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August 11, 2025 at 9:25 am in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448453
anitaParticipantYou’re welcome, Adalie. I’m really glad you don’t regret it. It sounds like it held meaning for youâsomething real, even if it came with pain. You deserved to be encouraged, and I’m holding space for all that this stirred in you.
đ€ Anita
August 10, 2025 at 9:12 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448429
anitaParticipantAdalie, I hear how deeply this hurt has landed. And I want to gently name something: trusting someone isnât a flaw. Itâs not a weakness or a mistake. Itâs a reflection of your capacity to care, to hope, to connect. That capacity is still yours â even if someone mishandled it.
You didnât cause the harm by being open. The harm came from how he responded to your openness. That distinction matters.
You donât have to rewrite your story to make it your fault. Youâre allowed to grieve what was real for you, even if it wasnât real for him. And youâre allowed to receive kindness without owing anything in return.
đ€ đ€ đ€ Anita
August 10, 2025 at 7:08 pm in reply to: Feeling Like Iâm Reliving My College Loneliness at Work #448426
anitaParticipantYou are welcome, Miss L Dutchess. I hope things change for you.. deeper, genuine connections with others!
đ€ Anita
August 10, 2025 at 7:01 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448425
anitaParticipantYes, Adalie- seems like this isn’t it, and I fully understand that you would want something else đ©”
August 10, 2025 at 11:28 am in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448421
anitaParticipantAdalie, I hear the tenderness in what you shared â the ache of not knowing, the significance of Jakeâs encouragement, and the meaning youâve found in the details surrounding the firearm. Itâs clear that moment carried weight for you, and I can feel how deeply youâve held onto it.
I wonder if, when you feel ready, it might be possible to gently shift your focus â away from Jake, and toward practical steps that support your healing and clarity within your marriage to Vince.
đ€ Anita
August 10, 2025 at 9:35 am in reply to: Feeling Like Iâm Reliving My College Loneliness at Work #448419
anitaParticipantHi MissLDutchess,
What you went through in college with your roommate, your RA, and your fiancĂ© was deeply unfair. You were trying to build a life, and instead you were stuck in situations that made you feel unsafe and alone. That kind of experience doesnât just fade â it leaves a mark.
It makes sense that your current work situation brings some of those feelings back. Iâm really glad your supervisor stepped in this time â thatâs a small but important shift. You deserved that kind of support back then, too.
Youâve worked hard to build a life that reflects who you are. Youâve tried apps, events, classes, volunteering â all while commuting and working in a space where youâre the youngest by far. Thatâs a lot of effort, and it shows how much you care about connection.
Itâs okay to feel tired. Itâs okay to feel bitter about the past. And itâs okay to want something deeper than surface-level friendships. Wanting real connection doesnât make you picky â it makes you honest.
You havenât failed. Youâve been navigating a world that doesnât always make space for quiet, thoughtful people â especially those with NVLD, who often feel misunderstood. But your voice is clear, your heart is open, and youâre still reaching. That matters.
I believe the right people will come â not because you force it, but because you keep showing up as yourself. And that self is worth knowing.
Warmly, Anita
August 10, 2025 at 9:16 am in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448418
anitaParticipantAdalie, I became aware of your most recent post after I completed the reply above.
It makes sense that youâre trying to understand Vinceâs behavior through the lens of mental health. Whether itâs bipolar disorder, DID, or something else entirely, what youâre describing â the emotional highs and lows, the cycles of cruelty and apology â is less about diagnosis and more about impact. And the impact on you has been destabilizing, exhausting, and deeply confusing.
Itâs not your job to diagnose or fix him. What matters most is how you feel in the relationship, and whether your emotional safety and stability are being honored.
As for Jake â itâs okay that heâs both a âlessonâ and a âwhat if.â Sometimes people enter our lives not to stay, but to show us whatâs possible. Jake reminded you what tenderness feels like. What encouragement feels like. What itâs like to be seen and supported without being controlled. Thatâs not trivial â thatâs a glimpse of the kind of emotional landscape you deserve.
You said you really like Jake. That feeling matters. Even if heâs not ready, even if it doesnât turn into something lasting, the way you felt around him is telling. Itâs emotional truth.
Youâre allowed to want something different. Youâre allowed to question what youâve been living. And youâre allowed to hold space for both grief and longing â without rushing to resolve either.
đ€ Anita
August 10, 2025 at 8:57 am in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448417
anitaParticipantGood Sunday Morning, Adalieâ
What you shared yesterday is a clear, emotionally articulate account of a relationship that has become emotionally imbalanced, psychologically taxing, and increasingly unsustainable. Youâre not in a mutual partnership â youâre functioning as Vinceâs emotional regulator. Instead of developing his own coping tools, he relies on your presence, reassurance, and emotional labor to regulate himself.
Emotional labor is a term I came across only yesterday. It describes the often invisible work of managing emotions â yours and othersâ â to keep relationships functioning, often at the cost of your own well-being.
It includes:
* Soothing anotherâs feelings (e.g., calming someone down when theyâre upset)
* Suppressing your own emotions
* Silencing your own needs
* Managing your tone of voice, facial expressions, and reactions for the sake of someone else’s comfort
* Absorbing blame or guilt
* Offering constant reassurance or validation without reciprocity
* Walking on eggshells to avoid triggering someoneâs moods
Emotional labor is unpaid, unacknowledged, and leads to burnout, resentment, and emotional depletion. Over time, it erodes your sense of self â because youâre constantly prioritizing someone elseâs emotional comfort over your own truth.
Emotional containment is another new term for me. It refers to when one personâs emotional needs, reactions, or anxieties are so dominant that the other person feels forced to suppress, shrink, or silence their own emotions in order to keep the relationship stable.
Itâs not mutual regulation â itâs one person absorbing the emotional chaos of another, often without consent or reciprocity. It can look like:
* Avoiding sadness, anger, or joy because it might destabilize the other person
* Constantly scanning for emotional landmines
* Feeling reduced to âneutralâ or âsupportiveâ
* No longer asking for what you need because their needs always come first
* You become the emotional buffer â the one who absorbs, soothes, and stabilizes.
In your case, Vinceâs panic, anxiety, and controlling behavior dominate the emotional space. Your independence, needs, and natural expressions of love are contained â pushed aside, minimized, or punished. Youâre not just managing his emotions â youâre sacrificing your own to keep things functional. This leads to emotional exhaustion, loss of self-expression, and a sense of being trapped or erased.
You also described conditional kindness: Vince is âunusually niceâ only when he wants something, and otherwise dismissive or mean. This is a manipulative pattern that creates emotional whiplash and erodes trust.
Mocking your age, questioning your dependability â these are demeaning tactics that chip away at your self-worth.
The apology cycle â conflict â apology â repeat â is a classic abuse pattern, even if itâs not physical. The apology doesnât lead to change; it simply resets the tension.
Twisting situations to make you feel at fault for setting boundaries is a form of emotional reversal. He disrespects your boundaries, but instead of holding himself accountable, he blames you.
Unfortunately, youâre tied to him through shared housing and expenses, which makes leaving feel unsafe. His desire to move into a smaller place could further isolate you â physically and emotionally.
Youâre not staying because you want to â youâre staying because you feel you canât leave.
You recognized that youâre snapping back, saying mean things, and becoming someone you donât want to be. Thatâs not a moral failure â itâs a sign of emotional depletion.
Your final line â âI hate itâ â is a cry from someone whoâs still in the fog, but beginning to see the edges of it. And that matters. You are naming whatâs happening, and youâre beginning to imagine something different â a relationship where love flows freely, where you feel safe, where your emotional truth isnât contained or erased.
Five days ago, you shared something quietly profound about your experience with Jake â not just the physical intimacy, but the emotional texture of it:
“Yeah it awakened what think I’m missing because it’s not always present at home. Tenderness⊠he was kind quiet gentle, didn’t make fun of me or force anything. So yeah for sure tenderness and care. Also motivation to go for concealed carry. I was interested in it and have only thought about it. He said âgo for itâ. And I did. I got my permit still working on step 2. He even suggested a firearm based off me saying my hands are small.”-
That tenderness â the absence of mockery, pressure, or emotional volatility â is what your nervous system has been craving. Itâs not just about Jake. Itâs about what youâve been deprived of in your marriage: emotional safety, gentleness, and respect.
The concealed carry permit isnât just a practical step â itâs symbolic. Itâs you reclaiming your right to protect yourself, to enforce boundaries, to make decisions in your own favor. Itâs you placing your needs at the center of your life, rather than orbiting around Vinceâs moods and demands. Itâs a gesture of self-trust â sparked not by control, but by care. Even if brief, Jakeâs presence reminded you what it feels like to be encouraged, not diminished.
With care, Anita
anitaParticipant“We werenât for each other. And that hurts too much.”- be there for yourself, Eva. Be there on your side. Truly. Unapologetically.
Anita
August 9, 2025 at 10:02 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448413
anitaParticipantAdalie, I will reply further in the morning, but for now, as I understand it, Jake is the guy we’ve been talking about, Vince is the husband.
“mocking your age”- that stood out to me as cruel. I am sorry, Adalie.. That’s nothing but cruel. How dare he???
“He sometimes twists situations to make you feel guilty or at fault, even for normal boundaries.”- cruel again.
Having read the rest, Adalie- it makes me sad. Your place is NOT with Vince. Home is not with Vince.. unless a miracle happens and he changes..
If you believe in miracles. I don’t, not really. Do you..?
Anita
August 9, 2025 at 5:21 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448412
anitaParticipantI will read and replie, Adali, sun morning.
Anita
anitaParticipantThank you, brandy .. for intending well. Thing is it’s not a good idea for me to discuss the matter further, at least not here, on this public forum.
Anita
August 9, 2025 at 1:53 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448408
anitaParticipantYou are very welcome, Adalie.
It makes so much sense that your mind keeps returning to that moment with Jakeâespecially when it offered something youâre not receiving in your own relationship. That kind of contrast can stir up a lot of feelings: grief, yearning, even questions about what you deserve.
If you ever feel ready to talk more about how things are with your husband, Iâm here to listen. No pressure at allâjust an open space if you need it.
đ€ Anita
August 9, 2025 at 12:35 pm in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448405
anitaParticipantAdalie, I hear how much this hurts. Ghosting is brutal â not just because someone disappears, but because they leave behind a thousand unanswered questions. You thought he was different. You felt something real. And now youâre left wondering why â why he kept you connected, why he vanished, why it feels like you were used.
That line â âhe got what he wanted and it doesnât mean anything elseâ â sounds like a dagger. Iâm so sorry someone said that to you. Whether or not itâs true, itâs not kind. And it doesnât honor the depth of what you felt.
Youâre not wrong for caring. Youâre not foolish for hoping. Youâre not weak for wanting answers.
Sometimes, when someone gives us a moment that feels good â validating, intimate, connective â our hearts hold onto it. We build meaning around it, because it mattered to us. Thatâs not wrong. Thatâs human.
If you ever want to explore what that moment meant to you â not just what he did, but what you felt â Iâm here. No pressure to analyze or reflect before youâre ready. Just space to feel, to speak, and to be held.
đ€ Anita
August 9, 2025 at 10:13 am in reply to: âHe initiated closeness, then disappeared â still hurting months laterâ #448402
anitaParticipantHey Adalie,
Iâve been sitting with what you shared. Itâs tender and layered, and I want to reflect something back that might resonate.
Thereâs a term â limerence â that describes the kind of emotional intensity youâre feeling. Itâs not about being dramatic or irrational; itâs actually a very human response to longing, uncertainty, and the ache for connection. Limerence can happen when we fixate on someone â even after just one encounter â and start to build a whole emotional world around them. Itâs not just about attraction; itâs about what that person represents to us.
Often, limerence serves a deeper need:
đ A safe way to love someone-
Sometimes, loving someone from a distance â or holding onto a brief moment â feels safer than being in a real relationship. In real relationships, we risk rejection, disappointment, or being misunderstood. But in limerence, we get to imagine love without those risks. We can feel deeply, dream freely, and stay emotionally âcloseâ without exposing our full selves or facing the messiness of real intimacy. Itâs like loving someone through a window â we see what we want to see, and we stay protected.
đ A way to feel chosen, seen, or special â even if only in our own minds-
When someone gives us even a small amount of attention â a look, a kind word, a moment of care â it can light something up inside us. Especially if weâve been feeling invisible, unchosen, or emotionally starved. Limerence lets us hold onto that spark and turn it into a story: âHe saw me.â âI mattered to him.â âI was special, even if just for that day.â Even if the other person never said those things, our minds create a version where we were chosen â and that imagined feeling can be incredibly powerful.
đïž A way to anchor meaning to a moment that felt good-
When life feels chaotic, lonely, or full of emotional pain, we naturally reach for moments that felt good. That one day, that one look, that one connection â it becomes a kind of emotional lifeboat. We replay it, revisit it, and build meaning around it because it gave us something we needed: hope, warmth, a sense of being cared for. Even if it was brief or unclear, it becomes a symbol of what we long for â and sometimes, what we feel weâre missing.
Does any of this resonate, Adalie?
I remember my own limerence with Robert, my high school classmate. I was extremely shy at the time, with very low self-esteem. I was sensitive to any sign of rejection. Looking back, I think what made Robert safe to love â as a limerent object â was that unlike others, when he looked at me, it felt like he valued me. Or at least didnât un-value me.
My life at home with my mother was miserable. I had no friends. So daydreaming about Robert â imagining that he loved me â became my emotional lifeboat. It gave me the sense of being cared for, of being chosen, seen, and special â feelings I didnât have in real life.
One night, after a youth movement meeting, he offered to walk me home. Just me and him. My response was immediate: I said âNoâ and walked home alone. Itâs a ânoâ I endlessly regretted. I was just too afraid.
Back to you, Adalie: your heart responded to a moment that felt real and nourishing â and it makes sense that youâd want to hold onto it. But sometimes, when someone is emotionally unavailable or ambiguous, our minds fill in the gaps with fantasy. We start to imagine who they are, what they feel, and what could have been â and that imagined version becomes a kind of emotional refuge.
Itâs not foolish. Itâs protective. Itâs your heart trying to make sense of something that felt beautiful but unfinished. And maybe itâs also about something you deserve â to be wanted, to be remembered, to be chosen not just for a day, but for real.
If you ever want to explore what that moment meant to you â what it awakened or mirrored â Iâm here. Not to pull you out of it, but to walk with you through it.
đ€ Anita
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