
Originally Posted by
qwertyu;964613[quote
I honestly never saw it coming, he was a very good guy and he showed me nothing but affection.
Love just isn't the amount of new relationship "affection" he shows you.
If men are able to deceive so well, then there is no reason to ever believe that they say even when they seem incredibly genuine on the surface.
Seriously. Just because he changed his mind, or just because he showed you nothing but affection, DURING the honeymoon period it doesn't mean that after the honeymoon period, the limerence, the new relationship energy has dissipatted that he's actually going to be able to conclude that you are someone he wants to spend the rest of his life with. It's after the lust and the new relationship energy is gone that we decide who we wan't to (try to) spend the rest of our lives with. In the beginning, thee who cares less owns all the power. It's afterward after the limerence that the the power is interchanging and shared.
All relationships end through either break up or death. If you want to go through life with your current jaded view, without ever allowing yourself to become vulnerable to someone, then YOU will be the one that is going through life lacking true passion or intimacy. That's giving up a lot but Your call.
As much as I like the idea of being good friends with him, I don't know if I could ever become his friend again. I have a lot of anger towards him.
but then he started dating a new girl. The girl was someone who we had fights over when we were still in a relationship because he and her were very good friends and I was incredibly uncomfortable with their level of friendship at the time.
You are a major Hypocrit. You didn't like him being friends with her while he was dating you but you've pushed to be friends with him while he dates her. Where are your own personal boundaries? If you don't like something being done to you, then why would you do it to others?
Keep men that don't need to be friends with ex's or overly-involved with members of the opposite sex while in a relationship of their own. Set some personal boundaries that you won't cross and you'll not be with others that cross them... Then you'll not have this problem.
Stop be codependent and acting needy. Just distance yourself from him, go zero contact so you can get on with your life without him in. That is the interdependent, :I have the power: thing for you to be doing.
Your questions are needy and you're still wanting someone who wants to demote you to "just friend" from lover. Have more respect for yourself and don't even give him the time of day.
That is how you will get to the stage of indifference to him instead of clinging to his crumbs as if they were golden. Pfffft.
Last edited by Wakeup; 11-01-14 at 08:59 AM.
Reason: added and deleted.
“The willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.” ~Joan Didion