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JParticipant
I can sympathize with you because I have felt the same pain. That pain in your chest. Itās literally like your heart is aching.
I had a connection with someone recently. We were friends that met 1-2 times a week but chatted daily. Eventually we became lovers but (for reasons Iād rather not get into right now) we knew it could not continue and the intimacy would have to end. But we would always remain friends. However, the day he told me things had to end (because he found someone he could actually have a relationship with) was the day I felt that same discomfort; the unbearable pain in my stomach and chest. I couldnāt sleep or eat or think of anything else. The pain of being out of his life completely was unbearable. We went from regular daily contact and meetings a few times a week to a text message here or there 1 or 2 times a week and zero meetings. Some mornings the heaviness in my chest was too bad to even get out of bed. Thatās when I decided (the first time) that we couldnāt be friends. I tried to end the friendship completely by writing a goodbye letter and even having a last āgoodbyeā meeting. But neither of us could let go completely. I thought I had actually gotten over things a bit as time went on and we would meet for coffee or lunch here and there. But eventually, I would want more and the pain would return. Itās like a vicious cycle. Now 7 months later, he wants to remain āfriendsā and Iām realizing I really canāt. So by my experience, I have found that I cannot truly be a friend with someone I have such deep feelings for. I have expectations of him the way I did before. When he doesnāt meet them (since he is in a relationship now and canāt) I feel hurt and betrayed and like I canāt go on like this without āusā the way we āwereā. I DO realize though that this is unhealthy. Itās like Iām addicted to what was and canāt let go. So Iāve decided (once again) to cut off contact as much as I can (Iām trying 0 contact this time and letās jus tsay, itās a work in progress). If I can do that long enough, in time I will get over the deeper feelings I have for this person and maybe someday in the future, we can be friends.
My close friend that I confided in regarding this told me in the beginning that only time will heal things completely. She was right. Iām sorry to tell you, only time will help you feel better. Eventually the pain will go away. But it requires work. You have to force yourself to think of other things when your mind wanders to X. You canāt reminisce as much as you want to (because it just feels soooo good to relive those moments again and again does it!?). With time, the memories will fade (ever so slightly!)ā¦and with that, the pain slowly goes away. It did for me. It only returns once contact begins again. And not even right away-it slowly creeps up on you. We start chatting, talking, meet for coffee and have great conversation! And then the deeper feelings resurface again and I realize, what I want is out of my reach once again. Thatās when the pain returns.
Iām not sure my story helped you at all but I guess my advice would be to stay on track with ending things completely as you have. You canāt be friends and expect the pain to go away ā not by my experience. You will be tempted to become friends again if he contacts you or if he questions the letter – you just have to fight the urge. I found jogging, yoga and meditation helpful in helping me fight those urges but I do still succumb to them. I wish you much strength! -
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