Home→Forums→Relationships→Struggling with "break up"
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January 15, 2019 at 7:23 am #274643BrianneParticipant
I found the Tiny Buddha website about 2 months ago and I am so grateful! This site has been a godsend and I rely on it several times a day in order to get my mind straight.
An old acquaintance and I met up at the end of the summer after not seeing one another for several years. He lives in NYC, which is about 3 hours away from me, and just got out of a long-term relationship. He was in town visiting family and we rekindled a physical relationship. There is an 8-year age difference between us, with him being younger. He was 21 and I was 29 when we first started hanging out. Our personalities couldn’t be more different. He is very materialistic while I’m the complete opposite. Despite these differences, we were always attracted to one another and felt very comfortable with each other. It got to the point though where we were so different (and he was so immature due to the age difference) that it was hard for me to spend any significant time with him. As a result we fell out of touch and he moved to NYC. His brother is married to my sister’s friend so I would receive occasional updates on how he was doing but hadn’t talked to him until we reconnected this summer. He made it clear that he didn’t want anything serious because he just got out of a 4-year relationship. I was completely on board with that until he started to kick things up a notch. We would talk every day and he would constantly compliment me and tell me how much he missed me. This attention made me feel things I hadn’t felt in years, and despite some red flags I allowed myself to be more open and vulnerable than I usually allow myself to be. It even got to the point where he mentioned me going back on birth control so we could be more intimate with each other. To me, that really kicked things up a notch. Whenever he would come home to visit his time would be very limited with me because he had family to spend time with. As a compromise I told him I could travel to see him in NYC in November, once work quieted down for me. He appeared excited about that and told me he would contact me to make plans, but never did. As each day passed, I felt him slipping more and more away and because I’m codependent I pulled out all of the stops to try and steer things back in a positive direction. When we did talk he would be either completely disengaged (leaving me disheartened) or all in (telling my how much he missed me,which thrilled me). It got exhausting dealing with the back and forth, hearing his excuses and not knowing where I stood with him. If he reaches out to me and doesn’t hear back right away, he’ll send a barrage of texts to see what I’m doing. However, I’ll text him, see that he read it via iPhone notifications but sometimes will take hours and even a day to respond. This weekend he pulled the same thing and when I mentioned it to him he said he left his phone at home all day despite the fact that I saw him active on social media throughout the day.
This weekend was my birthday and I went out to celebrate with friends. I drank a little more than I should of and got emotional when he started to text “the most beautiful girl” on her birthday. I eventually unloaded and told him I feel like he doesn’t want me anymore and he disagreed saying we talk every day (not true) and he doesn’t know why I say such negative things. All of the things I’ve been feeling over the past 2 months and bottled up came spilling out. The next day I woke up with regret that I came clean to him while I was in that condition and not at the time when I was sober. I texted him a genuine apology. I owned up to my part and didn’t feel it was right to call him out at that time but need to be more open and honest as I’m feeling these types of emotions. Again, I saw that he read the message but he hasn’t responded. It’s been two days. Yesterday I felt confident in how I responded to him – I owned up to what I felt I did wrong and tried to make it right. The fact that he hasn’t acknowledged or responded to my outreach tells me all I need to know about him. However, today is a different story. I woke up this morning feeling like I totally screwed this up with him. I know deep down that’s not true. This relationship would never work out for the simple facts that he will not compromise, he’s too self involved, says things he knows I want to hear with no intention of following through, etc. However, I still feel like I’m the one who screwed up. The codependent person in me wants to reach out and apologize profusely, but thankfully the rational person in me is prevailing. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve felt terrible as a result of his behavior (and for me allowing it to happen) but there is a part of me today that is clinging to the person he was in the beginning. He was so engaged, couldn’t wait to see me, etc. That person is gone and I constantly question what I did to cause this to change.
I apologize for the lengthy explanation. My therapist has been out of work and recovering from surgery for the past 2 months. I talk to my friends about this often, but feel like they’ve heard enough. I go to CODA meetings and journal frequently but really need another outlet and felt this would be a good start. Thank you all for listening and for any feedback you may have <3
January 15, 2019 at 8:26 am #274689AnonymousGuestDear Brianne:
“He made it clear that he didn’t want anything serious because he just got out of a 4- year relationship”- meaning he didn’t want an exclusive bf/gf relationship with anyone.
Then “he started to kick things up a notch”, talking ever day, complimenting you a lot, telling you how much he missed you, and suggesting you go back on birth control so that the two of you can experience more intimacy. The latter, for you, “really kicked things up a notch”-
You figured that these behaviors, things he said meant that he is interested in moving the relationship with you toward exclusivity. I think that these behaviors indicate his style of interacting with women, not an interest in an exclusive bf/gf relationship.
He probably compliments a number of women within a period of a day or a week, telling each one he misses her, etc. It doesn’t mean he is lying. He probably feels this way toward you at one time and toward another woman at another time.
You suggested to travel to NYC to visit him, and he “appeared excited” and said he’ll contact you and make plans for your visit. He probably was excited about your suggested visit, then calmed down, got distracted by something else or someone else and forgot or lost the motivation to contacted you.
When you talked “he would be either completely disengaged”- maybe checking social media, distracted by something else or someone else, “or all in (telling me how much he missed me..”- that’s when he was not distracted.
Reads to me that he has been multi tasking, communicating with a number of women at the same time, so when he reached out to you and was focused on your lack of response, he sent you “a barrage of texts to see what I’m doing”. But then you texted him and he knew you did and did not respond for hours and even a day, because he was otherwise engaged, multi tasking.
His message for your birthday, to “the most beautiful girl” is in line with his Style. A style you mistook for an indication that he is moving toward an exclusive relationship with you.
Do you agree with my understanding?
anita
January 15, 2019 at 8:49 pm #274823GLParticipantDear Brianne,
I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but this guy is clearly stringing you along and you are choosing to be an active participant.
From the time you regained contact to the point of the physical relationship, he told you out right that he didn’t want an intimate, exclusive relationship. You conceded to that, but still chose to keep in contact with him. Then as he kicked things up, you started to dive deeper into this ‘friends with benefits’ relationship. You chose to fall even when your intuition warned you that it would end badly. And it probably became a game for him, a game to see how long you’ll stay as long as he continued to deliver words of sweet nothings to you on a basis that would keep you hook. As you continued to let yourself stay hook, you eventually put him on a pedestal of ‘in due course, a boyfriend’ but remember, he told you from the beginning that he did not want a serious relationship and you agreed to those terms. And the terms is friends with benefits with no serious commitment in the future.
So the best course of action right now would be to end this ‘friends with benefits’ relationship since you clearly desire a serious relationship, but this ‘friend’ is not going to be the one who will commit to it. He does not really care for you, he cares about this fishing game. He has chosen to look at this relationship with you as a way to pass time because you chose to let him see you, the other person, as someone available and waiting for him to commit or at least text you back to let you know that he is still thinking of you, if only for a few minutes. You let yourself wait for him, wait for him to finally come around, but how long will he make you wait? And how long will you be waiting?
The thing is, you didn’t advocate for yourself, you didn’t advocate for what you want, which is a serious relationship with this person who you knew briefly a few years back. But people change and you can only know the present person. No matter what you might think, you are not responsible for anyone’s actions, but your own. You also need to set down boundaries. When you set down boundaries for what you will or will not do, will the voice that tells you ‘that’s as good as it gets’ will be irrelevant, will seem illogical and very unkind to the present you. And you’ll be able to tell that voice that you don’t have to obediently do what it tells you to do because you will not cross your own boundaries. You’ve set down those boundaries for yourself as an act of self care and you will not cross them nor let anyone else cross them.
You need to find ways to put value into yourself than the relationship with this person who only remember to text you when he deign it not a waste of his time. You need to learn to care for yourself first and foremost than to look for someone to ‘take care’ of your heart for you.
Good luck.
January 16, 2019 at 12:18 am #274833MarkParticipantBrianne,
I woke up this morning feeling like I totally screwed this up with him. I know deep down that’s not true. This relationship would never work out for the simple facts that he will not compromise, he’s too self involved, says things he knows I want to hear with no intention of following through, etc.
You are your own best therapist if you re-read what you wrote.
I assume that co-dependents need others for validation. Validate yourself by accepting what you observed.
Mark
January 17, 2019 at 7:02 am #275099BrianneParticipantThank you everyone for your feedback and input. I’ve read through everything carefully and made the decision to move on. I ended things with him yesterday and while he was not happy about it, I know I need to stick to my belief that I deserve so much better than this.
January 17, 2019 at 10:09 am #275149AnonymousGuestYou are welcome, Brianne. Reads like you made a wise decision for yourself, congratulations! Post again anytime you’d like.
anita
January 17, 2019 at 12:01 pm #275187BrianneParticipantThank you, Anita. I’ve gone through some up and down emotions (as I expect to) as a result, but I know deep down this is the best course for me. Above all else, I need to practice self love (which I’ve never been very good at) and know this is the first step in that process. I’m sure I’ll be checking in again soon. Thank you for your the support <3
January 17, 2019 at 12:11 pm #275191AnonymousGuestDear Brianne:
You are welcome. I am curious about the specifics of your “practice (of) self love”. Post again today, tomorrow, a week or even month from now, anytime you want to and I will be glad to reply.
anita
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