If you lack exclusivity, then it follows that there is no commitment. If I drew the venn diagram, the way I think about it, commitment would be a subset of exclusive.Quote:
Originally Posted by Mishanya [Dear Guest/Member you have to reply to see the link.click here to register]
But some of you seem to want to stuff your relationship experiences immediately into that deeper subset. And that is foolish, I think. Once you offer & receive commitment from someone (i.e. you plan for the future, together), you have NOT achieved the Holy Grail. Its merely a building block for the next set of challenges you'll face in this thing called 'relationship'.
So you better make damn sure that whoever you offer commitment to is worth it. Give it away too easy & you reduce its value, IMO. This is why so many couples, including the OP, end up with the problems they do.
I'm with Vash & CB on this. I view any relationship that doesn't have an understanding of permanency, agreed upon by both partners, as uncommitted & therefore you can 'walk away from it' at any point. Sure, ppl will get hurt, but I happen to think honesty about such things is always better than misleading someone and then causing even more hurt down the road.
To the OP: if, by just being her friend, you can destabilize the relationship with her BF to the point they break up, then in my opinion they didn't really belong together anyway. Note that there ARE ways to do this such that you aren't an asshole.
In other words, don't be disrespectful, but don't actively work to support a relationship that isn't all that stable anyway. Let her know your feelings (they aren't wrong) & let her decide what to do about it.
Good luck.
