Home→Forums→Relationships→Gf’s Dad passing was the final straw into ending our long distance relationship
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Alecsee.
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February 18, 2026 at 6:53 pm #455315
anitaParticipantWhen was the last time you communicated with her? What was the last exchange between you and her ( as in what did you say, what did she say?)
🤔 Anita
February 18, 2026 at 7:01 pm #455316
AlecseeParticipantwell my other message didnt send… thats sad. How can someone that doesnt want u in their lives be the love of your life? she didnt want me several times but long distance is hard. A person that doesnt want u by their side in a time of hardship, the hardest one in their life, btw, isnt that just a stranger and not a life time partner. i put in the effort even tho it was one sided. she did try but it was easier to just answer the question than avoid. and then she never confided in me. she confided with me when she broke up with me and after her work was done.. I made mistakes and thats why i wanted to correct and try to show her I was there for her but some things are meant to be ig.
February 18, 2026 at 7:28 pm #455318
anitaParticipantDear Alecsee:
I’m so sorry 😞 you’re still hurting so much and for so long. You’re so attached to her, having been for so long.
I feel your pain and Wish it wasn’t there, meaning, I wish you weren’t hurting 💔
🤍 Anita
February 18, 2026 at 7:33 pm #455320
AlecseeParticipantSending the cheating lie in November in person after no hearing:
Here’s the closure you’ve been asking for so persistently – since being on a call for 7h to hear what you wanted to say, wasn’t enough.
I was silent, because I simply needed time.
I didn’t do anything differently than usual, or anything against what I said – I just needed the time alone.But experiencing your bombarding attempts to hear from me, was an eye-opening time to see how selfish, and obsessive you could be.
And here are some facts that might clear your wonders:
1. I never blocked you on LINE
2. I never cheated, and never will.
Cheating is the ONE thing I will never accept, and no excuse will make it right. (Makes me angry why you had to tell me that you cheated, let alone assume that I cheated on you? What do you take me for. Fuck you.)
3. Your online stalking and physical approach with mails and leaving stuff at my place is nothing else but creepy. You even put my family in anxious state, and it is not acceptable. I guess you never thought to put yourself in my shoes, or in anyone’s shoes other than yours in life I guess.
4. With the 3 factors above being the prominent reason to my conclusion – I never want to see you or hear from you again. Ever.Nevertheless, I will end on one note – I appreciate the good times we did have, and I acknowledge that it was love to you, for giving me all the love you could. That is a quality that not many people have or could act end, and I hope one day we both can find someone to feel as such again.
Our time has ended and you should move on. You will never see me or hear from me so please stop trying, or even, hoping for something that has zero chance of happening.
I despise cheaters and they don’t even deserve a closure tbh.
That’s all. Bye.February 18, 2026 at 7:42 pm #455321
AlecseeParticipantAfter the cheating lie was revealed:
Wow. Something is seriously wrong with you.
Firstly, whether you cheating was a lie or not, I don’t trust you any more.
Secondly, how immature are you really to use such lie to get one’s – supposedly someone that you “cared” about, attention. Let alone, knowing that cheating x lying is the trauma trigger for that person.
Thirdly, what is wrong about avoiding.I have been nothing but honest with you with every feelings, and have put efforts in communicating, even if that meant facing arguments and conflicts, haven’t I?
I even told you, in fact, multiple times, when I was emotionally exhausted and in the verge of checking out.
And what did you do?You said you love me more than anything, you said you care about me more than you could’ve ever done, you made it seem like you could make things better.
You didn’t.
You didn’t start off from avoiding anything, you made me become avoidant, because once I gave you my heart and that safe place to be in – you started piling up your bullshit, just sitting on your ass instead of making things better, nourishing the heart, and respecting boundaries.Just accept it. You didn’t really care about me or loved me to the extent you expressed in words – you were just drunk in your own fantasy. Your actions always pointed back at how you cared about yourself only, and being in a relationship that you thought was perfect for you.
And for the how-many-time-th Idk I’ve told you.
I didn’t break up with you because I lost a parent.
I broke up with you because I needed peace in life and clarity in mind more than anything, and you were not contributing.In full honesty, I was going to text you back when you messaged me after a while of silence, but I still needed time to sort out my emotions and was being slow.
That, I accept as my fault. But when you continued to go on a mad spree of copy&paste messaging me on multiple platforms, that freaked me out, made me anxious, and I decided not to engage with.
If you truly cared about me and really understood what I was going through, you would’ve not done that and instead waited, with trust that one day I will get back, no matter how long that took.
So I hope you see now my side of the story.
You broke my trust, disrespected my boundaries, and disrupted my peace.
That is the sole reason why I no longer want to share any moment of my life or time with you.You can make me the villain of all cause, if that brings you peace.
I admit not being a good partner to you, but at this point of distrust I’m not even sure if I feel sorry or not.
Maybe I am a little.
Sorry that I wasn’t your ideal partner and you, and I, should both not waste our energy in continuing this game of trying to one-up another any further.February 18, 2026 at 7:42 pm #455322
anitaParticipantDear Alecsee:
I’m just not focused enough to process your post of 5 minutes ago, being that it’s night time here, but I intend to listen and process tomorrow morning 🌄, in about 12 hours from now.
I don’t know what time it is where you’re at.
Try to be there for you, even if no one else is. Try to have empathy for yourself, be on your side.
🤍🌙🙏 Anita
February 18, 2026 at 7:44 pm #455323
AlecseeParticipantand then me trying to explain the logic in a lengthy two segments
Jeez, just stop with the bombarding messages. Send a message when you make up your mind and proof read before sending.
I heard you, you heard me.
I have nothing else to tell you or to hear from you.
We’re done.Hope you find happiness one day.
Good bye.February 18, 2026 at 7:45 pm #455324
anitaParticipantOh, I just noticed you submitted another post. I will read and reply in the morning. Please 🙏 direct empathy toward yourself. B Back Tomorrow.
🌙 Anita
February 18, 2026 at 7:50 pm #455325
AlecseeParticipantI appreciate it Anita! i have been avoiding skimming over this for awhile now.
it sucks to relive this but in a way i have to confront it
the way she expected me to stay no matter how long it took? It was 14 months I waited for her to return some sort of love. and i was beyond patient. my limit broke after no contact. If she was a nice person, her fathers death could have been shared but because she was mean to her friends and family and partner, the death meant she could never apologize and she felt bad cuz of that
what kills me is these moments where she exemplifies the good traits I had and all the good moments that i brought into the relationship. if that wasn good enough, what was?
She broke my trust into not confiding she needed time to recover from her Dads death. She never said ANYTHING to that respect. and when we talked, she seemed to brush it off. what she said and what she wanted did not match up, and i trusted her words. i trusted in what she said unfortunately as truth
February 18, 2026 at 8:00 pm #455326
anitaParticipantI’m really looking forward to understand better in the morning. What’s clear to me now is that your love for her has been intense for so long. Intense is the word.
B Back Thurs morning (Wed 8 pm here).
🤍🌙 Anita
February 19, 2026 at 2:35 am #455338
AlecseeParticipantI appreciate it! Its weird. I have to write the narrative that she knows she didnt give me love and that I did get obsessive only because she just dissapeared into the void. I was patient for 14 months, 14 months of reassurance doubt and guilt. I had to let her walk away and never have access to me. But in reality, we werent meant for each other and she needed to move on easily. Idk it hurts a lot but i think i forced myself to do it. But anyway. at 34 years old i do not know why intimacy, having intercourse feel good with a specificbody type and looks and body type matter to me so much.Ive been fortunae enough to be really blessed in my dating pool but the harsh reality… I was serious about someone who was just always an avoidant. I had to always ask her about her to know about her. And even when I asked she wasnt really revealing. She never wanted to reveal herself to me so she could always walk away when it benefited her. I just have to write this narrative. i made a ton of mistakes. Some crucial ones but im only human. and just wanted to be accepted and vibe with all my flaws. she made me resent her
February 19, 2026 at 8:34 am #455341
anitaParticipantDear Alecsee:
I reread your first posts starting with the first on July 8, 2025, then fast forwarded to your posts yesterday/ today (Feb 18-19, 2026).
This was indeed an anxious–avoidant relationship, like you said yourself, which tends to be the most painful combination.
You needed reassurance, communication, emotional closeness, consistency and transparency.
She needed space, independence, emotional distance, physical proximity (not long-distance) and low-intensity connection
Your needs were fundamentally incompatible. And as a result, you pursued → she withdrew → you panicked → she shut down → you escalated → she cut off.
This is a textbook anxious–avoidant pairing.
Neither one of you is ‘the villain.’ You were simply mismatched in a way that amplified each other’s worst fears.
Your posts show a man who has been losing himself in the relationship for a long time. The breaking point was her father’s death when she withdrew completely, and you panicked completely. This is when you started messaging her repeatedly, visiting, leaving gifts, and trying to force clarity. You weren’t trying to harm her — you were trying to stop the emotional freefall.
The “cheating lie” was not a calculated act. It was a panic response. You were thinking along these lines: ‘She’s gone=> I need her to respond=> I need something to break the silence!’
Her responses were harsh, final, and deeply wounding, and you spiraled into self-blame, regret and obsessive replaying of events, trying to understand what went wrong.
Her final messages were angry, defensive, overwhelmed, emotionally reactive and final. She was trying to protect herself. Her words reflect fear, anger, exhaustion, a desire for distance, a need for control and for closure on her terms.
She was not in a place where reconciliation was possible. She explicitly said she never wants to be in contact again, blocked you on multiple platforms, told you to stop trying, said there is “zero chance” of reconnection and ended with “Goodbye.”
This is not an ambiguous situation. This is a closed door.
You kept asking: “Did I have a chance?”, “Could I have saved it?”, “Was it doomed?”, “Did I ruin everything?”
The truth is: the relationship was already ending long before the cheating lie. The lie accelerated the end, but it didn’t cause it.
Your needs were incompatible from the start. You didn’t ruin a healthy relationship — you clung to an unhealthy one.
You’re grieving the idea of her — the version of her you hoped she could be. Healing means accepting that she wasn’t emotionally available, she couldn’t meet your needs, you couldn’t meet hers, and that the relationship was mismatched from the start
Letting go isn’t forgetting. It’s accepting reality over fantasy.
It’d be easy to paint her as cold, avoidant, or cruel. But her behavior makes sense when you understand her emotional world. She was overwhelmed — she had an all-consuming job, a parent’s death, chronic exhaustion
and a limited space within her mind for conflict or intensity.Avoidant people shut down when overwhelmed. That’s how they protect themselves. Avoidant partners fear being engulfed. When they feel overwhelmed, they retreat.
Her harsh messages came from fear and anger. This wasn’t her at her best. This was her in fight-or-flight mode.
She wasn’t capable of giving what you needed because she couldn’t handle emotional intensity, couldn’t handle conflict, and couldn’t handle long-distance. She couldn’t handle someone who needed reassurance. This makes her incompatible with you.
Here’s what moving forward can look like for someone in your position:
A. Accepting that the relationship is over- not because you failed, not because she’s cruel, but because you were incompatible. Acceptance is the first step toward peace.
B. Letting yourself grieve fully- allow the sadness, anger, confusion, longing and regret. These emotions pass when they’re felt, not when they’re avoided.
C. Rebuilding your emotional foundation- this means reconnecting with friends, rediscovering hobbies, grounding yourself in routine, learning emotional regulation, and practicing self-compassion.
You need to rebuild the parts of yourself that were shaken during the relationship and breakup.
D. Learning healthier relationship patterns- you can learn to communicate needs calmly, choose partners who are emotionally available, recognize red flags early, avoid chasing avoidant partners, and slow down when anxious. This is how you can break the cycle.
E. Understanding that attraction can be rewired- being fixated on her body type and the physical chemistry,
that’s normal after heartbreak. But over time, you can learn to be attracted to emotional safety, consistency, kindness and reciprocity.F. Realizing that love isn’t supposed to feel like panic- the love of your life will not disappear for months, block you repeatedly, leave him in uncertainty, or make you feel like you’re drowning
Real love feels like calm, safety, mutual effort, emotional presence and trust.
You haven’t experienced that yet — but you can.
🌟 The bottom line: You’re not broken. She’s not evil. You were simply incompatible in a way that activated both of your deepest wounds.
You can heal. You can grow. You can love again — in a healthier, more grounded way.
And the pain you’re feeling now is not a sign that you lost “the one.” It’s a sign that you cared deeply, and that you’re ready to learn what real emotional safety looks like.
* I will add more in the next post
🤍 Anita
February 19, 2026 at 8:59 am #455343
anitaParticipantDear Alecsee:
Someone with your emotional style — deeply feeling, anxious when uncertain, loyal, expressive — would thrive in relationships where the other person communicates openly, doesn’t disappear during stress, can talk through conflict, offers reassurance without being asked, and doesn’t punish vulnerability. This doesn’t mean constant attention — it means consistency.
You need a partner who says what she means, follows through, doesn’t send mixed signals, and doesn’t withdraw without explanation
Predictability is safety.
You’d thrive in a relationship where the other person shares about herself, expresses affection, initiates conversations, shows appreciation and meets you halfway. You need emotional exchange, not emotional guessing.
You wouldn’t do well with doesn’t do well with silent withdrawal, sudden distance or unclear expectations. So, a healthy partner for you would say things like: ‘I need a quiet night, but I care about you.’, ‘I’m overwhelmed, but I’ll check in tomorrow.’ This would prevent your anxiety from spiraling.
How can you stop repeating this pattern?
A. Learn to recognize early signs of avoidant partners. Avoidant partners often struggle to share feelings, need a lot of space, get overwhelmed by emotional closeness, send mixed signals and disappear during stress. You can learn to spot this before you get attached.
B. Slow down the pace of emotional investment. Anxious partners often bond quickly. You need to take time, observe consistency, see how someone handles stress and see how they communicate needs. Attachment should build gradually, not instantly.
C. Build emotional regulation skills. This helps you pause before reacting, tolerate uncertainty, avoid panic-driven decisions and communicate calmly. There is the difference between reacting and responding.
D. Choose partners who are emotionally available. You deserve someone who texts back, shows up, communicates and doesn’t disappear. Compatibility matters more than chemistry.
E. Strengthen your sense of self. The more grounded you feel in yourself, the less you’ll chase, panic, overthink, idealize your partner and lose yourself in relationships. This is long-term work, but it changes everything.
Being grounded in yourself means you have a steady emotional center, so you don’t fall apart when someone pulls away, gets busy, or doesn’t respond right away. It means you know who you are, what you need, and how to calm yourself without relying on another person to make you feel okay. When you’re grounded, you don’t panic, chase, or lose your identity in a relationship — you can pause, breathe, and respond thoughtfully instead of reacting from fear. It’s basically the difference between feeling like your whole world depends on someone else and feeling like you can stand on your own two feet even when things are uncertain.
🌱🛡️🌿🧘🤍 Anita
February 19, 2026 at 11:05 am #455347
AlecseeParticipantI Agree. The one that “got away” chose me and even wanted to move to my city. It was a lesson that I learned the hard way and even her dad was financially wealthy as well. But i was very immature (more so than now) and could not really think about staying with a partner forever.
Yes, Im observing! Actually. I made a promise to myself that the next partner I have to feel that theyre it. and then I can go all in. I think I am always attracting ppl when I am my happiest but then I end up pouring myself into them. Its funny i could have chosen my first love but God made it so I have to do it the hard way. its always the hard way :/
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