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:omgno: |
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I told him that perhaps that was not a very positive reaction and he agreed.. |
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I think its over and I guess there is no easy way for these things and it will always be messy. Still i cant lay into her as they may get back together :worry: |
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If his reaction when she came home was 'oh fk no' then maybe he's just disappointed at the disruption to his routine? Life is short and if you finish work at 10 and come home to someone who has the 'oh fk no' face then I say turn around, walk straight out and don't look back! |
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Best stay out of it in all honesty |
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The rural scottish idyll |
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I guess it's the fact that they've been together for so long that he kind of doesn't want to lose that feeling of 'having someone there' even though it sounds like it's not the right person? |
Tell him to buck his ideas up and get himself a Playstation.
Never once has my PS4 told me I'm an idiot for leaving the wet washing in a washing machine for too long. She appreciates me. |
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We've had 3 pages of feely feely femsplaining and now it's time for a man to step in and offer some practical solutions. |
I did tell him that the answers would be found at the bottom of a good tumbler full of whisky
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I also notice in codependent relationships or relationships where there is smothering/controlling behavior going on... the weaker of the two sometimes asks for space, and then they don't know what to do with the freedom and are more emotionally vulnerable (relatively speaking here)... and may end up having a little bit of fun on the side... funny enough, the stronger link (usually the one doing the smothering) usually takes responsibility for "fixing it", forgives them and they go back... or it falls apart at the seams... though they don't usually last... I've seen that happen with friends whose lives are all sorts of stupidly complicated because they don't know understand the point of boundaries and do lots of "fixing" to each other instead of dealing with their issues... Though in general I don't think there is anything wrong with asking for space. If you're otherwise good with each other, but the other person actually does need space to assess their actual priorities, it can really strengthen a relationship and make a good foundation for a long-term relationship (or marriage). I gave my husband 7 years to change his mind before we finally tied the knot. |
...when people say they need space in that context, I often find that what they actually need is to talk/communicate and maybe that's what they haven't been doing enough of..?..just both doing their own thing and not giving themselves any quality time as a couple...it's sad, they may work it out but a lot of communication seems to be the thing that is needed, the 'grass may seem greener' for her atm but that could just be a reactionary/attention thing and that's what needs to be addressed...relationships/marriages etc need to be worked on, they don't just flourish and sustain on their own without that..just drifting along can very much be, not drifting in the same direction and then these things can sadly happen..anyways I don't think that whisky is the answer, I think communication is to find out if their future can be with each other or no..../sometimes people just fall out of love as well...
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