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If it was meant to be…

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  • #76887
    B
    Participant

    I’m done with week 1 of no-contact after an amicable break up with my boyfriend of 10 months. He was recently separated when we started dating and in a way we were both each other’s rebounds but it evolved into something mature and intimate and was full of honesty and support of each other. As I have now learned but felt the need to disregard and experience for myself since I have little life experience, this is almost guaranteed to happen in all recently-divorced or separated relationships.

    He was married for 2 years and believed they were growing apart and she emotionally cheated on him and realized she was feeling trapped and wanted to divorce. He has a lot of issues to sort out, grieving to do, values to reflect on, and goals to be analyzed and he was pulling himself away from our relationship to give himself the space to do this, while communicating with me what was going on and helping me understand what he was going through. I have my own issues (fear of abandonment, insecurity, grew up with low self-esteem but grew to become more confident and strong) which I need to and am working on (counseling, reading, I’m here!, etc.) and he was supportive of this, but had his own issues to deal with, including the fear of being alone, which he wanted to conquer.

    Recently he was more and more upset and I was fearing abandonment more and more, and after having an amazing week vacation together where I felt like he was truly present and I could feel so strongly our love and appreciation for what we bring to each others’ lives, he knew that if he wanted to be able to ever marry again and let himself love without barriers, he needed to be on his own and process things. I agreed that we couldn’t go on with him being emotionally unavailable and me living with so much fear and doubt, so we broke up. We were both in tears and kissed and hugged each other good bye. He was doing miserably the day after and texted and then called me and I tried to be supportive but when he texted me again the next day I told him we couldn’t do this and that he couldn’t use me as a security net.

    We haven’t been in touch this past week except he helped pass on some info about a physical therapist I need see which I can only see for free through him, and he wants to be able to support me, but beyond this contact, I won’t use him for any more help. I recently had a friend who had seen him at an event the other day tell me that he approached her and told her about what happened between us. She said he was in tears and I saw tears in her eyes as she told me the story because of how broken he looked, and she said that he knew I was the girl for him but he was so confused and needed more time but was afraid of losing me to someone else. In his space from me I know he is starting to realize how much he took me for granted and when we were together he told me he wished and knew he should appreciate me more for what I’ve done for him, but I know he just was not in the place to be able to do this.

    We both need more time to heal and grow individually, maybe him longer than I. I’m not looking to date for a while since I want to conquer the fear and insecurity of being happily single, but I know if an opportunity were to come with someone else I would take it if I felt ready, so I will not wait around.

    We said to each other if it was meant to be it will happen one day, which gives me peace (whether or not we do.) Through this experience people I’ve had in my lives whom I didn’t know the past of told me that they or their now spouse of many years or decades went through something similar and after months or a year their lives were brought back together, both as better versions of themselves. I’m just curious if anyone else has had similar experiences of this, whether you got back together again months or years down the line or if you each found someone else– did you regret losing them? Are happier now? I’m just curious.

    #76890
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Korrasamus:
    I don’t believe in fate, predestination and therefore I don’t believe in things meant to be or not meant to be.

    You wrote about your friend meeting the guy: “he said that he knew I was the girl for him but he was so confused and needed more time but was afraid of losing me to someone else” Did you notice the contradiction in what he told her according to her remembrance? He said he KNEW you were the girl for him and he is CONFUSED. Which one is it? Know (means certainty) or confused (uncertaintly)?

    What I think is that he is probably honest and so are you and that sometimes he KNOWS you are the girl for him and at other times he doubts it so therefore he is confused. Maybe when he is afraid, he knows you are the girl for him because he needs your comfort when he is anxious… Maybe when he feels more secure, he does not feel the need for your comforting presence and does not feel confident that he wants you as his mate. Maybe he expects to feel ONE WAY all the time and is confused that he feels two different ways at different times.

    There is more i could read into your post. What do you think so far about what i wrote and does it bring new thoughts to you?

    Take care:
    anita

    #76891
    B
    Participant

    Thanks for your response!

    By confused– he mentioned this a few times– he meant he didn’t know if he was doing the right thing with his life, if he was fulfilling his potential. He was afraid that when we were together he didn’t have to think about his struggles and grief and he was worried that it could mean we were together for the wrong reasons– for his security and avoiding a time of growth and struggle. The last thing he wanted was to end up married to me– or anyone– and realize that he did so for the wrong reasons and suffer through divorce again. I believe there was more to it than that just comfort and security for both of us and that something deep had developed, and that is why he is worried about losing me. Only time will tell.

    #76915
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi korrasamus,

    Wow, people make their lives so complicated! If you guys want to be together one day ~ be together now! You don’t have to get married. Just enjoy each other’s company. He doesn’t have to “struggle” or “grieve”. You don’t have to be “strong” or “confident”. I mean, when would he or you be ready then? Next year? Five years? Ten years? Throw out your “shoulds” and be together NOW!

    Caveat: Sometimes when people say, “I’m not ready for a relationship” they really mean “I don’t want a relationship ~ with YOU!” Make sure that’s not what was going on. If so then throw my above advice out the window.

    Blessings,

    Inky

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 11 months ago by Inky.
    #76920
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Korrasamus:
    I read your original post again and your added post. I find your post very interesting. In the original post your question at the end is: “I’m just curious if anyone else has had similar experiences of this, whether you got back together again months or years down the line or if you each found someone else– did you regret losing them? Are happier now? I’m just curious.”

    It seems to me that what you need is others to tell you stories of separation and re-uniting love stories so that you feel comforted. I feel empathy for you. You wrote that you suffer from abandonment issues. The separation from the man you are talking about is causing you great distress, isn’t it? You are afraid of feeling alone and you want the comfort of imagining a re-uniting, a together-again with this fellow. This is understandable. I can very much relate.

    But I have no such story to tell you. I don’t have what I believe that you want; what I believe that you need. What I do have, because i am not inside your story, is an outside perspective, a wider perspective. I know I can see the forest right now better than you can- not because I am more intelligent than you are, or older or any such thing but simply because I am not emotionally invested in that man the way you are. Our need emotions create blind spots in our vision, make us not see what is right there, make us focus on this or that tree or this or that branch of one tree and not see the whole tree or the whole forest.

    It has taken and is taking me a lot of time to see the forest. Let me know if, IF you want more of MY input on what is easily there to be seen by the non-invested reader, see if you can widen your perspective, not necessarily to agree with my input but to consider possible validity in your mind.

    Take care:
    anita

    #76966
    Christy
    Participant

    Korra, I am in a very similar situation to yours currently, and hope to offer you some advice that I wish had been given me a year ago.

    After dating for 5 years my ex and I ‘took a break’ so that we could both work on ourselves and our careers. During this time we both agreed that it would be OK to date other people. The break-up was extremely painful for both of us and after a short period of no contact, we began speaking every week or so as friends. While we both had problems (me fear of commitment and abandonment; him fear of abandonment and anxiety), he had also not chosen a career path and was moving from job to job with no real direction or sense of fulfillment (we are in our late twenties). I thought that giving him space would allow him to ‘grow up’ and find what he needed and it would give me the space to work on my issues as well. Essentially, instead of doing that, he just found someone else and is now in a serious relationship with her. Although he agreed to the break-up at the time, he now says that by my stepping out of his life at that time I was unsupportive of him during an extremely trying time.

    It has been about 9 months now and we rarely talk because he does not want his relationship with me to interfere with his current relationship. I fear I have lost him forever.

    I wish I had realized that we could have worked through our respective issues together. That he would in no way stifle my career but would enrich my life (which is more important than any job). That the issues and fears that we both had would be most obvious and therefore easiest to deal with INSIDE of a relationship (since fears of commitment and abandonment surface most often when in a relationship). I also feel that my generation (I am in my late twenties) is obsessed with the foolish idea that each person in a relationship needs to be independent, completely self aware and un-needy in a relationship. You cant be in a healthy relationship if you aren’t a perfectly happy, well-rounded person on your own, right? SO WRONG! Our brains are biologically wired for connection. Social isolation will literally make us lose our minds. There is nothing wrong with needing someone in your life to be happy. There is nothing wrong with being scared shitless of commitment – the potential for being hurt is huge. There is also nothing wrong with figuring out who you are and what you want together.

    I have also realized there is no such thing as a ‘healthy relationship’ (please read anything by John Gottman for more on this), there is only what works between 2 people. If you were mostly happy together, if this period of relationship doubt is just a bump in the road and not a pattern, then I see no reason to not be together.

    I also do not believe in the saying ‘If it’s meant to be, it will be’. It actually pisses me off. For me, that phrase represents giving up on a relationship and being arrogant enough to believe that the universe has some ultimate plan for your life. There is no plan, but there are consequences for your actions – if you choose not to be with someone, chances are you will lose them. I know, because I did.

    • This reply was modified 8 years, 11 months ago by Christy.
    #76970
    Christy
    Participant

    I have read many of your posts Anita and find your perspective to be fascinating. Would love to hear more from you on this if Korra agrees:)

    #76985
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Christy:
    Thank you for the above comment about my perspective being fascinating- it pleased me to read this. I read your story above just now. I very much agree with you. It is a scientific fact that “Our brains are biologically wired for connection” as you put it. Absolutely. Since your ex boyfriend, you wrote, had a fear of abandonment and anxiety, no wonder he soon connected with another woman. Babies, children… and adults need social connection with at least one other person (and sometimes a pet insead) to SOOTHE their anxiety. The separation from him, no wonder, increased his anxiety and motivated him to find another connection. You are correct, you learned from the experience, problems of interpersonal relaionship need to be worked on in the context of an interpersonal relationship.

    I also agree with you about “if it was meant to be”- you wrote: “There is no plan, but there are consequences for your actions.” Absolutely. There is no plan. I wonder how you are feeling currenly about your ex boyfriend and how did or do you find the courage to look at things AS THEY ARE. How rare it is, isn’t it… people, including myself, seeing what they want to see, what is convenient at the moment to see (the trees, not the forest as I mentioned in my post)… I think you captured a forest in your post!

    anita

    #77010
    B
    Participant

    I would love to hear more of what you have to say on this topic, anita.

    You and Christy have presented ideas I’d never seen anyone bring up before and it makes so much sense. I am no longer anxious and afraid of abandonment because there no longer is anyone to abandon me and I find a great relief in this, but now I am concerned about arming myself against these fears and vulnerabilities in my future partners and in evaluating whether or not I’m with someone who is emotionally available. It makes sense that these can only be worked on while experiencing interpersonal relationships and for most of my relationship with my boyfriend, I felt so lucky to have found someone like him because he was healing me! During the beginning of my relationship with him and the avoidant guy I dated and over-invested in for 2 months before him, I questioned what had happened to my life and to my own identity. I never felt such insecurity, anxiety, and unhappiness/disinterest in the things I used to love doing alone! I truly never want to feel that way again, but I don’t know how to work through it and whether or not it must be done while single or in a relationship. I have a therapist I’ve started seeing so hopefully in time that will help.

    I had many irrational moments and fears and thoughts that my bf never failed to soothe and it gave me courage knowing that there were people out there who didn’t believe in ignoring you or shutting you out and actually wanted to stay in touch daily. Unfortunately, whether he really didn’t come to feel what he thought he should feel for me or felt like he was blocked from feeling anymore, had unresolved feelings from his marriage it doesn’t really matter. I don’t think I was in a place to try and change him and don’t believe I had to fight to make someone love me back as much as I loved them. He saw how much his pulling away from my physically (asking to see each other much less but keeping the affection and phone calls daily) was hurting me and my self esteem. And silly me, I felt I was needy and that something was wrong of me to be needing so much from him when he obviously began to prefer seeing less of me.

    I’ve done my homework and this is guaranteed to happen with 90% of the stories I have read with people dating before they are done processing their divorce, but I guess I feel better knowing this is common. For whatever reason, perhaps these failed transitional relationships that went from blazing hot to cool were really just the wrong people, or the people who divorced are no longer attracted to their “transitional” after the circumstances, or tried to reconcile later on but one or both moved on to other relationships.

    He contacted me two days ago asking how I was, saying that last week was the hardest he’d ever gone through, but he spent time with family and his dog and was starting to get a sense of peace. He was feeling positive and seemed to be in an “up” phase because he suggested we talk on the phone the next day to check in. I hesitantly agreed but by yesterday was fully anticipating it until later in the afternoon he wrote me an email saying he had been thinking all night and day and realized he really wasn’t ready, that he wanted to tell me how much of a struggle it’s been and how he wants to stay in touch but that it’d be too hard for both of us. He said he had “so many emotions” and needs more time and growth whether or not we do end up together in the future and that he is still struggling to feel complete as himself. That he needs to find a sense of peace and happiness before he can contribute to a relationship and that he was always second guessing things because he wasn’t sure he was ready and that in the future he wants to be confident and stable so that both in the relationship can support each other. He said “I am not saying to wait for me, because this is a time of growth for both of us and you have to do what feels right for you.” In a text later in response to my short email reply saying I understood but still felt hurt, he said he was sorry that I said I felt misled and that he wasn’t saying there was not a chance that we get back together.

    I’m glad though, that at least I finally have some peace myself and can move on, knowing that that is the only path that I have available– forward. I will not wait, but it may be a nice surprise if things do work out down the road and I still have feelings for him and don’t have anyone else in my life.

    #77018
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Korrasumus:
    I am not as clearly thinking as at the time I offered you my input above, but I will try to offer you something helpful. I will try: what i am getting from reading your posts, what i am feelings is that you grew up (or “grew in”) alone and lonely. You reached out for your parent/s love and she/ he ignored you, rejected you… and now you reach out to this guy and when you had the week with him it felt so good, didn’t it? That feeling of CONNECTION, of loving and BEING LOVED… isn’t it the most wonderful thing in the world? I mean, isn’t it like dying of thirst and finally drinking lots of cold water (or whatever your favorite cold drink is)? Oh, do we want more of it… do we crave it- since childhood we crave it. We crave it because we didn’t get it then and because no matter our age, we need it. We are all needy of connection, of love- it is a biological need, nothing unique to you, not a matter of choice (can’t help it) and nothing to be ashamed of.

    So here is this guy you are writing about and it becomes so much about him, isn’t it- when all along it is about you. It becomes: what does HE feel now? What will HE feel tomorrow? Will he choose me? Will fate choose us? Will we live happily ever after?

    It is called External Locus of Control- when your well being is depended, in your mind, in someone else’s choices, or in fate’s choice, something external to you (therefore External L.O.C., the term in the previous line). For as long as your focus is him or fate or the statistics of what is likely to happen- you are avoiding the GREATEST and only reliable source of information- yourself.

    Relying on yourself for information leads to Internal Locus of Control kind of life.
    How do you, how do I rely on myself? If your therapist is a good, effective therapist he/ she should be able to teach you the SKILLS required to connect – to re-connect to yourself, to come back to the part of you that you dissociated from so to endure the childhood anxiety of being alone. That fear is intense. what you needed then was the SOOTHING connection with a parent. You didn’t get it and fear becomes intense, overwhelming.

    Without soothing connection, we can’t deal with fear, so we dissociate, deny our feelings, our fear, our (normal) neediness, even feel ashamed of all these… And now, with this guy- and the guy before him- the soothing connection is intoxicating but the healing needed is far from being a happy/ intoxicating experience. It is a difficult long process. It can be worked on outside of a romantic relationship but within a relationship with a good therapist.

    What do you think so far about what I wrote? If it is meaningful to you, tell me how is the thrapy going? Does your therapist give you homework? is it a cognitive behavior therapy? Did the therapist mention or teach you Mindfulness? Go over interpersonal skills??? What has been going on in your therapy?

    Take care:
    anita

    #77023
    B
    Participant

    So much insight.. that is really great anita. I have started coming to those exact conclusions and realize how much more at peace I am when I am focused on my own healing, am reading about my own insecurities and low-selfesteem and lower-than-ideal levels of self-love and confidence. But then this thought will pop in my head or I will go on social media or do more forum searches for dating a divorced man, etc. and then the focus goes to him and I am miserable.

    My problem and thing I want to resolve, now that I am aware of what my issues are, is what do I do now? How do I not be this way any longer? I have only gone to this therapist twice now and see her again next week, so hopefully by then I will know if she is really going to be helpful and maybe I will inquire about what you just asked me. The first session I mostly went over my issues while I was still with my boyfriend and then had to cancel for this vacation so I didn’t see her until afterwards. Oddly, I had a few days initially where I was more relieved, somewhat at peace, and one some days even sort of positive! And I happened to see her on a positive day where the direction went in other areas– like my dissatisfaction at work, which was helpful, but now I need to refocus on these problems.

    Thank you for so poignantly clarifying these things and helping redirect me on a path to really get to the true root of my problem! Do you have any books or reading suggestions on these areas? I love giving myself homework 🙂 And it’s nice to retreat into nature by myself and work on some self-healing.

    #77025
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Korrasamus:
    You asked: “My problem and thing I want to resolve, now that I am aware of what my issues are, is what do I do now? How do I not be this way any longer?”

    From my ongoing process of healing, my answer is (I use the pronoun “you” meaning “I” projected, hopefully accurately enough to you):
    Healing is going to take a long, long time. What you are aware of now, you will become, over time, aware of on deeper levels than now. You can not rush it. I was impatient. Unfortunately you need to be… sometimes excruciatingly patient.
    What you are aware of now you can forget tomorrow- as you have repeatedly when you shift your focus from you to him. It takes returning your focus again and again. It takes learning new skills (mindfulness, “radical acceptance,” correcting thoughts- Cognitive Therapy tool:learning types of distorted thinking, identifying yours and correcting those thoughts). It takes self empathy. It takes ever increasing insight.

    One step at a time. Patience. A few steps backward, regrouping, a step forward. No “from now on” solution. You identify what does not work and stop doing what is ineffective. You identify what does work and you practice what is effective. No progress without practice. You feel pain and learn to endure it without reacting to it the old, ineffective ways.

    Books: well, i don’t know if you would like it- if it would fit you now. It depends on what you are ready for at this point, what will not overwhelm you, what will not turn you off. Lots of self help books try to include as many people in it as possible, using the word “may” a lot, as in you may feel this or that… it loses power for me. psych central website has some good info- recently unsuccessful getting there though. Some useless and even damaging info potentially… I tried to access some good articles i read there about what to expect in the first session/s of a good psychotherapy but failed to access. From what i remember and from experience, the psychotherapist should give you- after a few session, a PLAN including evaluation she made of you, objectives and a plan of how to achieve those objectives. Such a plan was given to me by my therapist. And he gave me homework every session. this was different from previous experiences where i saw a therapist, talked, felt better for having talked, but there was no game plan. It was just catharsis, feeling better after venting, with occasion empathy at best. Good psychotherapy includes venting and empathy but also PSYCHOEDUCATION, the teaching of SKILLS (A MUST!). It is a science, not just an intuitive art form. It is not magic- so choosing the right therapist is very important. Many therapists are at best providers of empathy while you vent. There is so much more some therapists are!!! I recommend Cognitive Behavioral Therapy combined with Mindfulness therapy.

    Back to your question: “How do I not be this way any longer?”

    Healing, you will be everything your child part has been all these years, loveable, needy of love, connection, scared, hurt. You will not stop being “that way”- what you will develop is a part of yourself that will do a way more effective job leading your life so you have more and more control over how you live and less and less fear.

    I already wrote too much.

    Take good care of yourself:
    anita

    #77026
    B
    Participant

    Thank you so much again for your input anita! I look forward to this journey and now know more about what I should look for in a therapist! This has been so helpful– I really appreciate it.

    #77377
    T.S.
    Participant

    Hi all,
    I know I am late to this post but it is so relevant for what I am experiencing at this moment. Korra, Christy, Anita–all of your posts are so self-aware and give me hope. I hope the three of you see my message.

    I, too, am needy and have abandonment issues. Having been told I have an “insecure/anxious” attachment style stemming from childhood, I am well aware of these behaviors and how they sabotage not only the relationships I am in, but also cloud my own judgment when it comes to needs. Like you, Korra, I felt weak or ashamed of my “needs” (to be contacted every day, etc.) in a relationship and tried to fix myself. But the insecurities manifested elsewhere.

    For 18 months, off and on, I dated a man who had his heart broken twice. He smokes pot daily (not that I judge on people’s vices) and is very much into Mindfulness, but I feel like he uses it to his advantage. He acted in all the “right” ways that indicates a relationship (we met each others’ families, celebrated holidays together, saw each other every weekend) but he would never fully commit, saying he was not ready, or capable of giving me what I needed, was not sure if he loved me, was scared, didn’t want to say “boyfriend” because he thought he could get hurt.

    We had a blow-out fight the weekend before last where I saw a side of him I never saw–he was screaming and throwing things around the apartment. I stood up for myself, saying he couldn’t talk to me that way and that he needed to relax. He left and came back and 6 a.m. When I was leaving around noon, I woke him and said we should address it. He said there is nothing to address-we are in an unhealthy place and you made me act like that last night.

    I tried to reach out to him later that day–phone calls and texts–and got no reply. It is 10 days later and nothing. We are leaving on a trip tomorrow, and I know the heartache of sitting next to an empty seat on that plane will kill me (yes, I am still going).

    The pain of no closure, of being dropped by a hot potato, by someone who cared about me is almost unbearable. I am trying to see my way out.

    I started CBT 3 weeks ago (I was in talk therapy for many years but needed more, much like Anita, instead of just sitting around talking about feelings). I also try to meditate and read much on mindfulness and try to practice it–even though it reminds me of him a bit.

    Also like you, Korra, I was in a happy place when he came into my life. Now the things I loved before I have zero interest in. I allowed this relationship to take me apart, brick by brick, but seeking happiness from another person. In that, I lost myself. And I am not sure how to return.

    I turned 40 during this relationship, and I think a lot of the self-doubt and hopelessness I feel is accompanied by what I see as cultural views on an older woman–she is less valuable. I am trying to work through the self-loathing and hopelessness I feel in general, coupled with the completely harsh removal of this person from my life.

    #77381
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear titanshiny:
    About the blow up fight you described, you wrote: “He said there is nothing to address-we are in an unhealthy place and you made me act like that last night.” Did I get it right? Did he say that you MADE HIM act like that, made him scream and throw things around the apartment?

    Then he did not reply to your efforts to contact him. And for ten days he did not contact you.

    Oh, you are so fortunate, titanshiny, that he did not reply to you and did not contact you for ten days. If he never contacts you- you will be most fortunate. Most magnificent fortune in this regrad would be if you were willing and capable to not having contact with him, YOUR decision.

    Do you see why I am stating this???

    I will wait for a reply to this question…
    anita

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