Jump to content

catfeeder

Platinum Member
  • Posts

    28,247
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    151

catfeeder last won the day on March 19

catfeeder had the most liked content!

7 Followers

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

catfeeder's Achievements

Grand Master

Grand Master (14/14)

  • Reacting Well Rare
  • Dedicated Rare
  • Very Popular Rare
  • First Post
  • Collaborator

Recent Badges

7.3k

Reputation

5

Community Answers

  1. I think twice every day is too much. It's hovering. I'd dial that down to once a day, then every other day. This allows her to fill in the gaps if she so desires, and if not, I'd drop yet another day. This allows you to learn the pace at which she's comfortable. It also makes room for the fact that the intensity bubble around new dating gets popped as the real world must pour back into our lives. If we don't have enough going on with the rest of our lives, that's kinda creepy. You raised the word 'mutual' and I think it's a good one, along with reciprocity. Making room for these is not a game. Learning a reasonable pace is valuable. If you're too proactive you prevent yourself from learning valuable information about the other, and you don't allow yourself to diffuse your focus to tend to other important aspects of your life.
  2. Haaaah! That's so funny, it's how I view vacation romances. Once that vacay bubble is popped we see people come here all the time complaining that the other person isn't so into them. Wul? They're thousands of miles away from you living their real life.
  3. It means that you told him you didn't expect an answer, and he agreed not to give you one. Don't say one thing if you really mean another. Either follow through on your words and leave him alone about this, or bother him for an answer and make yourself look like a hypocrite.
  4. Sounds like a combo plate: she's trying to weave into the rest of her life while you're being too intense. I'd back off and get some air while respecting that she needs to do the same.
  5. I would mitigate the worry about learning of ex being with someone else by assuming that he's already with someone else. So, where to go from there? I can stop the rumination. It's done--he's with someone else, and I can move beyond moping and get on with my life. Give it a shot.
  6. Nobody 'owes' anyone consistency at a few weeks of dating. You're sounding way too hard core. This might be what she has reservations about.
  7. I would do this, but not without getting legal advice of your own, and also without the 'start getting a divorce' part. In the spirit of team-work to get the child into the right program, you can both learn what life is like without living together. You can date one another. You can explore whether there's anything salvageable in your relationship over time. If so, you can both shop for a nice house in the area and move in together. If not, you can work together to make a planned split.
  8. Good. It's not just about the 'work' of setting up dates, it's about allowing for yourself and the other to catch your breath and reflect between the dates. Too much, too soon is suffocation. There really is no coming back from that. This woman had these events lined up, and she's running from one thing to the next. Let her catch her breath instead of pushing her to stay running on a hamster wheel. Pressure doesn't feel 'good'.
  9. No, you're not wrong. Your mother just knows that it's her best interests to manipulate you into believing that you're wrong. However, she's in charge of running her life, your sister is in charge of running hers, and you're in charge of running your own. You don't deserve to have your household or your finances harmed by those who want to use you as their ATM machine. And I wouldn't count on never hearing from your mother again. She'll be asking you for something else at some point, and you're better off suggesting that she contact her local hospital's human services department for a referral to a case worker who can help her to apply for resources. Head high, and my heart goes out to you.
  10. I can't speak to the SM point, but most people I know don't use apps to schedule full expensive dates, just first mets over coffee to check one another out. If either wants to invite the other for a full date after that, then great, but in most cases it not a match. That's just a statement of natural odds, it's rare to strike simpatico no matter how you opt to meet a new person.
  11. It's only been a few weeks, and you're still strangers at this point. Pipe down. Allow for a natural progression, and appreciate that nobody can fully trust anyone during the storm of a whirlwind. I'd pull back and allow her to settle into some reflection and deliberation of choice. That's how both you and she will be able to trust that your next future date is fully voluntary. Don't pressure her to trust you--that has the opposite effect. Think: whenever someone rushes into anything, it's usually about persuasion, and nobody likes to feel manipulated. Head high, and congrats on meeting someone fabulous. Tread gently.
  12. I know some couples who opted to stay together through the blahs because they were focused on prioritizing their family and cultivating their home and friendships and shared bonds. I know others who divorced yet in hindsight ended up wishing they had stayed with their partner and what they'd built together. I know still others who divorced and went on to build partnerships with other people, or they've remained single out of choice. All of the above are valid options. We are not the morality police here, and we're also not living your life FOR you, so we don't get a vote. I will say, however, that I would opt to fully lean into my choices--none of this half-azzed, "I'll just resign myself to misery..." stuff. I mean, you can do that if you want, it's not against the law, but it's a mental take-down of yourself and everyone around you. I can appreciate that you feel this way in this moment, because this is how people typically feel after a breakup. So grief is natural, but I'd reach for some professional help with it. People have no trouble hiring a plumber or electrician or tax accountant when they need that level of expertise, so why disqualify your whole quality of life when there is expertise to be hired there to help you enhance it?
  13. My heart goes out to you. You've picked up the myth that adolescent development ends at age 18, but your prefrontal cortex is only mid-development, and it doesn't complete until between ages 23 to 26, This is why so many people consider themselves to be entirely different people in their 20's. So you became suicidal as you entered puberty, and you have not yet experienced what life could become for you on the other side of that stage. You might consider exploring how to become a peer counselor to help others who are suicidal to feel understood. You might find comfort in offering comfort to keep yourself alive long enough to learn whether maturity beyond adolescence brings a state you'll thank yourself for experiencing. Regardless of your choice, I would give myself the benefit of researching developmental life stages and teach myself enough to operate on real information rather than on emotions alone. Emotions are fluid, and so are life stages. Holding you in my thoughts.
  14. I'm not clear what you find to be the big surprise, is it that he won't marry you? Given that you're not happy with him, isn't that a blessing? Untangling a house purchase will be no picnic, but it's far less expensive than going through the cost of a wedding, only to hire divorce lawyers who would eat any profits from selling the house. Consider the ages, happiness and stability of your children along with watching the housing market, and create the most peaceful and loving household possible, even while you plan a long range exit strategy to sell the house when appropriate. This could be one year or five or whenever you decide that the best interests of your children would be served. But the most important thing I would consider is why you believed that you were happy enough with this man to make such a long range decision to share a home with him, only to decide that you can't enliven the same degree of happiness today. He was never affectionate even prior to this choice, so how did you cope with that before moving into this house?
  15. Hah! I see. When I raised local dating I wasn't speaking in terms of TV shows. That's not dating, it's auditioning. 🙂 There's something healthy about getting to know a person in the context of one anothers' day-to-day lives. I don't mean living together, but just how a potential partner invests in work, play, family, friendships, and where a committed relationship can fit into that--or not.
×
×
  • Create New...