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Should we try to rebuild a friendship in the spring or give up?

HomeForumsRelationshipsShould we try to rebuild a friendship in the spring or give up?

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  • #372007
    Lilyana
    Participant

    This is my first time posting here, and I don’t really know where to begin, but let’s just say I haven’t had a great year. A lot of this might just be me venting, but I need a second set of eyes to analyze my actions because I can’t really think straight anymore.

    I am a college student, so around March we were kicked out of dorms and sent home. My boyfriend at the time and I had just had our first “break” a month prior, but things were looking better, so I was hopeful. However once I went home, it became more and more difficult to stay in touch and keep our relationship spark. I began to be bothered by some of the old issues that led to our first break again, and I broke up with him right before summer break.

    This was big for me, considering this was my first relationship, I had known him pretty much since the beginning of college, and I really didn’t have any close friends and I wasn’t as close to my family as I used to be. I guess I had one friend, but that friendship was pretty one-sided.

    Anyway summer began, and so did my summer job, which I worked on remotely from home. Without my ex to talk to, I lost a sense of normalcy and lost connection to the person I’d grown to since college and problems began to arise. Being back home, I began to be reminded of all the insecurities I used to have, the way I was ostracized throughout high school/middle school, how much of a shit human being I used to be, my family problems, and as someone who used to bury a lot of sadness and anger but became more emotionally aware in college, I began to uncover a lot of past grievances and long overdue anger and sadness. Over the course of two months, I quickly became depressed. I never received an official diagnosis, but I could barely function, couldn’t sleep, didn’t talk to anyone, didn’t go anywhere, and I felt so empty that I began turning to alcohol to make myself feel something and to sleep.

    I tried therapy twice but quit shortly due to lack of privacy at home and lack of connection to the therapists. I tried talking to that one friend, but she is like talking to a wall, so I couldn’t open up past a certain point, and she seemed annoyed with and judgemental of how emotional I was, so I stopped talking to her as well. Due to past family issues that I couldn’t get out of my head at the time, differences in value, and also since I lost my ability to speak my native language quite a bit since going off to college, it was difficult to talk to my family as well.

    My ex was the closest person I had ever had and to lose someone like that in a time like this was painful.

    Around two months after our breakup, he messaged me out of the blue one day and we began to talk. He said he was worried about how I was doing (and rightly so). Looking back, I don’t think I was ready to get back together with him at the time as I hadn’t resolved all my anger about our issues, but considering the mental state I was in, I was desperate. We got back together around August.

    For the first few weeks, things were going great. Because I was feeling so much better, I was starting to feel more comfortable around my family as well and starting to forgive them for the family issues we used to have. I decided that I would head back to live with him and some other friends for the fall semester.

    I was excited for things to be finally somewhat normal again. However, about a week before I was supposed to head back, we had a fight which reminded me of the issues we used to have and I suddenly froze up again. A day before my flight was supposed to leave, I decided against going back, we broke up (again), and decided to stay home.

    Despite breaking up, my ex was worried due to how things turned out in the past and decided to keep in contact. He claimed it should be fine because our breakup this time around was more circumstantial and we could have stayed together had it not been for COVID. Honestly, the first several weeks, things were not much different from when we were dating. But again, one thing led to another and we stopped talking. Throughout the fall semester, this happened on and off multiple times. When we weren’t talking, I would become very depressed. I dropped so many of my commitments and classes I became worried about graduating on time.

    I don’t really know how to describe my feeling towards him. When we first met, I was a very lost person. My parents never gave me much guidance growing up because my sister was the problem child. My family had a lot of issues ranging from my sister’s mental disorders to my mom’s depression/suicide attempts to my dad’s anger problems. My extended family all lived back in my native country, so they were out of the picture. I also felt ostracized in the town I grew up in since we didn’t look like any of the people who lived there.

    When I met my ex, he changed all of that. He was the first person to ever show unconditional love towards me. He was honest and guided me about right and wrong. He heard me and responded to anything and everything I talked about. He made me feel like I wasn’t alone anymore.

    But at the same time, it was like he became a load-bearing wall in my life. I used to be so independent, but I didn’t know how to be anymore. I was one of those girlfriends that never left the boyfriend’s side. As an extremely “alpha” person, he also tended to not always listen or take my opinions seriously and overshadowed me a lot. Over time, I lost confidence in myself (even though I was already a not so confident person to begin with) and became overly dependent on him because I didn’t trust myself anymore.

    Whenever we did start becoming close again, I felt like I was falling back into these patterns again. But when we stopped talking, I didn’t have anyone to lean on, and due to COVID, I couldn’t just go out to meet new people. I was stuck.

    Being at home and being reminded of who I used to be and all of my flaws (old or still existing), I felt stuck.

    Around November, we had a few weeks of goodness again. We weren’t officially back together, but we thought, Maybe this could work, and we plus one other friend decided to room together in the spring… But yep, you guessed it. Shortly after, I started having doubts again. We have an odd housing situation since it is a 2 bedroom for the 3 of us, so we couldn’t just find a third person to take over one of our spots. We had agreed on just keeping the living situation as is, and I would take over a part of the living room, and put up a room divider to make my own space.

    We had stopped talking after that, but he contacts me out of the blue again a few days ago asking to catch up. He said he is lost and sad since we were basically each other’s best friends and he wanted to catch up so that things would be less awkward and we could try to rebuild a friendship starting February when we all move in. Honestly, I was still angry about a lot of things at the time and I was scared of going down the same path if we became friendly again, so I was very terse and unfriendly in my responses. Seeing my reaction, he became upset (maybe even angry), and he suggested maybe it’s best if he finds other living arrangements for the spring.

    Today, he texts me he may have found someone who could take over his room if I am still willing to live in the living room. Seeing this, I am now conflicted because it’s setting in that I may never see him again and this whole thing has officially come to an end. Honestly, I do understand how he feels and I feel the same way. I have never been as close with anyone as I have been with him. He understands me and I can talk about anything with him. I could just settle for him, but we also have our issues, and I have my own issues that I feel I won’t be able to work on with him around. Am I right to go ahead and have this other person take over his lease despite feeling this way? Is it still possible to try to build a friendship?

    #372069
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Lilyana:

    Welcome to Tiny Buddha. Regarding your Posting on Tiny Buddha thread, I am a member here, just like you. I do know that not all posts are awaiting-moderation, just like you observed. The awaiting-moderation feature is an automatic feature that reacts to specific triggers, for example: if you copy material from another website into your post, it sometimes triggers this feature.

    Regarding forum guidelines, they are listed under Forums at the top of the page, click Forums and you will see them.

    Regarding this thread, you shared that your family “had a lot of issues”: your mother was depressed and attempted suicide, perhaps repeatedly (?), your father had anger problems, and your sister had mental disorders. During middle and high school, you were ostracized in school, and otherwise, you (and your family) were ostracized in your town as an immigrants who “didn’t look like any of the people who lived there”. As a result of all these severe experiences, you felt like “a sh** human being”, and you “used to bury a lot of sadness and anger”.

    For college, you moved out of home into the college dorms a plane flight away.  During college, you felt lost and didn’t have close friends, but you gradually “became more emotionally aware… began to uncover a lot of past grievances and long overdue anger and sadness”. In college,  you met your first boyfriend: “He was the first person to ever show unconditional love”, he was honest, he heard you and “responded to anything and everything” you talked about, he guided you “about right and wrong”, and he made you feel like you weren’t alone anymore.

    But at the same time, you felt too dependent on him, and being “an extremely ‘alpha’ person, he also tended to not always listen” to you, or take your opinion seriously, overshadowing you a lot.

    In Feb 2020, you and your boyfriend experienced the first, temporary break. A month later, you were “kicked out of dorms and sent home”. Once you went home, you “began to be bothered by some of the old issues that led” to that first break from your boyfriend, and you broke up with him fight before the summer break of 2020.

    At home, you were reminded of your childhood experience, and “problems began to arise”, you “became depressed… could barely function, couldn’t sleep, didn’t talk to anyone, didn’t go anywhere.. felt so empty”. You turned to alcohol to make yourself “feel something and to sleep”. You worked from home, having a summer job, and you tried online therapy, but “quit shortly due to lack of privacy at home and lack of connection to the therapists”.

    Two months after the breakup, in August 2020, you and your boyfriend got back together. You felt better and decided to move out of your parents’ home and live with him and some other friends for the Fall semester. The day before your flight there, you “froze up again” and decided against the plan. You broke up again and you “decided to stay home”.

    Throughout the Fall semester, the two of you talked on and off multiple times. When you didn’t talk to him, you became very depressed. You dropped many of your college commitment and classes and worried about graduating on time.

    Around November, you were somewhat back together, and you felt better,  but shortly after you started “having doubts again”. The two of you considered moving into a 2-bedroom place in February 2021, in time for the Spring semester- as roommates, you staying in the living room area, using a room divider for privacy. But recently, you were unfriendly to him and he “became upset (maybe even angry), and he suggested maybe it’s best if he finds other living arrangements for the spring”. Most recently, he texted you that he found someone to take over his room in the apartment, if you still want to live there.

    You asked: “Am I right to go ahead and have this other person take over his lease despite feeling this way? Is it still possible to try to build a friendship?”.

    It took me a couple of hours to process and put together your story, as I just did. It will take a further back and forth communication between us to get to a better understanding of your current situation (if you are interested, of course). For now, I would suggest the following five suggestions:

    1. I don’t think that you are ready at this time for a close friendship or a romantic relationship with your ex boyfriend (or with any other man), so I wouldn’t attempt a close friendship or a relationship with him, if I was you- not anytime very soon.

    2. If the roommate he found to replace him in the 2-bedroom place is to your liking, if it is someone who will respect your privacy and will keep a minimal, polite, and respectful, strictly- roommate relationship with you, then I would take on that opportunity. (It would be much better if you had your own room instead of sharing the living room).

    3. Make your academic studies your first priority.

    4. It is very important that you don’t live in your parents’ home again, make that a very high priority.

    5. You will need quality psychotherapy.

    * There is a question in my mind regarding your ex boyfriend. If you would like to, please elaborate and give specific examples about his behaviors in regard to being an “extremely ‘alpha’ person”, tending to not take your opinions seriously, and tending to overshadow you. Also, can you explain what you meant by him guiding you “about right and wrong”?

    anita

     

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