Home→Forums→Relationships→It's been a while and I can't seem to let go
- This topic has 8 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 7 months ago by Anonymous.
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April 2, 2018 at 5:40 pm #200611Tiny BuddhaParticipant
I was with my now-ex-boyfriend for about 6 months. I can admit the relationship moved quickly. He pushed a lot of things on me…meeting his family, meeting my family, going on our first trip away together…all in the span of 6 months, I have to be honest I was never really ready for any of it. But, I did it anyways because I saw potential in him. That wasn’t the worst part though, he was extremely emotionally abusive, controlling, and manipulative. He started telling me what to wear, who to be friends with, and when I was allowed to go see my family. At first, I refused. It was unreasonable…how can someone say they love and trust me but control me like this. But I wanted us to work so bad because when we talked about the future, it seemed so perfect, that if I made it through this storm, we can hold this future together. So I listened to him. I did everything he said, I let him hold everything against me, I let him make me cry almost every weekend. In a sense, I let him tear me down piece by piece to let him build me up again. I lost myself trying to love him and I hold it against myself everyday. I realized the relationship was toxic. We fought every week leading up to almost every other day near the end of the relationship. We fought about absolutely nothing but it always lead to someone crying and no resolution, we would just pretend it never happened so the fights just built up over time. He couldn’t let the small things go, instead of working on the present fight, he’d bring up past fights. I did most of the apologizing by the way, I wasn’t even sure what I was apologizing about but again, I wanted us to work so bad I couldn’t see that I was only enabling him.
So coming to the realization that the relationship was beyond the issues he had with me, I had to leave him. It has been about 3 months since we’ve broken up and I can’t stop thinking about him. I realized all the things he’s done to me, but when I’m sitting alone in my bed, I just can’t help but picture his face in the pillow next to mine. I can’t stop thinking about our good times or how good we were when times were good. I could tell how broken he was when I left him but I recently just talked to him for the first time in a while and it seems like he’s doing a lot better than I am. I don’t know why it’s taking so long to get over him. He treated me like absolute garbage and I gave him everything I had.
I just want to know…what am I doing wrong? How can I get over him?
April 3, 2018 at 4:12 am #200645AnonymousGuestDear Tiny Buddha:
You are emotionally attached to this man, missing him, missing the good times you had with him. This is natural and understandable, happens when a relationship ends and there is no other that replaced it.
Your ex boyfriend, you wrote, “pushed a lot of things on (you)… was extremely emotionally abusive, controlling, and manipulative…make (you) cry almost every weekend…tear (you) down piece by piece… toxic..fought… crying and no resolution… treated me like absolute garbage”
And yet you miss him. I suppose at times he didn’t treat you like absolute garbage. At times you were not crying, not fighting.
In the relationship was there anything you said or did wrong to him, or was all wrong done by him?
anita
April 3, 2018 at 4:17 am #200647AireneParticipantHello Tiny Buddha,
You ask how you can get over your ex-boyfriend. The boyfriend who – in your words – treated you like absolute garbage and who – also in your words – was extremely emotionally abusive, controlling and manipulative. If this was a friend talking to you, what would you tell her?
I would start to focus on YOU and take care of yourself. Eat right. Get enough sleep. Accept that this sucks and set small goals for yourself. Also think about doing something you have always wanted to, but keep putting off. It can be something simple, and you can start with small steps. And don’t beat yourself up if it fails. Keep going until you find something that helps you feel happy and at peace. And it needs to be constructive, not destructive (like, alcohol, drugs, etc.).
When events in your life are out of your control, doing something over which you have complete control can help you find your balance.
Airene
April 3, 2018 at 4:54 am #200653JasonParticipant+1 for all of stuff written above.
You can’t love someone if you do not love yourself first. Moreover, the only person that can truly look after yourself is indeed yourself. So focus on yourself – caring and developing and self-growth would be worthwhile to look into to and while getting over him.
As for dealing with toxicity, learn to stand up for yourself and that you don’t need to deal with anyone’s crap. Walk away- respect yourself enough to not be treated like that or abused.
The answer is in yourself, not anyone or anywhere else.
April 3, 2018 at 5:46 am #200665InkyParticipantHi Tiny Budda,
A great quote is: “Life gets easier when you learn to accept an apology you’ll never get”.
Part of the problem is he’s done you wrong, and never apologized for it. And worse, he got away with not even recognizing he did bad by you! That’s why he looks like he’s handling the breakup better than you when you saw him! He got to skate away guilt free while you’re still tormented!
When asked about the breakup, turn the script around. Leave out the part where you were an apologetic victim. Say, “He tried to be abusive but I dumped his azz so fast he’ll never try THAT crap again!” Post that great quote (first sentence above) on your social media for the world to see. Then post a picture of you looking amazing, feeling amazing, with amazing people in an amazing place.
Never Again!
Inky
- This reply was modified 6 years, 7 months ago by Inky.
April 3, 2018 at 12:00 pm #200717Tiny BuddhaParticipantHey Anita,
I’m not going to say that I was the perfect one in the relationship but I’ve never given him a reason to treat me like he did. He did a lot of things that made it evident that he had some sort of insecurities he was dealing with. I always took measures to make him feel less insecure. For example, he hated when guys looked at me and would blame it on the clothes I wore, which were actually not revealing at all. But I went to the extent of changing what I wore and even stopped talking to all my guy friends. I felt like in a sense I was enabling him to control me… To be honest, when I did start a fight it would be because he would say mean things to me or if he was being too controlling but other than that I’m a pretty laid back person and I stay away from conflict as much as possible. I’m just not sure what I did wrong…
April 4, 2018 at 4:37 am #200795AnonymousGuestDear Tiny Buddha:
In your original post you wrote: “I just want to know…what am I doing wrong? How can I get over him?”
I suggest looking at the relationship more like it really was.
You wrote about your ex boyfriend: “he was extremely emotionally abusive” and “He treated me like absolute garbage”. Emotional abuse and garbage are expressions that are strong enough. You added extreme (extremely emotionally abusive) to the first and absolute (absolute garbage) to the second.
Where are the examples of these behaviors on his part. The only specific behaviors on his part that you shared about are: “He started telling me what to wear, who to be friends with, and when I was allowed to see my family… he hated when guys looked at me and would blame it on the clothes I wore”
These behaviors are not necessarily abusive at all. They may be, if when displeased he screamed and yelled at you, calling you names, and such. But if he didn’t yell at you and so forth, it may not even be controlling behavior on his part at all. For example: maybe when he suggested you don’t see certain friends or family members, or not as much, because you complained about them a lot, because he believed spending time with them was hurting you. That wouldn’t be controlling.
What I read from you is perhaps a retroactive demonizing of your ex boyfriend and the relationship. Whenever we don’t see things as they were, we suffer.
anita
April 4, 2018 at 7:51 am #200809Tiny BuddhaParticipantHey Anita,
I wish it was because I was complaining about them too much. But no, my family hated him because they saw the way he treated me and although they never pushed me to leave him, he knew that they disapproved. So he wanted me to cut them off to prove my love to him, that he was the only person I needed in my life. As for my friends, who are really good people, he always thought they were ‘bad influences,’ as he would say. For the record, he didn’t really hang out with anyone and I definitely had a larger network of friends.
For the controlling and manipulative example, he would always pin it on me when he didn’t get his way. I had 2 friend who I’ve known for over 3 years, he has yet to meet them but he insisted I cut them off. I reasoned with him for as long as I could until I was crying and tired and realized there was never going to be a solution where we both compromise because he said ‘I didn’t love him enough to cut them off and that he wanted to be a priority in his life’. He always used that line against me and I always gave in.
I also told him about my past because he asked and I never wanted to lie to him but he couldn’t get over it. It wasn’t dark or anything to be honest but he just always used it as a reason to fight with me. He had to fight with me until I cried because I couldn’t take it anymore. It was non-stop name calling, during the fights and even when we weren’t fighting. He would subtly throw in the name calling so it didn’t sound ‘rude’ because he didn’t want to be ‘rude’ and also because he respected women (I laugh at this all the time).
There was a lot that happened in the relationship but I believe that I would need a whole year to go through every single detail but this is really just the jist of it.
Ps. for the record he forced me to stop exercising because ‘I didn’t need it’
April 4, 2018 at 8:16 am #200815AnonymousGuestDear Tiny Buddha:
If I understand correctly, what you are saying is that he wanted you to cut family members and friends out of your life even though he didn’t know them, never have met them, or if the met them, his reason was not that he believed they were harmful to you, not because of any concern on his part for your well-being, but solely because he wanted to be the only person of any importance in your life.
Your time and attention to others, or others’ attention to you threatened him. His sense of safety was in you having no one else but him in your life. He accused you that you don’t love him by having other people in your life and he expressed his invalid anger at you, and demanded that you … correct your unloving ways and, as you wrote: “prove my love to him, that he was the only person I needed in my life.”
Not only did he feel threatened by your present relationships but by your past relationships as well (“he couldn’t get over it”, your past, that is).
He wanted you to wear less revealing, or less attractive clothes and to stop exercising so that you don’t attract the attention of strangers.
What you are describing, if I understand correctly, is not him treating you like garbage, as you stated earlier. It is not him treating you like something of no value. He thought of you as someone very valuable to him, so much so that he wanted this very valuable person, you, all for himself. What you are describing is a pathology on his part. It is not reasonable to expect a girlfriend to cut off all her relationships so to prove her love, to make herself unattractive so to not attract anyone’s attention.
I suppose he never had a healthy relationship with a woman, not with you and not before you. I doubt any woman accommodated such an extreme demand on his part. Or that any woman ever will.
anita
April 5, 2018 at 8:13 am #200935IndiaParticipantIt doesn’t sound like you did anything wrong.
He sounds manipulative and troubled. He sounds emotionally unstable and very unhealthy for you and your emotional well being.
I agree with Anita above, it sounds like he may not have every experienced a healthy relationship and really messed it up because he didn’t know how to just be. To trust you, to encourage you, to accept you as you are. Those are a few things common to a healthy relationship. If you granted him those rights but he didn’t return them to you, it sounds to me like he’s emotionally unstable and unhealthy.
I relate to your story because I too dated a man who was emotionally damaged and unstable. I’m still trying to figure out what happened, what went wrong and why. I can’t get over it either. I’m grateful you wrote this and have reached out.
As for me and how I am dealing with it, I realize that I did not do anything wrong. I come from a very stable and emotionally healthy family, I’m not perfect but I try and do my best to be kind, considerate, supportive, honest, present, listen, and to simply be aware. I was honest and presented myself exactly as I am, I shared honestly about myself and that’s my bedrock. You have to believe in yourself. Don’t let who he thought you were, who he wanted you to be, and all the disturbing and manipulative things he did to you become you. It is clear to me that is not who you are at all. It’s clear to me he was very manipulative. You gave in, and now you have to build yourself back up. (I say that because that’s how I feel, I feel like I am repairing my self)
Perhaps you came to the relationship with different rules. Consider he’s just very damaged and doesn’t know how to be in a healthy, open, honest, supportive, and loving relationship. I believe everyone wants and deserves this but we also come to relationships with all we have, that’s it. I don’t think being with him was good for you. Hopefully you will take away being respectful to yourself is first, if that is violated then the relationship isn’t going to be healthy and you may want to consider leaving it or asking your partner why can’t he respect you and accept you for who you are. And, secondly, if he wants to, what can you and he do to be mutually respectful and supportive.
It sounds like you know who you are. You sound very stable, but have been severely shaken up and rocked by the changes you willingly made in hopes the relationship would flourish. Sadly it didn’t. That’s ok. It is something to learn from and become stronger for having gone through. Now you can recognize when someone is not accepting you for who you are, and hopefully you will not allow that to happen again.
For what this is worth, I can’t get my ex out of my mind either. The only way I know how to move on is to listen to my conscience, the still quiet and resilient voice deep inside. I write about it. I cry. I share with friends and we discuss it until they no longer want to. (thank you dear friends for listening and supporting me) And, I am hopeful that after having gone through this last relationship I will have gained knowledge to recognize when someone is respectful, honest, kind, supportive, and accepting and when they are not. It’s been a terribly painful experience, I am sorry for that.
May we both be stronger for having experienced these relationships. I also sincerely hope some of these words are helpful and supportive in your healing.
India
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