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Advice needed - Strella

I would like to receive comments, advice regarding a relationship I want to improve. I met my SO almost 2 years ago. Few shared amazing good time for 2 months although we knew it would end as I was ready to leave for a one year oversea assignment. We did not make nay plans at all, just enjoy the days together. I left and 3 days after my departure, he called me to tell me he felt in love with me and wanted to see me again even after one year. I had also felt in love him and was ready to work out one year far apart. I managed to go to visit him for few weeks in the middle of the year. We manage to keep and even strenghten our feelings. It was though being alone but I always felt him closed.

We had decided to live together upon my return. He had found a nice place and we really wanted to make it work. Somehow it did not. We had not been able to have a "nice and cosy" place as we dreamt, we had fought over nothing, we complained about anything... I, and he, had been very affected. We really love each other but we cannot live together. We still have "our life" and do not want any one to "touch" it. We are now living apart. We both have our occupation (he is finishing his graduate studies, and I am working in another city). It was very difficult for me to accept that we could not "make it" together. I have blamed him for making this happen but I know I am responsibale too. We see each other every week end and we have coffee, diner together. We are trying to start again on more "realistic and rational" grounds. I am starting to accept this type of relationship. We want to "clear away" the bad from the past. We need to keep more independence from each other. I have been putting a lot of pressure on him to still keep thigs as we had planned. It has been hard to accept he was right. For now, we are having a more peacefull and platonic relationship. I suppose (I want to believe) it will be fine, but I always have this fear of blowing it out somehow. I would like to support him in this decision as I agreed to. How can I properly behave to prove it to him, without feeling desappointed?

From: Bernd

One of the hardest struggles in many relationships is trying to find the balance between independence, and closeness. It seems the closer we get to someone, the more we feel obligated to live up to the "rules" of relationships, expectations, and what we've been taught. Doing so often seems to mean sacrificing part of ourself. Many things that were "I" things before, become "we" things.

It is a lot easier to let our walls down when we know a relationship won't take away our independence indefinitely, or hardly at all. When we know our partner is going to leave at a definite time in the future, we can let our emotions flow like a river during the time we're together. The passion is heightened because we want to fill every precious second we can with all those wonderful feelings, because we know it's gonna be over too soon.

Long distance relationships make it MUCH easier for us to keep a comfortable balance between being ourselves, and being part of a couple. The trade-off is that we sacrifice much of our need for actual physical closeness, and also find - when we start living with someone - that the realities of a REAL relationship don't turn out the way we dreamt they would.

One of the most powerful things that a relationship does is strip away the unhealthy masks that we use as crutches to cope with life. The longer we're in a relationship with someone, the more they get to know who we really are, and vice versa. In an unhealthy relationship, the more imperfections I see in myself, the more defensive I get, the more I use emotional walls to protect myself, and the more I start preparing myself for the day my partner is going to say "the hell with you" and leave me.

It sounds to me that your partner has a well established pattern of reasserting his independence, and withdrawing, once a relationship starts to threaten that independence with too much closeness. It may also be that you have a pattern of seeking out this type of man, hoping that one of them will "change" THEIR pattern, and that will finally confirm you're truly lovable.

I sense that your need to "change" this man will continue to lead you to choices that leave control of much of your destiny, and the relationship, in his hands. The words "more realistic and rational" sound very much like HIS words. My guess is that he has let you know in no uncertain terms that it's either his way, or the highway. If so, that has left you with the choice of either letting him call the shots (and trying to convince yourself he's right), hoping things will eventually work out - or saying goodbye to the huge emotional investment you've put in so far. A goodbye is also probable very scary, because it would seem to confirm that there's something wrong with you, that makes you unlovable.

You are not unlovable. If you want to support him in his decision, then let go of wanting him to change. Begin a search for answers and for insight into what past pain keeps pulling you to men who lack the capacity for true, ONGOING closeness. Take time to be honest with yourself about how you REALLY feel about where this relationship stands today, and accept that those are YOUR feelings, and none of them have to make sense right now. They might, they might not, but they don't HAVE to. They will in time.

The book" Women Who Love Too Much" really helped me get insight into my patterns. I would fall in love with any woman that would HAVE me. Most wouldn't, because they were scared away by my crushing dependence and neediness. Those that would get involved with me had just as many problems as I did, and almost all of the relationships I had ended up in disaster, and rejection.

A relationship with another person can only be as good as the one we have with ourselves. If you can take the struggle you have had and are having with this man, and let it teach you what things you still need to heal in your relationship with yourself, then it will be able to give you a miraculous gift, no matter what else happens. Start with the book I mentioned, and see where that takes you next.

These are just my thoughts and best guesses. Hope it helps in some small way.


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