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Is it normal to feel on and off about your significant other?

HomeForumsRelationshipsIs it normal to feel on and off about your significant other?

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  • This topic has 23 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 3 years ago by Tee.
Viewing 9 posts - 16 through 24 (of 24 total)
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  • #378265
    Ashmitha
    Participant

    Dear Anita,

    I’m sorry to hear that you experienced something similar in your childhood. It certainly is not an easy experience to go through. Please take your time.

     

    #378271
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Thank you, Ashmitha. I am looking forward to return to your thread in about 16 hours from now.

    anita

    #378273
    Tee
    Participant

    Dear Ashmitha,

    you’re welcome, and thank you for sharing some more. You did well to become strong and resilient while growing up, to fight rather than flee, to work hard and excel in your studies, rather than become disillusioned and self-destructive. Your self-preservation instincts were excellent and you got out of your precarious childhood as a strong, independent woman. Congratulations for that! The only thing that suffered as a collateral damage is your emotional side – your ability to be emotionally open and vulnerable with another person.

    Perhaps what could help a little bit is to tell yourself that you don’t have to be in the survival mode any more, that you’re safe and there’s no one pointing a knife at you or your mother (have your parents divorced in the meanwhile? has your father stopped threatening your mother?).

    If you know you’re physically and existentially safe, you could relax a little, which could be as simple as laying down on a carpet, or lean against the wall, and allow the ground, or the wall, to take your weight. You don’t need to hold so much any more – you can allow yourself to be held (put a cushion if you lean against the wall to make it more comfy 🙂 ). And just breathe and relax.

    You can also make a habit of getting on the call each evening with your boyfriend and asking him how was his day, and also share about your day. That’s the chance to talk about any dilemmas, or worries you might have, or simply “to talk about feelings and experiences and just understanding people” – which you said you’d love to do.

    So I believe if you make the space for mutual sharing, every day at a convenient time, you’ll start building that intimacy, that emotional bond between you. Do you think it’s something you could try?

     

    #378311
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Ashmitha:

    “a healthy marriage and healthy environment for my children is very important to me”- yes it is, but you did not experience yet a healthy marriage/ a healthy home environment. You can imagine how it looks like, how it sounds like and how it feels like, but it is yet something to experience for the first time.

    What you experienced instead is this: “as a child, I always put myself in the middle of my parents’ fights. Whenever my dad gave my mom trouble, I would be the first to go up to him and tell him to leave her alone. My mother was afraid for my safety, since he was drunk.. He would threaten my mom a lot, and hold knives to scare her.. I would go to the kitchen, get my own knife, and stand up to him and ask him what his problem was. I just remember protecting my mom a lot as a child. I saw myself as stronger woman than she was… she was a fearful person”-

    – your mother was The Victim, your father, when drunk, was The Villain, and you were The Child Hero.

    How does it feel for a child to be the hero, to courageously protect one parent from the other?

    It felt good when your mother praised you for protecting her, because you had a purpose, you were making a difference, and because she trusted you to be strong and capable (“My mom still talks about how she never worries about me because I take care of myself”).

    Because of her praise and trust, you felt confident enough to appear very confident then and now  (“I appear as a very confident and relaxed person to my friends and partners”).

    That confidence in your capability carried on to the context of school where you excelled (“I was consistently at the top of my class, won several awards and had a great relationship with my teachers and peers”), and it carried on to the context of higher education and employment (“I am confident in my academics.. professors and employers describe me as intellectual and advanced for my level. I am confident in who I am as a person, I think I have a good relationship with myself.”)

    But there was a price to pay for being The Child Hero that you were: “I appear as a very confident and relaxed person to my friends and partners, but I think I am definitely insecure”.

    How is it possible for a hero to feel insecure?

    “I think I have a hard time fully trusting people and letting them in because I’m scared they will disappoint me, like my dad did… I think I truly only trust myself”- as a child, you didn’t trust your father, but you didn’t trust your mother either, that’s why you can only trust yourself.

    When a child cannot trust either parents, a child feels insecure.

    No matter how many times you protected your fearful, weak mother (“I just remember protecting my mom a lot as a child”), she never rose to the occasion and protected herself, or you, from your father. “My mother was afraid for my safety, since he was drunk”- she was afraid for your safety, but she didn’t protect you.

    “I have a great relationship with my mom.. My dad and I are close as well and I still love him… When he is sober, I enjoy being around him. But when he is drunk, I hate him.. I love my family a lot”- there is love, but there is also hate, which is intense anger. When you confronted your father, as a child, you were energized by fear and by anger, anger at him for getting drunk and for harassing your mother and you. You may have been angry at your mother too, for being fearful and weak, for not standing up to your father, for not protecting herself and you, and for not being the strong mother that you needed.

    As The Child Hero,  you were considered (1) a child who does not need protection because she can protect herself (“My mom still talks about how she never worries about me because I take care of myself“), and (2) a child who has no feelings that need to be attended to (“There wasn’t much time to talk about my feelings.. home was chaotic and there were more important things to worry about than my feelings”).

    But you did need protection and you did have feelings that needed to be attended to. Without protection and attention, you closed off emotionally, pushing down much of your uncomfortable emotions to below the surface, away from your awareness (“I have been closed-off emotionally since I was young”).

    You wrote about your boyfriend: “Our values are aligned… he would make a great father and kind husband.. I 100% think he is a good person”, but something is missing: “I go through periods of feeling happy and content with my partner to feeling like something is missing”.

    Something is always missing in a relationship, but I think that the something-is-missing that you are referring to is your awareness of your pushed down/ repressed feelings.

    “I feel like something is missing at times. When we are together, I am quite content with him. When we are apart, I sometimes question if he is the one I should marry”-

    – it is not uncommon for a woman to question if a man is the one she should marry, but I think that your questioning is motivated by fear and anger brewing under the surface of your awareness.

    Fear and anger make it easy for you to leave relationships (“I am fine with leaving a relationship if something isn’t working”). Fear and anger motivate you to look for that “something is missing”/ “something isn’t working”, including considering that different interests in sports and music are enough of a a reason to leave the relationship.

    “Feeling emotionally connected to my partner is necessary for me to feel romance and security in him. I know I am a deep person”- you will need to bring more of your emotions from deep inside up to the surface, back to your awareness. It is then that you will (1) feel more connected to yourself, (2) feel confident in your ability to evaluate and choose a compatible partner,  (3) appear and feel confident otherwise, and (4) able to feel connected to a compatible partner.

    When I shared with you that responding to your scary childhood experience was emotionally intense for me, you wrote: “Please don’t feel obligated to respond if this is triggering to you.. I don’t want you to put yourself in an emotionally difficult situation. I am just so used to it that I have emotionally detached from it and it is easy for me to share. Sorry if it was too explicit”-

    – you rushed to protect me (thank you!), similar to you rushing to protect your mother. You also shared that you are emotionally detached from the explicit details of your scary, personal story (it is as if it happened to someone else, isn’t it?). It is this emotional detachment that I referred to when I mentioned your emotions being pushed down, being repressed.

    (I use the two words, feelings and emotions, interchangeably, as having the same meaning)

    Dear Ashmitha, I think that you need to be a different kind of hero, at this point in your life- a hero courageous enough to take on the difficult, gradual task of feeling what you don’t want to feel…

    anita

     

    #378561
    Ashmitha
    Participant

    Thank you Teak and Anita. I really appreciate the time and effort you both into the responses on this site.

    Teak, thank you, that means a lot. It makes sense why I am less of an emotionally open person now. It is hard for me to turn off that “survival mode” way of thinking until I am at a place I want to be. I am still completing my graduate studies and thus unable to purchase my own home until I have graduated and start working. My parents have not divorced, but my mother and I live in my brother’s home which he purchased. My dad lives in our old apartment because he works near it. He comes here on the weekends. I will definitely try that exercise you mentioned! I started doing 5 minute meditations last month and it felt really good after completing one. Yes I would like having calls daily with my boyfriend. I’ve brought it up before but he says he doesn’t really like talking on the phone and I don’t want to force him. If I tell him I really want it, he will probably do it.

    Anita, thank you. I can identify with the “Child Hero” analogy you mention. Is this common? It makes sense why I am closed off emotionally now. It sometimes scares me how emotionally detached I can be, but it makes sense why I became like this. I am still a very emotional person though with some things.. it’s strange. I wonder why I seek comfort in relationships with men. It’s like I can’t be single for long because I crave the security of a relationship. Even if I am unhappy in the relationship, there is some type of security there which I crave. I feel more of worth when I am in a relationship… it is bad, I know. And I think I “jump” from relationship to relationship because I don’t want to feel the emotional heartache of a breakup.

    Even when I have known I was unhappy in a relationship and I bring that up to them, once they agree to or suggest a breakup, I feel very anxious and don’t want them to leave. Yet, I will go into it thinking I do want to leave. I also wonder what triggers this response. A fear of being alone? I’m planning to seek therapy to look into these things further. Thank you both for your thorough and caring responses 🙂 I really value your wisdom and advice.

    #378573
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Ashmitha:

    You are welcome. You asked if the concept of Child Hero is common- I think so. I think that children love their parents so much that when a parent needs help, the child will do anything and everything to help the parents, whatever is in their little power to do. On the other hand, it is less common for parents to do anything and everything to help their children.

    “I wonder why I seek comfort in relationships with men… there is some type of security there which I crave”- I am guessing that it’s the same type of security that you craved as a child, when there was violence in the home, verbal and otherwise.

    “I think I ‘jump’ from relationship to relationship because I don’t want to feel the emotional heartache of a breakup”- meaning, you didn’t feel yet the emotional heartache of a breakup?

    anita

    #378598
    Ashmitha
    Participant

    Hi Anita,

    Yes, the love a child has for their parent can be incomparable, which is beautiful.

    Yes I do notice that when family is stressing me out, I feel an urge contact my partner and just talk to them.

    I do feel the pain of breakups and take a few months to grieve but it’s usually been about 3-6 months in between relationships, which seems kind of short. Getting into a new relationship does help me get over the previous one.

    #378602
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Ashmitha:

    “I do feel the pain of breakups and take a few months to grieve… Getting into a new relationship does help me get over the previous one”- I think that much the pain that women feel about breakups from men in romantic relationships, is the same pain from childhood: a pain of a young girl abandoned/ left alone in some ways that were very painful.

    anita

     

    #378606
    Tee
    Participant

    Dear Ashmitha,

    you’re very welcome. Regarding your parents, it appears they found an arrangement which suits them both – living apart, with weekend visits by your father. When he visits during the weekend, how’s the atmosphere? Is there still tension? Is he still drinking too much?

    Regarding your boyfriend, you say:

    Yes I do notice that when family is stressing me out, I feel an urge contact my partner and just talk to them.

    Do you feel you can share whatever bothers you and he’d be understanding and supportive? Does he share when there are issues in his family, and he just wants to talk about it or ask for your opinion?

    About your previous relationships, you said:

    Even when I have known I was unhappy in a relationship and I bring that up to them, once they agree to or suggest a breakup, I feel very anxious and don’t want them to leave. Yet, I will go into it thinking I do want to leave.

    How does it happen? You’re unhappy in a relationship, you bring it up with your boyfriend, and then it’s them who usually suggest a breakup and you agree, even though a part of you feels anxious about it?

    You also said earlier that you leave easily, without really trying to fix the relationship:

    I have always wondered why my friends have been in 4 year relationships, and despite having problems, will always want to get back together, whereas I am fine with leaving a relationship if something isn’t working.

    I guess there’s a part which wants to stay – the part that wants security and fears being alone. And that’s the fragile, scared inner child, which you suppressed because you needed to be the hero for your mother. That little girl needs a protector in her life, that’s why she can’t stay alone for long. She’s also the one who feels anxious that the relationship would end.

    But there’s also another part of you, who’s afraid of staying in a relationship which has problems, because you know where those problems might lead (your father threatening your mother with a knife). This part is probably afraid of the slightest problem and wants out as soon as something is off.

    This seems to me like the dynamic behind your relationship behavior. In order to be able to talk about problems with your partner, you’d need to 1) stop being afraid that he’d leave you if you say something, and 2) stop believing that problems cannot be solved, and that the only solution is to leave.

     

     

Viewing 9 posts - 16 through 24 (of 24 total)

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