Home→Forums→Relationships→Long Distance relationship (6-7 years)
- This topic has 3 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 11 years, 8 months ago by
Minh.
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September 18, 2013 at 3:06 am #42390
LDR
ParticipantHello Minh,
I am truly sorry to hear what you are going through. Break-ups are painful and , no matter how right the decision was for your” , you will always feel a certain amount of doubt initially.
Seven years is a long time and you will have developed a strong connection with your former boyfriend, and even a small part of defining “your” self.
The only advice I feel I can give is based upon my own personal experiences. I went through the same feelings you are now going through after I ended a 4 year relationship. Months after we had separated, I wondered whether the fact I was missing him equated having made a mistake. This is the key question.
The answers, or at least the approaches I took to trying to find the answer were numerous. I cannot say which works best , but I felt, for me, a combination of all of them worked:
1. Try to focus on yourself and what you need to do for yourself to heal and build yourself a happy life. You are already ahead of the game, having identified some personal life goals, i.e. travel. Focus on this and other things you need to nourish YOUR self. You mentioned your former boyfriend was a huge part of your confidence and happiness in the past. Whilst loving relationships will always contribute to our happiness and well-being, it is important to for us to begin to look at what we can do to provide this for ourselves. In my case, I found this useful.
2. Reflect on what brought you to the decision to end the relationship. Is that still relevant? If you decided to try and get him back, do you think things will be different? This can be a really difficult question to ask oneself when you are feeling vulnerable. It is important to try and answer this honestly. Dig deep. I found when I asked myself this question, the circumstances that brought me to end the relationship still existed and this actually helped me better process , and deal with, the doubts I had been having. This is not to say , you will have the same outcome from your reflection, but it is important you think about it.
3. Learning from experiences to draw lessons for life. Once I had accepted that ending the relationship was the right thing for me, I decided I wanted to try and learn from my relationship experience, good and bad. I decided to reflect (even made a list) of the things in our relationship that worked well for me, and the things that did not. I looked at these from two angles: 1. My behaviour; and 2. His behaviour. I found this an incredibly useful exercise and felt proud of myself in that I was taking responsibility for my emotional well-being with the hope of being better able to identify bad habits I had when in a relationship (e.g. letting the relationship become more than myself!) as well as his (lack of communication, selfish, etc). The aim of this is to help guide you in future relationships, both intimate and non-intimate.
These three things helped me a lot. I am not a relationship expert (by any standard!!!), but wanted to help you deal with your pain by sharing my own experience.
I really hope you find peace and I know there are many great people who use this forum and can probably give you better advice than I.
Take care of “yourself” (and I promise you, you will find a happy future filled with love) .
September 18, 2013 at 8:29 am #42395Matt
ParticipantMinh,
I’m sorry for your sorrows and difficulty. When I was reading through your post, and got to the part where you ended it with him, I thought “thank god.” I don’t know all of the conditions of your relationship with that man, but there are many red flags waving around in your message. Consider that you started the relationship when you were really young, and don’t really have much experience in an intimate relationship. What is possible is way better than what you described. He sounds like he was highly controlling and manipulative, and sabotaged a lot of your joy by requiring to dance to his tune. Giving you a curfew? Making you not have friends? Beating you up emotionally over and over? This is not what love inspires a man to do, its what fear does.
I know the connection you feel for him is loud, powerful, and you are afraid of missing out on a great relationship. Let it go, dear sister, what you had was so much less than what love can be. Consider that because you’ve been through that kind of experience, you have learned a lot about what is healthy and not healthy. All those moments you describe in your post where you were like “hmmm… doesn’t seem right but ok” … they didn’t seem right for a reason. Its awesome how you saw the control and icky, which will fuel your wisdom, as you rise like a phoenix. 🙂
For the self esteem issues that lead you into the whole mess, consider reading some of Pia Mellody’s writing. She has a couple great books on codependency that could provide much insight and help. The basic idea is that when we have low self esteem and poor self nurturing habits, we look outside ourselves for fulfillment. When we encounter someone who fills that need, we latch onto them, and are willing to put up with a terrible amount of abuse in order to secure that need… in order to keep ourselves nourished. Said differently, because he helped you with your low esteem, you put up with a lot of bullshit from him. That’s fine and normal, but as you are growing up, you can do much better for yourself. If you decide to self nurture, come to love yourself, then your relationship with a new man will look completely different. Love can be so much better, less like a prison, and more like a pair of wings.
Namaste, sister, I hope you find love and light.
With warmth,
MattSeptember 18, 2013 at 5:04 pm #42416Minh
ParticipantThank you, LDR and Matt for your feedback. I tried the exercise that LDR have given me and it really clears up most answers and doubts that i had.
And as you both stated, that i should focus on myself and learn to love myself, I totally will do that. Stepping out alone for the first time in 7 years is really scary and i feel very vulnerable at times, wanting to run back to him. But it just doesn’t seem fair to me or him to put us both back on that roller coaster.
I’ve seen and read in movies and books about learning to love yourself before loving anyone else, i guess i didn’t listen and missed that step. Experiences from others are sometime scattered and shown in a way i guess people like me tend to overlook, and say to ourselves like “oh, it’s just a movie.”
I’ve been cruising through life lost, wandering and i never have a direction or knew what people are talking about when they tell important life lessons. I guess i was a kid, still living in a fantasy or just ignorant of everything around me.
This year, it’s clear i’m beginning to open up, more outgoing and definitely seeing a path. I’m no longer that lost girl not knowing what to do other than what people tell me to do. I guess that’s why i reached a decision to lose some of people that i regularly talk to (jk i really didn’t have anyone to lose.) and gain new friendship that will and has help and inspire me to work towards myself and my future. I really feel bad putting all the blame and the hold back on my ex-boyfriend, but before breaking up with him i know i’m missing opportunities and contacts with some of the people that can really help me get to places (like i said before, i couldn’t talk to anyone who seems too nice or he’ll get jealous and make up their intentions so i have to stay away form that person.)
But thank you Matt and LDR, your feedback really did help me a lot! and put me at peace, i see that i did make the right choice, even though it hurts and i miss him. But i just can’t be slowed down anymore i have to keep going, i have waited too long for a change in emotional,and life-goal-wise from him. And him bringing up starting a family with no income i knew i had to go.
and i’m very thankful that you guys cared enough to read the whole story. It’s really long…Thank you so much.
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