T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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492.1 | My thoughts | BONKER::DUPRE | The Sherrif of Noting-ham | Fri Aug 24 1990 10:21 | 21 |
| < Note 492.0 by FRAIS3::LIESENBERG "Kierkegaard was right..." >
-< About goodbyes... >-
Paul,
I know how you feel for I have faced similiar situations,
it hurts to know that what you will say will hurt your partner and
that, no matter how well you say it, they will not be able to fully
understand why you must leave. You want so much to hold them and
give them some words of comfort to ease some of the pain but there
really isn't anything you can say to make it better.
The only advice I can give you is to do it as gently as
possible but don't vacillate and give conflicting signals, if it's
over make sure they know it's over. The kindest cut is that which
is quick and clean. I don't envy you and what you must do and I
hope that the pain is minimum for both of you but remember that the
only good thing about a broken heart is that it can heal with time.
Jim
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492.2 | An honest-open, man?? | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Fri Aug 24 1990 11:18 | 15 |
| re: FRAIS3::LIESENBERG
WOW! I am slowly getting my faith restored in men. Do you mean you
can be honest and say what you feel??? I sincerely respect you and
encourage you to never change!
Unfortunately, though, I don't have any advice to make the goodbye
easier, except the fact that done honestly, you will find that later on
when her hurt is somewhat eased, you two can and will be friends.
Good luck....
-Dotti.
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492.3 | you'll get thru this...your OK | UNXA::PERCIACCANTE | | Fri Aug 24 1990 17:15 | 20 |
| I've had a similarly (painful) experience. Some thoughts come to mind:
1. You are undoubtedly a sincere and honorable man. Yor're feeling
gulity for realizing that the marriage is no longer fulfilling your
needs. After reading note 491, it sounds like you did all the giving
and were kept on the defensive for a long time. No resource
(including our internal resources to give and love) are
inexhaustable. You simply ran out of resource and your wife failed
to do those things that would have recharged the resources.
2. Unlike our parents, we live in a world which is constantly painting
images of what life and love should be. We are always comparing
ourselves to what we understand that image to be. Most of us, I
think, find our lives on the short end of the comparison. (The grass
is greener....)
3. You cannot force a continued relationship with your wife, expect to
hide the fact your forcing it and not have it chew you up (read be
come less honorable, harder and perhaps even mean spirited)
4. I'm getting long winded... just let me say that you strike me as a
sincere individual...just follow your instincts.
|
492.4 | nasty shadow of a doubt... | FRAIS::LIESENBERG | Kierkegaard was right... | Mon Aug 27 1990 04:25 | 25 |
| Uh-oh! So there are people that understand what I do is because I try
to be honest to myself, and that I'm not about to do something mean in
a precipitated and dumb manner...it's odd that how your own "friends"
don't want the situation around them to change and are unwilling to
accept changes you go through...that's why for the moment I only have
two persons I can talk to without feeling criticized.
Throughout the weekend, being scared as I am, I started wishing back
the old days, I started missing the enjoyable little things of a
relation I know I'll miss...having always somebody to talk to around
you, having always somebody to comfort you when things go wrong, having
always a warm body near you in bed, having always sombody you can give
all your tenderness to...I'll miss it, I know, and it will get very
bad, and suddenly I felt like if I had to try it again. But no, no, no!
It's not love, it's just a good habit! You just feel so safe in
marriage...it's tough to get out of it.
And suddenly I understand why most men need another woman that forces
them to break up, they don't feel the danger of being alone then, they
just jump from one warm bed into the next one, they feel safe, and of
course that makes things easier...
Whereas women have the strength to break with a person when the
relationship isn't satisfying anymore, they don't need the guarantee of
having another person waiting for them.
Is this true?
...Paul
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492.5 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Mon Aug 27 1990 12:12 | 13 |
| Why do you have to hurt her?
You say she is the best woman, has no mistakes,
Do you know that MARRIAGE is for ever, not for just a little while and
if I get bored, just move on...
You would not HURT her if you stick by her, and instead of throwing
what you have, away, start to rekindle what you already HAD,
marriage is like a nice fireplace in a winter night... you enjoy a warm
fire but it is necessary to add a log now and then to keep it
going.....
Think about that and if you start rekindling you might end up having a
GREAT, STEADY AND PERNAMENT fire... from what you said in base note,
it seems that you have everything you need.
|
492.6 | Your love comes through - work it out! | PENPAL::SLOANE | It's boring being king of the jungle. | Mon Aug 27 1990 13:20 | 17 |
| This sounds like a tragedy.
If you truly deep down wanted a divorce you would not have such
ambivalent feelings about your marriage and your wife. If you truly
deep down wanted a divorce you would not write so compassionately,
tenderly, and lovingly about the woman you want to leave.
I don't think you know the depths of your feelings. You are about to
destroy something that is very dear to both of you, and irreparably
hurt both you and your wife.
I suggest you both go to a marriage counselor. At the very least,
please have a cooling off period before wrecking both your lives.
Please discuss things with your wife, no matter how painful if may.
Don't do something rash now that you will regret the rest of your life.
Bruce
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492.7 | where is the gut? | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Mon Aug 27 1990 14:13 | 18 |
| Did you write the basenote after lying in a tub of hot
water for a few hours? Passivity is too mild a word.
I hear soft splashing sounds, hear sweet violin music,
and it's so misty in here that I can't see anything.
You can't ask other guys to tell you how to kick the
woman you love in a nice way, so that you won't have
to watch her cry and have your heart broken by it!
There's nothing wrong with the hearts in this picture,
but there's a lot wrong with the gut.
You have to reach into your own guts and find the words
to tell her its over. OR, you have to reach into your
guts and put some fire back into the marriage! OR, you
have to go see a counselor and find out what's wrong
with your gut!
bill
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492.8 | let's get tougher... | FRAIS3::LIESENBERG | Kierkegaard was right... | Tue Aug 28 1990 03:41 | 29 |
| OK, so here's the gut:
I think it's over. I tried it long enough. I'm 27 and I guess I'll get
another chance of giving love to someone who understands better who I
am and accepts me that way. Dot.
So...no violin music this time, if it's the words that bother you:
Guys, how do you kick a woman you loved and still like in a nice way?
I guess this note got a little side-tracked, for what interested me was
to know if I was right in my view that we men have problems when it
comes to ending a relationship, or generally in actively expressing
every feeling that is going on inside them. And if it's right that the
normal male strategy is to let it slide and let the woman end the
relationship when it becomes unbearable. And if it's really women that
end relationships in most of the cases.
Sorry for focussing too much on my personal situation, my intention
really was to start a more general discussion on the subject "goodbyes".
P.S. re -1: Yes, you got the picture, I really need violin music,
passionate feelings and vows of loving eternally when it comes to love,
why not? But you are right about me being passive, but it's the
batteries that really start running a bit low when you're thinking,
re-thinking and herdly getting any sleep for too long a time...
...Paul
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492.9 | Who are you REALLY trying to protect? | SAGE::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Tue Aug 28 1990 09:44 | 34 |
| Paul, thanks for the clarification about the intent of this note. I
now feel like I have something to offer to the discussion.
In my experience, yes, men have a very difficult time ending
relationships. I haven't had vast numbers of meaningful relationships
over the years, but I've had enough to say that, without exception,
when the man wanted to end it before I did, the method used was crude
and very hurtful. In several instances the last date was warm, loving,
and fun, with no indication that a bomb was about to be dropped. Then
nothing. No phone calls, no letter, no communication. Nothing. My
phone calls weren't returned. Letters left unanswered. Obvious
confusion and concern on my part left unacknowledged.
Fellows, that hurts! It hurts far worse than hearing straight out that
the relationship is over; it was fun while it lasted; now good-bye.
The sad and bitter conclusion I've reached after a handful of this type
of ending is that men (speaking in general terms; if the shoe doesn't
fit, don't force it on) talk a great game of being tough and brave, but
when the situation demands bravery, they're chicken.
(Oh, yes, this ability to say good-bye also applies, in my experience,
to male managers having to make a hard decision about dismissing a poor
performer. In every such case I've witnessed, the manager seemed
unable make a clean cut. There were so many loose ends then he was
done that it isn't any wonder the person asked to leave was confused
about the reasons. Did he like my performance or not? He seemed to,
but then he fired me. What am I supposed to think?)
I agree with the title of your previous note, Paul. On the whole, men
need to get tougher when it comes to ending something that's over.
Karen
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492.10 | clean break? how about some talk? | BTOVT::MUNROE_R | I set my feet upon the rock | Tue Aug 28 1990 09:53 | 8 |
| re .9)
I agree, but some of the real courage comes earlier in the
relationship, when HE should be telling you what bothers him, so you
can ammend behavior or not be deluded for so long. (I don't me You as
You, personally, I just mean you, the female, and him the male).
--Becca
|
492.11 | exit | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Tue Aug 28 1990 10:57 | 28 |
| Well, she ended it on me, three months ago. Like a bomb.
She had asked to "go away for awhile by myself, to think
about things." I thought that was a great idea because
after a couple of months of being totally bewildered as to
what had gone wrong, and why she was acting so distant,
I was ready to try anything.
Well, she never said where she went, when she would leave,
when she would return, etc. After two weeks she finally returned,
met with me the next day, and told me it was over. I learned
later that she had spent the two weeks out west with the new
guy. How's that for getting away by yourself to do some thinking?
A week or two later, when I tried to get her to do some "ending
work", she said "No. You just have to get over it." When I
asked her how she felt about us, she said her feelings were
locked up in a box.
So let's not pin this kind of betrayal onto guys. This woman
seemed to have no trouble at all scraping me off her plate once
she found out what the next course was. I feel sorry for the
next guy!
And now I have to stop writing about this, because the rest of
what I have to say would get this reply deleted by the moderator.
Bill
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492.12 | Is it possible to sever ties painlessly? | SAGE::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:18 | 14 |
| Re. -.10 -- Agreed. Sometimes it takes lots of guts to tell someone
you love that there's something bothering you about the relationship.
But, as they say, no guts, no glory.
Re. -11 -- Bill, it sounds like you've been hurt, and understandably
so, by her actions. (Rhetorical question, you don't have to answer
here: could she have broken it off with you in ANY non-hurtful way?)
I'm certainly not forgiving her (or women who act like this) by my
comments in .9. But since this topic was about men and how they end
relationships, I didn't go into my experience with woman and how THEY
end relationships. Guess I didn't see this as a note to compre men to
women so much as an exploration of the male methods.
Karen
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492.13 | Two cents worth | LESPE::WHITE | Bring me my pistol, 3 rounds o'ball | Tue Aug 28 1990 11:41 | 13 |
|
Re: <<< Note 492.0 by FRAIS3::LIESENBERG "Kierkegaard was right..." >>>
> And I love her like you love your very best friend
I suppose I'm confused, but what more does one want with a spouse than
this?
Maybe the physical passion isn't there but the key ingredient certainly
still seems to be...
Bob
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492.14 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Better by you, better than me | Tue Aug 28 1990 12:36 | 17 |
| > The sad and bitter conclusion I've reached after a handful of this type
> of ending is that men (speaking in general terms; if the shoe doesn't
> fit, don't force it on) talk a great game of being tough and brave, but
> when the situation demands bravery, they're chicken.
Bingo! Many men, despite the tough exteriors, dislike intensely being the
cause of another's pain. Men don't like to see hurt they cause. Frequently they
run away from the situation to not have to deal with it anymore. Hence the
unanswered letters, unreturned phone calls. They can't deal with it.
What is needed is the ability to withstand the emotional impact of hurting
someone, while making a clean break. A clean break is harder to make initially,
but is far better in the long run.
I think Karen really hit this one on the head.
The Doctah
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492.15 | Try to be kind... | DNEAST::ROBBINS_GARY | Daroof,daroof,daroof izon fiya ! | Tue Aug 28 1990 18:29 | 24 |
| My wife and I divorced this past June after 15yrs of marrige.
Our 15th anniversary was about a month before the divorce.
I gave her a card with a flower on the outside and wrote this
message on the inside of the blank card;
"Our journey is almost over, our time together at an end.
Endings always involve us in pain. But anything which enters
our lives and transforms us is to be celebrated.
Thank you for as long as it lasted...
Your soon_to_be ex-husband,
Gary"
She was the first to say "I want a divorce", but it was I who divorced
her. One of us had to do it.
It was sad, but it was best for both of us.
Gary
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492.16 | but WHY? | FRAIS::LIESENBERG | Kierkegaard was right... | Wed Aug 29 1990 04:24 | 37 |
| But why the hell are we just so chicken-hearted?
I mean, what difference is there in the education process that makes
men afraid of accepting feelings and women so much more self-confident
emotionally?
Is it because we men are supposed to be more rational and therefore
stubbornly try to ignore the fact that we do NOT have control over our
feelings? Is it because we are supposed to be "stable" and "reliable"
and we don't like to picture ourselves as persons able to kick a person
we once loved out of our lives? Is it because we are educated to be
damnably superficial, viewing our role in society as making a nice
professional career and being good dads, and not as following our real
inclinations? Or is it just that we are afraid that the maelstroem we
have discovered inside us is going to mess up our lives and consume us?
Why do we have that urge to feel "safe"?
And, why are most women different? Why aren't they afraid to accept
their feelings, no matter what pain or difficulties this implies? You
know, I can still recall the secret admiration I had of my earlier
girlfriends, even at tender ages, when they told me "Listen, Paul, I've
got to tell you something...", and I thought, hell, this is exactly
what *I* felt and couldn't or just didn't want to articulate. Or when
the wife of a friend of mine filed in divorce, and she left a beautiful
house and a wealthy husband behind and went to live from her own modest
salary in a one room appartment, and when I visited her once she told
me "I just didn't love him anymore..." and I thought, oh yes, this
takes courage.
Maybe it's too that our mothers told us guys that women are "tender
flowers" and we would have to treat them very carefully. And, little
gentlemen that we are, we take this so seriously that we are afraid of
hurting them in any way. But in fact they have more courage and guts
than we have, emotionally speaking.
Hell, but why?
...Paul
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492.17 | experience | DEC25::BERRY | UNDER-ACHIEVER and PROUD of it, MAN! | Wed Aug 29 1990 06:07 | 12 |
| - how do you say goodbye?
- who says goodbye in most cases, is it he or is it she?
- How do you hurt a person so bad without hating yourself?
1) It's finished, over. Not debatable.
2) Dunno. Doesn't matter.
3) Look forward to having the burden lifted.
-dwight
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492.18 | | VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER | | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:33 | 6 |
| Paul, when you asked your wife if she would go with you for
some counseling, and she refused and went off and got her own
individual counseling, did you feel any need to go off and
get your own individual counseling?
Bill
|
492.19 | All our problems are our own... | CARTUN::TREMELLING | Making tomorrow yesterday, today! | Thu Aug 30 1990 14:29 | 20 |
| > <<< Note 492.18 by VAXUUM::KOHLBRENNER >>>
>
> Paul, when you asked your wife if she would go with you for
> some counseling, and she refused and went off and got her own
> individual counseling, did you feel any need to go off and
> get your own individual counseling?
Bingo!! I have a friend who is on his third marriage, and can't
figure out why the previous two seemed to fail in much the same way. My own
experience is that we continue making the same mistakes until someone is
kind enough to help us learn from them. That is the business of couselors,
helping us to learn from our mistakes (my opinion). The business of
marriage counselors is the same, with the added responsibility of training
us to become compassionate counselors with our spouses. I am frequently
amazed at what a friendly and cooperative world this is, but only after
much work on my own destructive attitudes and patterns of behavior. Had I
not resolved many of MY OWN problems during this marriage, I
would go on to act out the same problems in the next close relationship.
Best wishes.
|