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How to say goobye

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  • #209069
    Nairobi
    Participant

    Me and my boyfriend have been together for 6 years. We met when I was 19 and he was 23. We live in different cities, but from the beginning he pursued me, saying that it didn’t matter and that we could make it work. We love each other very very much. Whenever we are together we have so much fun, we make each other laugh and we connect. We have grown together. He has been my first everything and the most important person in my life. During all these years it has never been easy. There have been many times when it felt like the bad times almost outweighed the good times. We saw each other one weekend a month and I always felt like I wanted more, and that two days a month were not enough for me. I progresively became angry and frustrated that this was never goint to change, and so we begun fighting quite a lot, but whenever we were together none of this mattered. I had many doubts as to what I wanted. I felt like although I loved him -or perhapd because I did and we had such definite plans- I was losing my window of opportunity to meet other people and experiment. I have always had doubts about whether I was going to regret not being on my own and knowing what else there is. Many times I went to see him thinking about asking him to take a break, but whenever I was with him I forgot about this because I was reminded that being with him made me happy.
    Event though I am convinced the love we share is true, it has gotten to the point where we no longer want the same things and don’t know how to make it work. He has become increasingly religious and does not want to live together, and I need to experience being with each other on a daily basis before taking a huge step such as marriage. We have talked about moving, but in the end it seems we are just not able to compromise on something that would work for both. He has a family business he doesn’t want to leave, and a very absorbing family and group of friends (also religious) who tell him I’m not right for him. This has caused many arguments in the last year, because we have both begun to work and truly step into adulthood and I guess we’ve evolved in different ways. I feel like he has let everyone else’s opinions cloud his mind and he is no longer sure of how he feels. I’m also not sure of how I feel. I know that I love him, but I also know that my doubts are still here.

    I am so afraid that if we end it, if we take some time appart, we will never find each other again. I don’t know what to do. Right now he says he needs time to find himself and get back to who he used to be. That all of our arguments have changed him and that he needs to think. Suddenly, the panick I feel when I think of losing him has made me forget that I have doubts of my own. I’m afraid we’re making a mistake, that if we truly love each other, we might lose something that could have made us very happy and never get it back. At this point, I’m also disappointed. While I had my doubts (never about loving him, but about my lack of experience), he has always told me that he was completely sure that I was the best thing that had ever happened to him, that he wanted to marry me and be with me forever. Now it seems that while I’m resisting to let this break up happen, he has just given up. How can he love me the way he says he does and not fight for us? I am so confused about what to do. Please help.

    #209205
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nairobi:

    You had very good times with him in the past, but that was only two days per month, correct? Most of the time you were miserable and as you said, the bad times outweighed the good times, overall.

    And now things have gotten worse, he has his religion, a close friend circle that thinks you are bad for him, a family business, an absorbing family.. there is less and less of him, for you.

    To top all this, he now needs time to find himself which means he is no longer sure about you.

    Reads to me that logic points to ending this relationship. Your emotional attachment to him is strong though and has its own logic. In it there are the hopes and dreams that you had for so long, for the two of you.

    As strong as the attachment you feel for him, it doesn’t have to stop you from doing the right thing for yourself, which I believe is to day goodbye (in the title of your thread).

    anita

    #209275
    Michelle
    Participant

    Anita – I just wanted to say how beautiful (and right) this line is.  So many people don’t realize this. Your advice transcends just the people you are replying to in the the thread and has helped me (and many others) over the time I’ve been reading TinyBuddha.

    As strong as the attachment you feel for him, it doesn’t have to stop you from doing the right thing for yourself,

    #209299
    Nairobi
    Participant

    I understand that, and I know that he is not acting they way he should at the moment. He is not communicating with me -essentially ghosting me- and he is not treating me with the respect I deserve after all these years. I know he is afraid and he would rather just leave and not have this conversation if that means avoiding conflict, but if he is going to end a 6 year old relationship then I think we deserve to have a face to face last conversation. We have been through so much, all this waiting for a future where we could be together, and now he’s giving up.

    I’m so angry that he is not being brave enough to deal with this the way he should. Even now, when I’m the one who had all these doubts, I’m willing to fight to make it work and he is just giving up.

    #209315
    Anonymous
    Guest

    * Dear Michelle: your note means a lot to me, how kind of you to post it.  Thank you!

    Dear Nairobi:

    You mentioned being angry in your recent post (“I’m so angry”). I re-read your original post. You wrote there: “I progressively became angry.. and so we begun fighting quite a lot… many arguments in the last year” And later, you wrote that he told you “that all of our arguments have changed him and he needs to think”.

    You wrote: “he has always told me that he was completely sure that I was the best thing that had ever happened to him… now … he has just given up. How can he love me the way he says he does and not fight for us?”

    My answer: he did fight. All those arguments in the last year, so many, he argued back. He fought and reconciled, then fought again. Then he got tired, didn’t want to fight anymore.

    In your recent post you wrote: “I know he is afraid and he would rather just leave and not have this conversation if that means avoiding conflict”- but he did not “just leave” and he did not avoided conflict all through the many arguments the two of you had.

    anita

     

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