Well Honestly Now

January 12, 2010

Why Can’t I Break Free?

Filed under: Advice — Tags: , , — Wendie @ 11:34 am

~YOUR THOUGHTS

I’m glad to see that WHN is running again. I’ve thought about asking for your advice for quite a while now. When the idea first occurred to me, I was still in a relationship. A relationship I was unhappy with, with a person that I had and still have a deep connection with, but where love had given way to friendship, and passion really was never that much involved anyway. So after four years I ended it. One and a half of those years I was unhappy, but I didn’t know how to get out of it, how I could hurt somebody so badly that still meant so much to me and of whom I knew how much he loved me. I was able to end it and not to drag things out even longer in no small part because of somebody that I met.

He was only there for a few months, so whatever it was that was between us had a limited timeframe right from the start. At the beginning, it was harmless, I knew I didn’t want a new relationship, but he gave me so much of what I had been missing during my relationship. The
fighting was as fierce as was the sex. And while certainly not being the reason for the end of the relationship, he was a catalyst that enabled me to finally take that step that I had been unable to previously. If one could plan everything in life, including ones emotions, him leaving for another continent three weeks ago should have been a necessary end to something that was incredibly good and helpful at some point, but really had absolutely no future. But as life goes, things don’t always go as planned, and out of physical closeness comes more closeness. And perhaps it was exactly because I knew of the limited timeframe, I didn’t really watch out, wasn’t guarded enough, and feelings sneaked up. And now he’s gone and I’m hurting. We still have contact, sometimes more emotional sometimes less, sometimes more guarded sometimes less. We both don’t want to have a long distance relationship, we both miss each other and we both keep dragging this thing out, both keep
playing games of trying to establish distance, and then sometimes not being able to. The funny thing is that if a friend would tell me this story, I knew exactly what kind of advice to give: if he is hurting you, cut contact, let go and move on. Because just as is the case with closeness, out of distance comes more distance. I was hurting so badly at one point with him being ambiguous in his statements and actions that I actually followed my own advice for once and cut contact. And while it hurt at first, it really started to get better, and I thought I was getting over it. But then he re-established contact, and I haven’t been able to be as consequent as the last time since. My real problem is that while rationally I don’t want a relationship, and I don’t think its healthy to keep hanging onto this, and I know he doesn’t want anything serious under these circumstances either, emotionally, I can’t help but wanting him to fight. Fight for me, fight for a relationsh
ip that can’t be, fight for giving us a chance. It’s like secretly I’m hanging on because I’m waiting for him to give me a reason to throw sense out of the window and give it a shot even though it would be incredibly stupid. So I guess the question to this very long-winded story (I’m sorry for that!) is whether I should just cut contact now once and for all, or just let it go on and hope it will come to a natural end as time goes by? And most of all, where did the strong me go?

~MY THOUGHTS

There will be no natural end to this type of relationship.  It is one that I am very familiar with.  Make no mistake about it, drama is addictive.  It’s a fix.  Because even though it is painful and excruciating, in the moments that he leads you to believe that he wants to be with you (that ambiguity that you spoke of), you feel like he cares.  Who doesn’t want to feel that someone cares about them?   Not to get all Cheap Trick on you, but you want him to want you.

Your need to feel loved is normal.  The way in which  you are seeking that feeling isn’t healthy.  In the framework of a functional, mutually respectful friendship or relationship, you will feel safe, secure, loved without all the drama.  I promise you this:  If you can manage to break free of this endlessly dramatic dichotomy, you will realize just how emotionally exhausting it is.  You wonder where your strength is; it is being depleted by this ridiculous dynamic.  You need real distance.

FAT FREE VERSION:  NO CONTACT!

August 1, 2009

Advice Needed: Should I Pursue This?

Filed under: Advice, Uncategorized, relationships — Tags: , , — Wendie @ 11:22 pm

~YOUR THOUGHTS~

I’ll try to break my situation down so that it doesn’t end up resembling a novel.
I’m 23 years old, single, in college, living with my parents and a very annoying grandmother.
For the past six or seven years I have had a crush (although, I think it doesn’t qualify as a crush after such a long time…) on a guy that works at a restaurant where my mom used to work. He is three years older than me and I have, on a certain level, always known that nothing will ever happen between us because he’s been with the same girlfriend ever since I met him.
We never met outside of that restaurant, and even there, we never talked about anything except stupid trivial chit-chat, since my mom was always there. However, we texted each other on a daily basis, I could tell him stuff I told nobody else – he was like my diary in a way… Well, a couple of months ago, his girlfriend broke up with him, and I was the first person he contacted after it happened. Am I selfish and self-centered and stupid if I think that he did that because he too has feelings for me? Anyway, I thought that. I was nothing but supportive and our texting became even more frequent, and we started making plans to meet up for coffee. Then my dad ended up in a hospital, and I got a temp job, and my free time was pretty much minimum. He really wanted to have coffee, but I was never free, and after a while he stopped asking. He stopped everything. I texted him to ask if he was mad at me or what, and he said he’s broke, because the boss hadn’t given them their paycheck for two months, so he can’t pay his phone bill. He even asked me to lend him some money, but I still pretty much depend on my parents and I didn’t have that kind of money. He has been silent ever since, and last night I just felt so extremely lonely and I texted him. I asked him to please talk to me, and I said I missed my favorite person to chat with. Am I stupid? Should I just try and forget him? I have given this silly infatuation six years already and it’s not easy to forget. But in that six years, no other guy even came close to him. Well, except for one, but, naturally, he has a girlfriend. I tend to fall for guys with girlfriends. What do I do?
Thanks for listening (it did turn out to be a novel).

~MY THOUGHTS~

First and foremost, I don’t think you are selfish, self-centered or stupid.  You obviously like this guy and have liked him for a long time.  He’s single and you want to know if there’s opportunity here.  That’s a pretty normal human reaction.  I have concerns about this guy, though.

He just got out of a very long-term relationship and you were the first person he contacted.  Quite honestly, he’s not ready for a relationship after just coming off of such a major one.  And since you have had feelings for this guy for so long, would you really be willing to settle for being the rebound girl?

Also, it troubles me that a man that you don’t know outside of  the restaurant connection asked to borrow money from you. It’s inappropriate and I think it speaks a bit to his character.  

So, what do you do?  The decision is yours, obviously.  To me, it doesn’t sound like this man is in the right place to fully participate in a reciprocal relationship.  He’s been in a relationship for all of his twenties –he should want to explore this new-found freedom — and after a period of silence he asked you for a loan.  

If you do choose to pursue this, I suggest that you clearly indicate a specific desire to get together for dinner (drinks, a movie, whatever) and see how he responds. 

As an aside, you said something telling in your note to me.  ”I tend to fall for guys with girlfriends.”  Many times, when someone is afraid of being hurt or committing, they purposely choose people who are physically or emotionally unavailable.  It may not feel like a conscious decision, but there is a pattern of behavior — choosing situations that are destined to fail — that you may want to examine.  It’s something to think about.

FAT FREE VERSION:  Choose situations that benefit you, Never settle for being the rebound.

July 5, 2009

Advice Needed: How To Get Over A Break Up

Filed under: Advice, Uncategorized, relationships — Tags: , , , — Wendie @ 7:37 pm

~YOUR THOUGHTS~

Here’s the deal. I got dumped. After two years together, he said he just didn’t love me anymore/didn’t see a future with me. I’m not angry, really at all – I can’t fault him for not feeling it, and I can’t love him enough for the both of us.

But it hurts. It just hurts SO much. And I can’t seem to push through this pain. I keep bursting into fits of tears and I have no appetite. I feel… well… brokenhearted, and I hate it. Do you have any tips on getting over a break up?

~MY THOUGHTS~

The break up you are going through is one of the worst because it’s not like there was some flaw or deficiency in him — other than him having the unmitigated gall to not love you enough — for you to focus on now.

And, my friend, there are no quick fixes here.  Logic will tell you that you are better off.  We all deserve to be loved and loved deeply.  I think you probably know that, but it doesn’t help when you’re just in the pain. 

I think many people often make the mistake of trying to “get better” too quickly.  I don’t suggest that you stay stuck in the brokenheartedness, but it’s certainly okay to feel it and experience it.  I’ve often said that the only way past a broken heart is through it.  You don’t say how long ago this break up happened, but you need to cry and play completely depressing music and eat Cheetos for dinner and feel all that loss.  It’s the death of a dream and you need to acknowledge that.  Whatever you do, don’t have a rebound. 

Now, what to do when you are stuck in the grief:  Write a plan of what you want your life to look like.  List positive actions you need to take to achieve that picture.  If none of that works, get counseling if you are crying and not sleeping.

Have you ever had a really bad injury?  In the moment, and for the weeks directly afterward, it seems like your wound will never heal.  And you don’t even realize that you’re getting a little better every day until one day you realize that there is a marked improvement in your level of pain.  The process of healing a broken heart is very similar.  You won’t feel the progress until you have some distance on it.

FAT-FREE VERSION:  Allow the grief, Accept the reality, Don’t be afraid to ask for help.

June 14, 2009

Listen To Your Brain. It Knows What It’s Talking About

Not just with the advice questions that I receive, but in real life and with friends and on television dramas, there is this unrealistic expectation about love.  There exists these romanticized versions of what love can do.  Love conquers all.  All we need is love.  Love can weather any storm.  Unconditional love.  Honestly?  Bullshit.

Love is an emotion.  It can be all-consuming and override logic and values and common sense.  It’s so commanding.  But it’s just a feeling.  Why do we give it such authority that it really shouldn’t have?

I’ve loved and loved hard.  But love never meant I had to stay.  It can’t be the decision-maker.  I can’t give it that power.  I have to ignore my heart when choices need to be made.  My heart is tricky, and manipulative and rarely lucid.  My mind is where all the truths that I hold truly live.  Oh, how I’ve tried to silence the brain because I’ve preferred what the heart was saying.

Love, given to another — children excluded — can’t really do anything.  It can’t fix stuff.  No matter how strong I’ve loved, it didn’t sober up the user, it didn’t motivate the slacker.  The cheaters still strayed and the abusers still hit.  I learned that intensifying my level and actions of love didn’t result in the betterment of its recipient.  The truly healthy person accepts the normal, healthy serving of love I have to give.  It’s enough.

It’s so funny.  In my past, I spent so much time trying to love people right, love them the way they needed, yet put no energy into loving myself.  Why do we humans spend so much time and effort on loving others and so little on loving ourselves?

June 13, 2009

Indecision Is A Decision

Filed under: relationships — Tags: , , — Wendie @ 12:00 pm

Have I talked about the one time I broke my cardinal dating rule?  I think I have but this fuckwit is worth mentioning again.

I don’t reconcile.  If I’m in a relationship and it ends, that’s it for me.  If I feel strongly enough to terminate a relationship, or he feels strongly enough to terminate me — though let’s be honest, that never really happened all that often — I refuse to do the “get back together” thing.  It’s a rare day and a rarer person who makes grandiose change.  I think we can certainly improve parts of ourselves but the core parts of each of us are fairly hard-wired.  So revisiting the same person, with the same incompatibilities and circumstances never made much sense to me.

Anyway, there was one relationship that I was involved in and then it ended.  Not badly, just did.  And then the “I miss you” emails and phone calls started.  My pride was wounded over being dumped the first time, so I think on some level, I decided to do the reunited thing so I didn’t feel like the loser.  I needed to regain some footing — I’m very competitive.  We did get back together and date for a year.  Then he broke up with me again.  On voicemail.  And boy, did he try and take back that little tantrum phone message.

But I didn’t go back, ever again.  Because this is the thing:  Indecision is a decision.  He was never sure about me.  About us.  If he wanted to commit.  If he wanted to marry.  There was always this lingering suspicious thing he struggled with.  He was jaded and wounded and formerly betrayed.  Not.  My.  Problem.

Indecision isn’t “Yes.”  Indecision is “I don’t know.”  Indecision is “No.”  So whether someone in your life is struggling about the status of the two of you, or if you are struggling with a decision that you need to make, remember that indecision exists for a reason.  It protects us, cautions us, and it prevents us from saying “Yes.”  Think about it.

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