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The Fluid Process of Moving On

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  • #64807
    Ashley Arcel
    Participant

    Hi There,

    Four years ago, I met this beautiful, tall, blonde man in a college class at a university I had just transfered to. We became friends and something like a year later we began to date. Although we were hugely similar (he was and still is the only person I have ever met who I did not feel the need to explain myself to – so similar were we in our emotions and thought processes) and very much in love, we couldn’t ever figure out how to make the relationship work. (I wrote a personal blog post about this yesterday @ http://thegirlinlongshorts.wordpress.com/2014/09/11/a-goodbye-goes-a-long-way/) For three years, we dated, broke up, spent months in silence, got back together, functioned as friends, etc. There were many very high highs and many very low lows. It was a relationship built on intensity and ruined by immaturity. I’ve still never been able to figure out what made him run so hard from me but that was what killed us every time. He would draw very close, say beautiful things, propose future plans (at one point he propositioned marriage) and then he would panic – startled, maybe, by the intensity of his feelings or the fact that he felt ‘not ready’ and then he would run away from me. I would let him go and, without exception, he would come back a few weeks or months later and he would apologize (and, for the record, he was always sincere and eloquent in his apologies, this man is just deeply and personally terrified of commitment. Plus, he is obviously decently self-absorbed). And I would forgive him and we would get back together. And then the cycle would begin again. Throughout all of this, I loved him, but eventually I met someone who didn’t constantly flee from me and I began a relationship with him. It wasn’t as intense as my previous relationship and it took months to build the feelings that had been present with the other man from the beginning, but slowly and surely we built a very stable, positive life together. Throughout this time, the first man and I settled into a friendship. We would meet for coffee once every few months and talk via phone, text or email every couple of weeks. Recently, he took a job in another state and moved away and, for various reasons, that was the end of that.

    My struggle is this – I know he is not meant for me and I know him and his tenancies too well to ever truly want to be with him again but part of me is still deeply connected to him. I am happy in my life and I love my partner but there is something about a relationship like that that just leave a fill-in-his-name-here shaped hole in your heart. I like to compare him to some sort of meteorite who hurtled into my atmosphere, walloped my surface with the force of a 10,000 suns and then rebounded from the force. These things take time to move past. It has gotten better over the last few years and specifically since he has been gone but he is still present in my head and I wonder when, if ever, this will stop completely. Do you have a similar story? I’d love to hear it.

    Best,

    Ashley

    #64810
    Alana
    Participant

    I had to downgrade a best friend to a good friend because of a push-pull cycle. Mine was a friendship so it’s a bit different from romantic relationships.

    How do I describe her? Exciting, spontaneous and hilarious. Everyday we would talk on the phone and talk about ideas like making plans for trips, plans being roomies and even to open our own bakery.

    We would list things we wanted to do in the future like skydiving, dining and partying. I think the sad truth that I learnt was we were living in the realm of possibilities. It was much more exciting to do the planning versus carrying it out.
    A home made of glass is beautiful but fragile. Our relationship broke down when we decided to actually carry out the plans. The bakery opened since we never were able to finalize what our ideas on it, despite talking about it for months and months. I came to realize we were both two dreamers who escaping reality together through the same dream.

    Everytime we were close to finalizing the plan for the bakery, she would sabotage the plan by pointing every single flaw out. We had cycles of getting together to discuss which was always filled with laughter and then moments where she would remain distant and evasive to talk about it.

    I was upset about it but let it go because I realized she was communicating “no” plus the bakery was a huge commitment. Things got out of hand when I realized I was being constantly disappointed. Do you wanna go eat? Yes, but then no. Do you wanna to stop by the shoe store? Yes but then no.

    I am much more understanding now and have forgiven her because I also chose to agree with plans that probably were never gonna happen. I allowed it to keep happening and didn’t set limits because I understood she was struggling with “who” she was and “what” she wanted. I feel less angry knowing that I willingly kept making plans for I should have learnt my lesson.

    I was so in love with the picture we constructed of what we could have been that I blamed her by taking my anger on her and forcing the relationship to work in the way it could have been. I’ve forgiven much of it now and we are friends, just on a different level and with boundaries so I protect myself from further resentment. No more planning with her. Believe me, it wasn’t easy it was like I was addicted to her. Took ups and downs for me too realize this.

    Moving on is much easier when you know why feel like falling back into the same cycle. Understanding why he was so appealing to you and what emotional benefit you were getting from him is a step in rendering your the hole in your heart and such desires powerless. For me, I was looking for excitement to relieve my feelings of boredom for I was always the passive type of person, this in no way applies to you 😀

    Warmest Regards,
    Alana

    • This reply was modified 10 years, 3 months ago by Alana.
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