T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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654.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Oct 04 1991 13:50 | 14 |
| I'll say what I'm sure a lot of others here will say - this is by no means
unique to men. Women can do the same thing. It's called "fear of commitment."
While you were apart, you were "safe". No matter what promises the two of
you made, inside he didn't believe that he was committed, because of the
distance. But when you moved closer, you eliminated the "safety buffer" and
suddenly he realized that perhaps this wasn't what he wanted after all.
But rather than have the courage to tell you, he pretends you don't exist
and doesn't call.
My advice would be to try to forget him. There are also some notes in
HUMAN_RELATIONS on long-distance romances that may be of interest.
Steve
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654.2 | | R2ME2::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Fri Oct 04 1991 14:10 | 7 |
| Are you sure he isn't already in a "committed" relationship? Just a
thought. In general I agree with Steve. It's an emotional issue, and
he might not even have felt it until you actually arrived on the scene.
I don't think too many people are like that, but from what I read, it isn't
exactly uncommon either.
- Vick
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654.3 | don't just "run" | CECV01::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Oct 04 1991 14:38 | 18 |
| three years ago, shortly after I got a divorce, (a very tough time for
most folks), I "pulled back" from a long distance relationship.
(actually three of them... which, while not as serious as yours seems
to be, were involved enough for me.)
Two of the persons were angered and hurt by my withdrawal, and those
relationships soon ended. The third "understood" my crisis and stood
by me. We are now married.
Please don't jump to any conclusions about *why* he has withdrawn. Try
to confront him with your feelings and discuss it openly.
I suggest there may be something else in your SOs life which may be
causing his withdrawal than just fear of committment or proximity to
you.
tony
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654.4 | | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Fri Oct 04 1991 15:51 | 7 |
| I remember the 5 years after my divorce, I avoided committment.
I dated lots of men instead of getting too close to 1, dated men
in different towns and just plain never told them I was in love.
But, I will admit that it was fun to pretend to be in love. The
romancing was fun. But I remained honest about my feelings with
these fellas and lost some. To be fair, you have to be on the same
wave length.
|
654.5 | | CUPMK::CASSIN | There is no man behind the curtain. | Fri Oct 04 1991 17:44 | 14 |
| I agree with Steve's comments about maybe this man is afraid of
committment. I was once in love with a man that was incapable of
committment, but I didn't learn that until it was way too late for
me to get away from him without being deeply hurt.
The thing about your message that really stands out to me is it sounds
like you're giving this man the power to be the one that makes you
happy. If you are really miserable without him, I suggest that you get
yourself into couseling *right* away. There's nothing wrong with being
there for him (as one noter mentioned, he may be going through a very
tough time), but don't move any of your own boundries for him. Be
friendly towards him, but not at the cost of your own happiness.
-Janice
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654.6 | y | SRATGA::SCARBERRY_CI | | Fri Oct 04 1991 18:27 | 2 |
| re.5
"Great!"
|
654.7 | | POCUS::CULLEN | | Mon Oct 07 1991 17:08 | 17 |
| possibilities;
1) He's already committed and is now scared/ashamed because of
the dishonesty
2) unsure of his feelings
3) I hesitate to say "fear of commitment" because, IMHO, that
is a load of cr*p
In any case, he needs to face up to you and be honest about what is
^(have some b*lls)
going on so that you (individually or together) can get on with life.
Good luck...
Tom
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654.8 | | SOLVIT::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Tue Oct 08 1991 08:46 | 4 |
| How about mid life crisis. This is very real in some men.
Steve
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654.9 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | PCI with altitude! | Wed Oct 09 1991 03:56 | 6 |
| Fear of commitment is not 'crap'. It is... fear of commitment. It's when
reality thumps you in the guts and makes you see what you've gotten yourself
into and you realise that you're not ready and sometimes you go to pieces
instead of being cool, calm and ultra-mature because after all you are only
human. It's unfortunate, maybe unnecessary (in a preventive sense), but it's
very, very real.
|
654.10 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Oct 09 1991 10:27 | 11 |
| .8> How about mid life crisis. This is very real in some men.
It may be very real, but that doesn't mean a woman* should have to warp
her life around to accommodate it! It's real, it's a problem--it's
just not HER problem unless she decides to affix herself to it.
Leslie
*"Woman" and the feminine pronouns used only as default, as I know the
situation applies in homosexual partnering too. And women have midlife
crises as well....
|
654.11 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | PCI with altitude! | Thu Oct 10 1991 01:15 | 14 |
| re .10
> It may be very real, but that doesn't mean a woman* should have to warp
> her life around to accommodate it! It's real, it's a problem--it's
> just not HER problem unless she decides to affix herself to it.
In case it slipped your notice the whole point of .0's problem is that she
wants to be a part of the relationship only it's not working well right now.
So all this defensive feminist crap about how the woman shouldn't 'affix'
herself to the problem is not only irrelevant but destructive - partnerships
are about sharing the bad times with the good. This problem affects two
people and so two people will have to work it out. It will *not* be worked
out with one side laying down fixed boundaries and refusing to move until the
other 'gets it together'.
|
654.12 | reply to .11 | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Oct 10 1991 11:33 | 16 |
| I saw the basenote as asking "what _happened_?" She's just realized,
due to his sudden obnoxious behavior coincident with her move, that
this relationship is NOT (now, nor maybe ever had been) what she'd
assumed. My .10 was meant to 1) agree that a midlife crisis _may_ be
"what happened"; and 2) suggest that she not assume responsibility for
this adolescent behavior on his part. IMO, giving a tidy name
["midlife crisis"] to <grownups-acting-petulant-because-their-advancing-
age-is-suddenly-unpleasant>, or "deal[ing] with situations by pretending
[they] never existed", does not sanctify that kind of behavior.
No, I don't think she should be expected to put up with it, though when
she figures out what DID happen she can weigh the value of treading
water for X amount of time until he grows up enough to fish or cut
bait.
Leslie
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654.13 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | PCI with altitude! | Fri Oct 11 1991 03:54 | 37 |
| > assumed. My .10 was meant to 1) agree that a midlife crisis _may_ be
> "what happened"; and 2) suggest that she not assume responsibility for
> this adolescent behavior on his part. IMO, giving a tidy name
> ["midlife crisis"] to <grownups-acting-petulant-because-their-advancing-
> age-is-suddenly-unpleasant>, or "deal[ing] with situations by pretending
> [they] never existed", does not sanctify that kind of behavior.
This is still distinctly unhelpful. A mid-life crisis is not 'adolescent
behaviour', nor is it based on anything so flimsy as finding advancing age is
suddenly 'unpleasant'. Adolescents deny the reality of their mortality. A
true mid-life crisis is a *crisis* triggerd by the failure of existing denial
techniques to repress the knowledge of one's impending death. It involves a
complete reevaluation of one's value set and ultimately demands a
reassessment of one's attitude towards life and death.
It is a time when men ask themselves just what they've achieved, and for many
the answer is very little (of worth). It is a time when they have to
acknowledge the end of their dreams, and when you take a man's dreams away
you often take away just that which keeps him going when things get
toughest. Women tend to suffer less from this psychological malaise because
by this age they generally have achieved something of worth, ie., they have
had children. It is no accident that many of history's great women achieved
their greatness after menopause, when the freedom from procreation allowed
them to exert and develop their other talents.
For men it is different. Socialised into a fiercely competitive environment,
this is when they must contemplate the notion that society is going to
discard them. Retirement for some will be a boon, but for many men it is a
death sentence. It is no accident that most of history's great men achieved
their greatness before their forties, and today we have no substantive way to
assist men in the transition from youth to maturity (Jung defines a young man
up to the age of 35).
If the man in .0 is in fact going through a mid-life crisis then neither he
nor his prospective partner will be at all assisted by your glib throw away
lines about what for him is an existential crisis. Or perhaps we should
apologise because we aren't all great at handling trauma?
|
654.14 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri Oct 11 1991 10:39 | 5 |
| .13 should probably be moved to the MLC note. And whether one agrees
on its definition of MLC or not, and whether "what happened" is MLC or
not, his shoddy treatment of the basenoter is inexcuseable IMO.
Leslie
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654.15 | tolerance with a dash of reason | PULSAR::SEITSINGER | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:41 | 61 |
| This is my first entry into this notes conference, but from what I've
seen so far, it seems to be one that may offer some value.
In any event, my feedback on this situation:
Yes, it seems reasonable that this guy suddenly feels the physical
proximity too overbearing and doesn't know what to do about it, so
does the easiest thing (it is the easiest thing, guys, whether we
like it or not) and simply tries to push it aside, either hoping it
will eventually resolve itself, or give him enough time to resolve it
and go on from there.
I had a similar experience when I was about 22 where I moved into my
first apartment. Alone, on my own for the first time. My girlfriend
at the time would visit me every weekend, and when she didn't come up
I would go to her house. Well, after a month or so of that, I started
to 'like' to freedom that solitude offers and delayed my departure to
her house longer and longer each weekend, until such time that I simply
didn't go. At the time I knew that something had changed, but I didn't
understand what, so couldn't verbalize it, so had no way of communicating
this to her. I know she was hurt but I was too emotionally/
intellectually immature to even attempt a conversation around it. Actually,
I realized what had happened only in retrospect, after our relationship
ended.
For me it was an essential and very significant turning point. My only
regret is that I was too 'something' (I can't come up with a suitable
word), so was unable to talk to her about my feelings (I guess I was
also afraid of losing her, which I did. But at the time, my resolution
of this emotional dilema was more important to me than my relationship
with her).
So, I guess what I'm saying is, is that this person may be going
through a similar thing within himself, is having diffculty verbalizing
it internally, and thus can't verbalize it externally, and is maybe
hoping that it can be resolved via the passage of time and his own
inner resources. But I would also recommend attempting to bring it
out of him, but being direct, but empathetic.
I also agree, however, with a previous comment that it is an unhealthy
situation to 'need' someone too much. I've been married now for 10
years, and the best part about it is that neither my wife nor I feel
'trapped' (oh, we have our days like everyone else, when all we'd like
is a few minutes to ourselves - we have two little daughters, 2.8 yrs
and 2 months), because we both know that our decision to get married was
born out of a conscious choice to go through life together - not
because we 'needed' to, but because we 'wanted' to. Not because it was
going to be all roses, but because we wanted to help each other along
and share in whatever came our way. Assisting in the growth of each.
For me the reluctance and the inability to even begin a conversation on
my emotional state back when I was 22, was that I was afraid of what the
other person might do, i.e. get mad, be happy, etc. My own personal
'boundaries' were not stable enough to be able to deal with all cons-
equences, thus I avoided the whole mess by shutting her out. I could have
grown a lot more if I had at least made an attempt, and even if it didn't
work out, I'm sure she would have respected me more for it.
I hope this helps.
Bob S.
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654.16 | | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed Oct 16 1991 16:26 | 6 |
| Hey basenoter,
How goes the battle? Have you found out what's going on with him yet?
Is he returning your phone calls yet??
Leslie
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654.17 | Response from anonymous author of base note | QUARK::MODERATOR | | Tue Oct 29 1991 13:16 | 9 |
| Well... I stopped calling when he kept his machine on to pick up
the calls.. I did'nt leave any message as I was afraid that he
might not return that call also. So I stopped calling. I'm in
a quandry - let it go or pursue as he might need a push. Who
knows. Some replys here say ... find out... some say its
kind of obvious what his message is saying. I get the same
responses from my friends. I really don't know what to do. If
anything.
|
654.18 | Control & Understand your own life | NMSUV2::NAM | | Wed Oct 30 1991 07:32 | 19 |
| re .17......What do you want from this man??? sit down &
understand exactly what you want & write it down....Do you need this
man or do you need a deep relationship?? You say that you have stopped
phoning him but have you tried direct contact?? have you visited his
house??
If you do this,be prepared for all sorts of excuses etc & ensure
that you get from the meeting what you want - understanding maybe???
At some point you have to allow your life to get back on the rails &
get rolling again...It seems that you are now relying on his next move
to decide how your life is going to be run....try taking control of
your life again....regardless of his reasons,it is you (& maybe him)
who is suffering,but it is due to his unwillingness to talk to you
that you are now confused........
...give him no option other than facing you then at least you will
get some answers...
|