T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1007.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu May 17 1990 12:01 | 11 |
| I don't see a rosy future for you two.....
If the conversation you relate is accurate, I'd say her expectations are
way out of line. Unfortunately, a telephone conversation is one of the
worst possible mediums for having this sort of argument. With hindsight,
you perhaps should deferred asking her to contribute until you were
together again.
Then again, it may not have been worthwhile....
Steve
|
1007.2 | Not the calmest of replies... | PCOJCT::COHEN | In search of something wonderful | Thu May 17 1990 13:12 | 10 |
| My first "honest" reaction...
LET HER TAKE THE DAMN BUS!!!
My second, and probably calmer reaction...
"LET HER TAKE THE DAMN BUS...TODAY AND EVERY DAY!!!
Jill
|
1007.3 | | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Thu May 17 1990 13:58 | 11 |
| I would suggest she talk to someone who *knows* what a relationship
is about (like a counselor); then I would suggest that the two of you
sit down and air your expectations about your "realtionship" so all
the cards are on the table. It might be wise to decide who is paying for
what at what percentage of their salary, and strive to find some
common ground. It has also been my experience that when a courtesy
become an expectation, the relationship needs some work--fast.
Good Luck!
Barb
|
1007.4 | | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | California Dreamin' | Thu May 17 1990 14:03 | 20 |
| Are you an 'egotistic cheapskate'?? Hardly, from the likes of
that conversation. And I hope you don't start thinking of
yourself that way because of her!
You ask what's going on here? Well, to me it seems like a bad
case of mismatched expectations. Have the two of you ever sat
down and talked about what you expect from each other and from the
relationship? I think it's important that you do so. (Although
if the conversation goes anything like the one in the base note, I
wish you much luck in working things out!)
One of the worst things that can happen in a relationship is
when one person starts taking the other for granted and stops
working at the relationship. It sounds to me like she's the one
who doesn't know what a real sharing relationship is.
My thoughts...
amy
|
1007.5 | let her take the bus | CARTUN::DWESSELS | The only constant is change. | Thu May 17 1990 14:24 | 15 |
| My most ruthless, honest opinion is that she is seeing to what extent
she can "pull your strings". I have read your previous note in this
conference, and altogether I think she is shamelessly taking advantage
of a person in a _very_ vulnerable stage in his life.
I am a woman; when in a long-term relationship my SO made more money
than I; I never used these facts to pressure my SO into "carrying" me
financially or into acting as my private limo service. It makes me
feel better as person, regardless of gender, to know that I can take care
of myself rather than making myself a burden to someone else.
Let her take the bus, and advise her to get couselling regarding her
need to control you.
dlw
|
1007.6 | | ELESYS::ELLIOTT | schmoozing along.... | Thu May 17 1990 14:25 | 34 |
|
You asked for some "ruthlessly" honest opinions. Here are some
questions, instead. Hope some of it helps....
o What in the world is the "issue" here? Is it that you didn't
want to pick her up? She doesn't have a car? You are a cheapskate?
She doesn't make enough money? You pay for everything? You count
everything? She calls you names?
o Do you (as asked in other notes) set expectations? Have you talked
about all or some of these things before? Have you talked about
them one at a time or do they tend to come up in arguments and become
blurred and never resolved?
o How long have yuou been with this person? Is communication a
problem? What do you expect from all this? Don't you have any
"guidelines" in place for conflict negotiation and appropriate
behavior in a disagreement? I would suggest you work something
out if you're going to be dealing with this person and hope to
have something lasting. But from what you wrote here, there are
big problems.
Communication is the thing that will make or break any relationship
and the ability to conduct disagreements in a way which will benefit
NOT destroy the relationship is important. Also, you need to start
looking at these issues separately and not in the heat of an
argument to see what is what.
Good luck.
Susan
|
1007.7 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | we washed our hearts with laughter | Thu May 17 1990 14:44 | 8 |
| This is going to sound harsh, but it's my honest, gut reaction.
Based on the dialog you've written, if it's anything like your everyday
interaction, I'd say she's a manipulating, self-centered witch.
I'm sorry, you asked, and that was the first thing that came to mind.
-Jody
|
1007.8 | So she said, so then I said, so then she said... | STAR::RDAVIS | You can lose slower | Thu May 17 1990 15:12 | 8 |
| My most ruthlessly honest opinion is that you transcribed a memory of a
conversation rather than a recording of a conversation.
It sounds too one-sided to me to be able to draw any meaningful
conclusions, other than that you've had a fight.
Sorry,
Ray
|
1007.9 | | CADSE::MACKIN | It has our data and won't give it back! | Thu May 17 1990 15:57 | 12 |
| Re: -.1
That's my opinion, too. I remember a note some time ago where an
analogous situation was described and people were somewhat uniformly
taking the opposing view: that the person was being cheap or, at the
very least, insensitive to the other person.
I know that if I were in the situation described I'd feel more than a
little bit claustrophobic. But at the same time its easy to see the
other person's side: "damn it, he has a car and I have to take the
friggin' bus all the time." Its easy to get jealous over things
like that.
|
1007.10 | you deserve better. Let her know that. | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Thu May 17 1990 18:39 | 10 |
|
Uh, can I ask the obvious ? Is this the same Theo that put in the
other note ?
If so, I'd say stop letting her walk all over you. You deserve better.
Let her know that too.
/Eric
|
1007.12 | Be careful | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | J & J's Memere | Fri May 18 1990 07:23 | 19 |
| Whenever I see notes like this in a conference I wonder two things
Are we, the readers, part of a process which confirms to the author
that he/she is right and good and that their partner is wrong and has
to change?
What is the other side of the story or coin?
There are all sorts of justification for behavior. Honorable deeds
that should be accepted. But if we choose to devote all our time to
our children, our work, or any other endeavor and our partner feels
left out I guess we have to accept that. The probability of someone
changing to meet our needs is remote. We can change and if we want
something we have to decide how bad we want it.
I caution people from getting sympathetic support from any source
without thinking about how they are going to change their behavior to
get what they want. The sympathy and support feel so good that it can
become habit forming.
|
1007.13 | Movin' Right Along ... | MAMTS2::TTAYLOR | I do not want what I haven't got | Fri May 18 1990 10:04 | 14 |
| Theo:
It sounds like she's manipulating you. In your first note, I had a
little bit of sympathy for both of you ... and tried to give it the
benefit of the doubt. But judging from this conversation, it sou,ds
like you guys are having big time problems, #1, and #2, that she's a
totally selfish person and is trying to give you the guilts in a major
way.
If I were you, I'd move on to the next stage of the game: ending it and
starting anew. No one needs the stress and aggravation you're being
subjected to at this point. IMHO, that is.
Good luck and many hugs, Tammi
|
1007.14 | What is the attraction? | WMOIS::JETTE | | Fri May 18 1990 14:14 | 20 |
| I thought from your previous note that this relationship was trouble.
After reading this, I'm sure of it. You two seem to have problems
that run the full gambit. Can I ask you something and I'm not tying
to be a smart ass. What in the hell do you two have in common? do
you two EVER have any fun together? What was the attraction? Also,
it seems to me you two didn't know each other very well or for very
long before she (and correct me if I'm wrong) 1. Quit her jobs in the
states to move to Europe. 2. Left her country, her family, her friends
to move in with you. What was going on with her life that she was
so willing to do that with someone she didn't know very well (if at all
by the sound of your notes)? I just think (again, by the sound of
your notes and I know she has her side to the story) that this is a
doomed relationship and you need to spend some time ALONE to get
your own head where it belongs. If people don't give themselves enough
time (and in my experience, most people don't) after a divorce, they
will consistently wind up with the same type of person they divorced!!
I couild never figure that one out, but I guess we go back to what's
familiar unless we get help or give ourselves plenty of time to heal.
I'd be curious to know the answers tomy questions.
|
1007.15 | | WR1FOR::HOGGE_SK | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Sun May 20 1990 03:19 | 32 |
| Okay my 2 cents... first I have some trouble believing that you
spoke to her in a totally calm and rational voice throughout the
conversation. Second I tend to agree with the fact that all we
have to operate with is your side of the story... how much walking
is involved with taking the bus? I have to bus to work every morning
myself and I end up doing a LOT of walking... it gets tiresome and
if the weather is HOT it's a nightmare. Third... if she was upset
over it, you should have found out what was upsetting her not telling
her your own expectations over the phone. In a situation like that
the non-verbals are as important as the voice is. Forth what DOES
she do with her money... that is, is she buying the groceries each
week or keeping up both wardropes or covering some other expense
that you aren't? Maybe she feels she IS contributing fairly and
DOES deserve a ride. Finally, consider that (from what I've gathered)
she is a stranger in a strange land culture shock is a very stressful
situation culture shock without any friends who can understand it
is even worse. I know I lived two years in the Philipines after
having been raised in the states... entire concepts were different,
and if not for the fact that I was on a base with other people who
were going through the same cultural changes that I was I know I
would have had a lot of difficulty adjusting to the differences.
No familey, and no body who could understand what I was going through
would have made my first year there completely unbearable. Last...
If you can say that the conversation happened exactly as you discribed
it... that you were completely calm and rational about the whole
exchange and she was not... then the best thing to do is give her
a one way ticket home NOW before it gets any worse. You are fighting
a lost battle and it is just a matter of time before someone gets
hurt BAD.
Skip
|
1007.16 | Don't be afraid to walk away | BROKE::BNELSON | It's a Devil's disguise | Mon May 21 1990 14:58 | 24 |
|
Sounds familiar. I've certainly run into my share of folks who
didn't know how to contribute to a friendship/relationship.
Nowadays, if someone can't see their way to contributing in SOME
fashion or another, I think about moving on. Of course, I first try to
see if the situation can't be worked out. But in the end I'm not
afraid to start looking elsewhere. It helps that I've built a really
good circle of friends that I know I can depend on.
I do agree somewhat with the notes that say that we only have one
side of the story, but the fact that *you* are questioning *yourself*
leads me to believe that it's probably pretty accurate. Introspective
people -- at least if you do it honestly -- tend not to delude
themselves.
So I'd say, if you can't work it out move on. Good luck.
Brian
|
1007.17 | But what about..... | THRILL::ETHOMPSON | Blessed is the child of yesterday | Mon Jun 04 1990 18:21 | 18 |
|
One more thing to consider....
From the tone implied in both your notes, I would say that she
tends to get heated up when having a disagreement. How you deal
with this whole thing is one matter, but what about your son?
Is he a witness to this whole 'ordeal' each time there is one?
What kind of environment is this for him?
Essentially, who's the child? Seems like she get's
upset over not getting all of the attention as well
as the other things that may be bothering her.
IMHO,
Eileen
|
1007.18 | It takes two! | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jun 05 1990 12:02 | 36 |
| I think the conversation was just a manifestation of what's going on
at a deeper level in the relationship and that take two people - not
one person and a self-centered witch.
First off, she phrased the question in such a way that she *assumed*
you'd be coming to get her. Why? Has that been a normal pattern that
you come to get her *by default* unless you had something else to do?
If so, you helped establish that pattern and can't rightly be miffed
just because now you want to change that pattern and expect she will
simply read your mind and go along.
Second, your reluctance to pick her up wasn't really due to having to
get your son, but that it was "hot in the car" for him. What does that
mean? Is your son ill? If not, then I suspect the excuse was just an
excuse to cover up your real reason for not wanting to get her. And
that real reason could be that you just want to change the pattern.
Further on the conversation you mention your displeasure with "being
expected to". Are you perhaps just beginning to feel a little closed
in and want a little breathing space but aren't ready to face that
yourself yet much less face her with it? Does she perhaps sense this
such that her behavior is becoming more clinging and/or challenging?
I think the issues of her not having enough money to buy a car and you
having to pay for everything in the relationship are smokescreen
issues - they let a person take the offensive when they feel they are
too frighteningly on the defensive. They are far too general, ("You
always do x" "You never do y"), to really reflect anything more than
vague, underlying feelings. And what you need to do is face those
underlying feelings and read them in the context of your relationship.
Is she jealous of your money? Are you jealous of her carefree
dependence? Are these the real issues behind her demand and your
reluctance?
You have a right to establish the boundaries and expectations that you
want in a relationship but you have to work WITH your partner to do it.
|
1007.19 | What's going on? | WMOIS::JETTE | | Wed Jun 06 1990 11:40 | 6 |
| I haven't read these notes for a while, but se you still haven't
answered any questions asked of you or haven't responded to any
of our responses to your situation. What going on? Are you 2
still together? Have you worked out any of the issues presented
here? Just curious, as I'm sure a lot of others are.
|
1007.20 | a bit late | FSTVAX::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Jul 20 1990 14:09 | 4 |
| sounds like you are in a relationship with my ex-wife!
good luck!
tony
|