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Broke up with boyfriend: Need help dealing with guilt and his texts

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  • This topic has 3 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 5 years ago by Inky.
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  • #328305
    Samantha
    Participant

    I broke up with my boyfriend of 3.5 years yesterday. I kind of blindsided him with it – we had so many plans for this week, his birthday is on Saturday – but a simple disagreement just triggered something I had been honestly considering for months even though I still wanted to observe further, and his demands for me to “spit it out” ended up in things becoming a break-up.

    The thing is, I think I made the right decision to end things. We both admitted a while ago that we rushed into things by pretty much skipping the friend phase and deciding right from the get-go to date without each first meeting more people. It might just be commitment anxiety on my part – but in the past few months, whenever my mum asked me how we were doing or my friend jokingly asked when we’d get married, the very idea just filled me with utter dread and I even broke down a couple of times. That wasn’t right, was it? We’re both 20 – still so young – and issues have been coming up lately that make me question our long-term compatibility.

    Lastly, he will be entering a 5-year med school course locally in seven months (medicine isn’t a grad school only study where I’m from) while I have plans for a PharmD overseas. He wouldn’t have minded the long distance rs – he told me so – but I know he’s the sort that needs the physical proximity, little things like touching and cuddling. (I’m not going to lie: my rs with him was quite a major factor on me deciding to reject a place at Cambridge, and even though I never told him this bit – I just cited finances or whatever – that decision is one of my life’s biggest regrets. And it was never his fault: he didn’t ask me to give it up. I was just young and stupid. I knew he was the sort that wouldn’t survive long-distance relationships, and I just… wanted to keep him. But after some time, it only made me secretly start to resent him that slightest bit – which is so unfair to him, and ironically, put a strain on our relationship on my end.) I was so afraid of history repeating if in a moment of weakness, I gave up on another dream, and yet would begin another cycle of regret and bitterness on my end.

    I realised that I just wasn’t ready for a lifelong relationship, and I didn’t want to drag him along when I was having so many second thoughts and uncertainty to the point where I was only happen about the relationship when we met in-person. But, I just wish it didn’t hurt him so much. I feel so crushed and guilty – he loved me so much, and I feel like I betrayed him.

    It doesn’t help that he keeps texting, sounding like a complete emotional wreck and talking about wanting him back and asking if I can at least be there for him to just phase things out slowly. I’ve tried to keep my replies strictly friendly without giving him false hope, but it’s also been taking its toll, especially when he has bursts of frustration that seem aimed to guilt me further. (This emotional immaturity is also part of the reason I walked away, actually.) I’m just scared that he’ll do something stupid if I take extreme measures like blocking him. (He isn’t very close to his family or friends.) What should I do about this part, considering the circumstances?

    And on a secondary note, should I still wish him happy birthday 3 days later?

    #328415
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Samantha:

    You read like a very conscientious, responsible, decent young woman. I think that you did the right thing, and I don’t see how you blindsided him- he pressured you to “spit it out”, so you did.

    This was a premature relationship, too young, too fast. You need to be free to make a good life for yourself, you have a whole decade to form a successful career for yourself, to explore life, to get to know people and life more and more.

    Question is how to free yourself when you are afraid that he may not recover from this breakup and even “do something stupid” if you block him.

    I suggest that you don’t block him for now, that you do wish him happy birthday in three days, maybe get together with him for his birthday in a public coffee shop or so, buy him a slice of cake and coffee for his birthday.

    He asked you if you “can at least be there for him to just phase things out slowly”- consider agreeing to it, but in your way, not his, meaning you can decide that you will give this phase-things-out two months, in which he can talk to you  on the phone every day for the first month for 20 minutes. Then every other day in the second month, for 15 minutes (I am guessing with the numbers, of course, you decide on those and adjust the numbers depending on how things go).

    If he guilt-trips you, telling you how much he is hurting and suggesting you are a bad person for doing that, etc., let him know that this is not part of the phase-things-out process, and tell him that he needs to stop doing that.

    If he wouldn’t stop, suggest and maybe help him find a counselor or a medical doctor for professional help, make the first appointment with him and accompany him to the counselor/ doctor. Maybe even go with him to the session and speak to the professional.

    Post again anytime y0u want to and I will be glad to reply further.

    anita

     

    #328553
    Valora
    Participant

    I’ve been blindsided with a breakup of a long-term relationship with right before a holiday, and I’m not going to lie. It’s devastating. It completely ruins the joy of the holiday. BUT… you said what you said and he pulled it out of you, and that’s at least partially on him for making you spit it out. I think you’re just going to have to ride it out and deal with the guilty feelings you have because nothing is going to stop you from having them, even if he stops talking to you or you block him.  If you do block him, it’s likely to hurt him worse. You might feel a little better, but he’s going to feel like you don’t care at all and you’re still going to know he’s in pain, so you’ll still feel guilty.

    If you really want to ease it for him, just let him vent. He may not be actually intending to guilt trip you, no matter how much it seems, but just may be in a lot of pain and cannot understand where this is coming from and is just saying whatever he feels he needs to say to you. It’s also quite a shock to the system when you go from talking to someone every day for years to feeling like you can’t or they won’t be there for you.  You have had months to sort of start detaching from him emotionally, while he’s only had literally days, so while his reaction might be showing emotional immaturity, it’s understandable in this case.  A blindsiding breakup (and yes, it is blindsiding if he didn’t think you were going to tell him you wanted to break up when he asked you to spit it out) after years together really can be traumatic, and it’s going to take him some time to settle down from the emotions that it brought up, and while his reaction is taking it’s toll on you, I can guarantee it’s likely taking more of one on him.  I’m not saying this to make you feel any more guilty because this situation just is what it is and both of your reactions are normal, especially with the awful timing, but maybe it will help you to be able to put up with this while he vents a little easier… and if you know that you can help him get through it by letting him vent or talk to you, being honest, remaining friendly (but not romantic, which was a good idea on your part so as to not give him the wrong idea)… maybe that could actually ease your guilt a little.

    I love Anita’s idea of seeing a counselor together, too.  It is a LOOOTTT easier to get over a breakup when you understand what happened, and a counselor can help mediate a discussion to sort of hash things out, and a counselor would also likely agree that you guys are young with a lot of life left to experience and heading in different directions, so a relationship isn’t going to work long-term in this case, and maybe hearing that from someone else with you all in a room together would help it sink in and ease his pain, as well.

    #328577
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi Samantha,

    You absolutely did the right thing long term by breaking up with him. The timing could have been a lot better. Ideally it would have occurred, in, say, October or May when there are no major holidays. But what’s done is done.

    I wouldn’t block him, but I wouldn’t hold his hand, either. By wishing him a Happy Birthday: it could be seen as pity, as you coming back, met with anger, met with sadness (especially if he was having a good time and forgetting about you when you send the text), etc. By remaining silent it might help him to see that this breakup is REAL.

    I would text less often than he texts you, and always keep your responses shorter. Then slowly fade away.

    Good Luck!

    Inky

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