T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1303.1 | Hope this helps a little | CSTEAM::LOBOV | Even misery goes away | Tue Sep 22 1992 17:32 | 26 |
| I agree that you probably should get out of the relationship..no need
to bring yourself down too. But please don't sever ties so that she
feels that she has lost everything and has no one.
I went through a very hard time about three years ago, I was depressed
for a long period of time (almost 2 years) and if it weren't for the
people that stuck by me I don't think that I would ever have made it
through that period. I had almost struck bottom and without the help
of a few very people I would probably either still be depressed, in a
lonney bin or worse, I might not be here to say this to you.
I believed the worse in myself, had no faith in anything I did, said,
Hated the way that I looked, the way that I dressed, the way that I
was. It was the most horrible time of my life.
If she is anything like me, she will not cling to you, will not hang
around you all the time...There were times that I just NEEDED to know
that there was someone that cared about me (even though at the time I
just felt that they "tolerated" me).
I sincerely hope that she can work through this, get help, do whatever
it takes to start rising from the state of depression. I know from
experience that it is the most horrible way to feel. I hope that I
never have to live through that again.
~Linda~
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1303.2 | | AKOCOA::HOFFMAN | | Tue Sep 22 1992 22:20 | 5 |
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A friend in need... 'nuff said.
-- Ron
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1303.3 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | I am the King of Nothing | Wed Sep 23 1992 10:08 | 34 |
| Since I've been in the same boat as you have, I feel I should be able
to say something of use.
First off, if the state of depression is sever enough, you should
really incourage her to go to one of the 'combined' clinics for
mental health. These have psychologist who deal with the emotional
state and causes of the depression as well as phsychiatrists who
deal with the medical aspects of anti-depressive drugs. Both work
in tandum with each other (or are supposed to). And if done proberly
is a lot more effective then just seeing a counselor. It's something
to consider.
As was suggested before, don't be 'unaccessable' to her, if you need to
really get completely out of the relationship, it would be best to do
it slowly, cutting back on the amount of time you spend with her a
little at a time.
But, ideally, the thing to do, is to figure out what's going on. It
sounds to me, with what little you've given of her history and such,
that her biggest problem is she's lonely. She's in a location where
she knows nobody and has decided that it's because something is wrong
with her. A viable solution to those feelings, is to get her out and
introduce her to people, help her to make some new friends. Get some
other people to help occupy her free time besides and in addition to
yourself. You might discover that as she developes more friendships
locally, she'll start losing this feeling of not fitting in.
Lonelyness is a terrible thing to be in a new place. I've gone through
it several times and wouldn't wish it on anyone. The advantage now is
that I finally learned that if you give it time and make a little
effort you do make friends.
FWIW
Skip
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1303.4 | Wow - a healthy person! | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | Why not ask why? | Wed Sep 23 1992 10:20 | 63 |
|
Re .0 -
What you describe trully carries with it the so called "life
damaging consequences". I heartily commend you on your decision to not
continue a romance/love relationship with her. It sounds like a heathy
decision on your part to me.
Spontaneous depression can simply be someone's *unresolved* emotional
pain, grief over loss, or anger turned inward to themselves. That
you say she "doesnt like herself" is very much a characteristic of
an anger turned inward. This stuff usually is best worked in therapy
and/or a group (social) recovery environment. It's too bad to hear
that she has stopped and sees no value in it! :'(
I have personal experience with this. Some 10 years ago, I was
in this relationship which seemed to be going well for the most
part. I would be the depressed one, from time to time, and I even
got to what was bothering me - the then recent death of my Mother
- My girlfriend would wipe my tears and comfort me and all. But my
depression got the best of us when she wanted to vacation together and
I was just too "spontaneously depressed" and unmotivated to bother, so
we ended up breaking up shortly afterward. I've still got this old
printout from 4/9/82 indicating I was sitting in my office crying over
it. It took my doing therapy to come to work through (some) my unresolved
grief over my mother's death, as a big part of what was happening to me.
My other personal experience with this was about a year or two
later, when I was seeing someone who I'd now describe as just chock-full
of unresolved anger, grief and pain. I mean the writing was on the
wall; this woman would drink alcoholically, listen to "sad songs
say so much" and just cry and cry and cry and cry. So, what did
I do? I quit therapy and got her to *live with me*. Then I asked her
to MARRY ME! (Guess that says a bit about where I was at then, doesnt
it?) Well, I wont even go into what happened, because it was a horror
show, but save to say we ultimately broke up and went our seperate ways.
During both these episodes of my life, I had NO IDEA what was
going on with me, them or between us. To my fortune, that's all changed
for me today; I have what I consider a healthy relationship with a
healthy person and we both own and work on things like our "unresolved
emotional pain" - and on the relationship we have in our marriage. I
owe this fortune in part to an openmindedness on my part, a lot of hard
work and the desire for something better for myself than the life
I'd been living.
It's so good to read that you've drawn a healthy boundary for
yourself with this person. That is trully the only way you'd ever
get her to change; change something about yourself, like your role
in the relationship. It just might be the best thing for her to see;
to have someone demonstrate a healthy boundary / role change - but
without the common attendant total abandonment of someone when people
"breakup".
You can express that you're no longer interested in a romantic
relationship with her - and that her refusal to address her issues
around her constant depression is not acceptable to you, as the reason
why - but you can still be there for her in a supportive role as
a friend, which I'm sure she really needs more than anything now.
Hope this helps,
Joe
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1303.5 | The only person who can help her is.... | KERNEL::SUMMERFIELDJ | Walk on sunny side - other side wet | Wed Sep 23 1992 12:09 | 11 |
|
Oh dear. Your girlfriend sounds so like I was 3 years ago!
All I can say is, the only person who can help her is herself.
Yes, you need supportive friends, and hopefully you will be
one for her, but the will to get whatever is depressing her
has to come from within! I've found that out the hard way!
I don't think you can help her, you are already too close.
Good luck!
Jules
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1303.6 | Oh, and a PS.... | KERNEL::SUMMERFIELDJ | Walk on sunny side other side wet | Wed Sep 23 1992 12:54 | 14 |
|
PS
I had a very caring boyfriend who did everything in his power
to help me. Boy, did he put up with a lot! He too eventually
had to get out, but him doing so did more for me than any amount
of "support" did! I suppose I expected him to sort me out. I'm
actually grateful that he left me! He told me why and was very
sweet, but only now do I understand!! I realize that now, but
at the time I hated him! Only wish I could tell him that now,
but he chose not to be even a friend....! Oh, well.
Julia
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1303.7 | | KAKAPO::LILBURNE | | Wed Sep 23 1992 20:15 | 14 |
|
I agree with the other replies that it is a good decision for you to get out of
this relationship and that she must build up her self-esteem. I hope that you
won't drop her completely though. If you like her, presumably you care for her.
I would have thought it would mean a lot to her to have someone she knows
around especially if she is new to the area. If all she has around her
is rejection and strangers, it will be all the more difficult for her to
pull herself up. Set boundaries by all means but even a little caring will help.
It is important that you explain why you are ending the relationship (I don't
think gradually reducing your time with her will be any less painful for her)
and that you can not live with her negativism, maybe that will help give her
the incentive to *want* to change herself.
Linda
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1303.8 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 24 1992 00:08 | 9 |
| re:.0
I've been there. It stinks. Get out, and when you do, STAY OUT.
I prefer quick, clean, IMMEDIATE breaks with people like that. When
you try to do it gently, they can hold on even tighter and suck you right
back in. And I'm speaking from experience.
Good luck...
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1303.9 | | TRACTR::HOGGE | I am the King of Nothing | Thu Sep 24 1992 09:58 | 27 |
| Re- break it off Quick.
Great attitude folks.... don't worry she doesn't know anyone in town
has no close friends and when he breaks it off quick n' clean, she
will not be able to confide in anyone about how rotten he was, or good,
or how anything else for that matter. At that point, she'll REALLY be
alone, and if she IS psychotic-depressive, quite possibly will turn
toward suicide, or other self-destructive alternatives.
Before you break it off, encourage her to start seeing the pschologist/
psychiatrist combination I'd described before. That's not going to be
an easy task if she's decided they won't do her much good. AS I said
before once she starts seeing them, gradually decrease the time you
spend with her. She has the psychologist to take that problem to and
discuss it with, she can start the healing processes for a breakup
as well as dealing with her other problems that cause the depression
in the first place. Meanwhile, you don't have to pick up a paper and
see where she set fire to her apartment complex, killing two children
and a mother of 4. Or look at the pretty ink splot in the center of
the page that's a picture of her remains after bungy jumping off a
bridge without a harness. You'll be able to justify the 'bad feelings'
afterwards with the saying 'She was unstable, it wasn't my fault' but
it stays with you man. It stays with you. You can't help wonder if
perhaps you'd handled it a little different... maybe things would work
out just a bit better then they did.
Skip
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1303.10 | | AIMHI::WEBSTER | | Thu Sep 24 1992 11:04 | 4 |
|
re: 9 Very well put, Skip. Too bad more people don't have the
same compassion.
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1303.11 | Anonymous reply | QUARK::MODERATOR | | Thu Sep 24 1992 14:08 | 55 |
| The following reply has been contributed by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous. If you wish to contact the author by
mail, please send your message to QUARK::MODERATOR, specifying the
conference name and note number. Your message will be forwarded with
your name attached unless you request otherwise.
Steve
Dear Anon
I'm going through exactly the same thing at the moment, only I'm the
unhappy person. I'm not as depressed as your girlfriend, but always
feel up and down, can start crying suddenly for no apparent reason,
etc.
I just finished a 5 yr relationship which ended badly, and I have been
involved with a guy I met a couple of years ago for the past couple of
months. As soon as I split up my ex, my friend told me that he'd been
wanting to go out with me for the past year.
A couple of weeks ago he told me that he no longer wants to be
involved. I totally unexpected this and was really upset as we have
always got on so well together. He's one of the best things thats
happened to me, he's been really good to me and for me. We always
agreed that we would remain friends as we were friends before we
started going out. I was upset for a few days, but knew that he still
cared and we would continue to see each other. Well yesterday it had
been arranged that I would go and see him for the first time since we
broke up. An hr before I was to arrive at his place, he phoned me and
told be not to bother coming round, we would talk on the phone
instead. He now wants absolutely nothing to do with me, said it would
hurt more to be friends, and doesn't want to be involved with the
problems that I've have, and that we're too different. This hurts more
than him not wanting to go out with me. I've been a bit tearful, but am
in so much shock that I feel too numb to break down and have a good
cry.
I think you should tell her that you can't cope being involved with
her, but that you Do care and would like to remain friends, she sounds
like she has a lot to sort out. Don't break completely away from her,
if she is anything like me it will hurt her more if you do that. She
needs friends around her, especially if she is new to a city. It
sounds like she is trying to help herself by coming to a new town to
make a new life for herself. She needs all the support and love that
can be given to her.
You're most welcome to contact me off line through the moderators.
Regards
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1303.12 | Reply from anonymous author of base note | QUARK::MODERATOR | | Thu Sep 24 1992 14:09 | 23 |
| Hi, me again.
Actually, I know exactly where Mike is coming from in .8. It's going to
be hard for me to just be her friend because I still am very physically
attracted to her. The only surefire way for me to avoid temptation
would be a "clean" break.
But I care a lot for her, and I want to see her go through as little
pain as possible, so I'm going to be her friend, and I'm going to
restrain myself. I want to get her to join in my group of friends, and
hopefully she'll fit in, and I'm going to try to get her to go back
into therapy.
I understand a lot of what she's going through; there have been lots of
times when I've tried to fit into a new group of people. I'm a pretty
shy person, and for me to actually make friends and feel comfortable in
a new group probably takes six to nine months. During that time, I
usually feel pretty lonely and inadequate and depressed myself. But the
important thing to know, and for her to learn, is that that loneliness
doesn't last forever.
Anyway, thanks everyone for the advice.
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1303.13 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 24 1992 22:40 | 7 |
| re:.9, .10
Guys, I TRIED it the slow ("speaking from experience") way and the lesson
I learned was that a slow, dragged out split isn't easy for either party.
The depressed person becomes more and more desperate and you become more
and more involved.
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1303.14 | | YUPPY::CARTER | Windows on the world... | Fri Sep 25 1992 08:56 | 31 |
| I've been here too ... my ex was depressed and was on tranquilisers for
6 months or more.
I found that I was too close to really help. Any time I offered help
he saw it as a confirmation that I cared and that we would eventually
make it as a couple. I couldn't get him to understand that I could
care for him but not want to have a realtionship.
As other have said it really dragged out the process of splitting up
and did him no favours.
I was lucky, we had a set of friends that we both new well and I asked
them to take on the 'job' of looking after him. I then had to let go
of that responsibility and stop worrying about him.
If you can I would avoid pulling her too closely into your own circle
of friends, but if she has any friends of her own ask them to help
support her.
I believe you are too close, but I would echo the sentiment of not just
'dropping' her.
Xtine
ps. My ex is by all accounts (we no longer are in contact) getting on
fine. He has a new job, has learnt to drive, a new flat etc and is
finally taking care of himself - however to do this he went "home" to
surroundings where he had been happy beofre and had his own support
system. In the end he decided he needed that more than the well-paid
job that he had in the City.
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