She wants me to "believe in her"
Had a minor blowout with the gf on the phone this morning and can use some input. I think just getting it off my chest will help:
I've been seeing my girlfriend for almost a year, and she's been unemployed the entire time. I've seen her do very little to find herself a job. She wants to be a writer, and she devotes her time to updating her blog and writing book reviews that pay almost nothing, but spends very little time trying to actually find a writing job.
Friday night, I had dinner with her after a grueling week of work. I was really down about it, but she was in a tizzy of her own. She emailed her friends asking them to help her decide what kind of writing she should do (she doesn't know) and was upset that they responded with emails trying to suss out what she wants to do. She interpreted this as no support at all. I pointed out that they WERE trying to support her but it wasnt exactly the kind of decision they could make for her. She seemed to want more specific advice, which I gave her. That seemed to make her feel a little better but she said "For the rest of this weekend, I want this to be about me. I don't want to hear about how lousy your job is. I just want your support." Okay, fine. I can do that.
Saturday went okay, but Sunday morning was a disaster. She was running around like every little thing is a crisis, ignoring me except when she snapped at me. Finally I couldnt take it anymore and I told her I was going home to get a workout. She complained that I hadn't followed through on something I said about us going to the gym together (she had expressed next to no interest in it since we discussed it months ago.) Finally I told her she's acting like everything's a crisis, I don't know what I could do to help and I thought it would be better for both of us if I left for the day.
So this morning we cleared the air on the phone. I told her that her blog is not a substitute for a job search. She insisted she doesnt view it that way and said there are lots of things she's doing to find a job that I don't know about. (I have my doubts. She tells me every little thing and probably wouldve told me about jobs she'd applied to, especially since she knows I want her to apply. When I asked her about specific opportunities we've discussed, she admitted she hadn't followed up on them.)
When I told her I support her in her job hunt as well as her blog and other endeavors, she got upset. She said she feels that I dont support her, because I haven't told her she's a good writer and that I think she's going to make it. (I have in fact said both of these things, but perhaps not as often as she'd like.) She said she expected more support from me than she does from her friends, which is fair, although I don't know what else I can do. When I try to help her with her job hunt or offer other suggestions for things I think will make her happy, she responds with a boatload of excuses for why she shouldn't do them. She also said I treat her like a child as if she doesn't know how to conduct her job search. (She may indeed know, but she doesn't appear to be acting on it.)
She says she needs me to "believe in her" (again, I can only guess at what that means exactly) and she was upset that after she told me Friday night what she needed, I abandoned her Sunday morning. (True. I felt powerless to help and she appeared not to appreciate my presence, and yes, she was pissing me off so I did what I felt I had to do to salvage the rest of my weekend and gather some strength before I had to return to my shitty job on Monday.)
Sometimes women need sympathy, not solutions. I get that. Maybe I should have ridden it out. But I don't want to enable her self-pity either.
I want to help, and if I've done anything wrong, I want to make it right. But I think the larger issue here is she appears to lack a key piece of her self-esteem she is looking to me to restore. I can't, and neither can anyone else. I have told her that I can't do her job hunt for her, or bring her success. She needs to do those things for herself. But she's still looking to me for reassurance and support, which I try to give her even as she pisses away her abundant time on endeavors that do little to advance her toward her goal. It's frustrating and unattractive.
I'm scared because I think this could end us as a couple. I want this to work but I am starting to wonder if it's impossible.
I'm 37, btw, and she's 39 - too old to be wondering about what she wants to be when she grows up.