brie
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Post by brie on Jan 11, 2018 4:31:57 GMT
Avoidants don't like feeling forced to do anything. The critical thing is to make your partner feel like they have agency in the relationship so that it doesn't feel pressured.
I'm always attracted to partners more avoidant than me. I've learned that there are certain behaviors I will not tolerate (disappearing and being ignored) because it's inherently disrespectful and quite frankly feels uncivilized. On the other hand - I could never be with an AP because neediness suffocates me --but if you can take/give space AND behave like a "gentleman" then there is potential. Kindness, consideration, and consistency are paramount for my emotional wellbeing.
I know how hard it is to care for someone great that simply can't give what you need despite the fact they do indeed care. It sucks. However, you can't set yourself on fire just to keep someone warm. Being zen is letting go...not hanging on.
Figure out what your needs are and create healthy boundaries.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 11, 2018 7:13:25 GMT
Consistency would be great but the DA is like a cat - he comes and goes on his schedule. My biggest question is why are we bending over backwards, setting ourselves on fire, etc. to keep these partners? I am determined to move on, and might not post as often anymore on here, except for my own learning journey. So if I'm posting less here, it means I'm succeeding in real life. I'm grateful to finally recognize the insecure FA in my own behavior, and my next move is to start dating again. As long as I keep thinking about him, I don't have "room" for others in my life, one of whom would surely be the right Secure for me. If anyone has good strategies how to forget and move on, kindly post them for those of us who are ready!
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brie
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Post by brie on Jan 11, 2018 16:15:20 GMT
Best ways to move on: *No contact *Give yourself a time limit to grieve the end of your relationship (for me it was 30 days) and truly grieve. Journal every day during this time. *Know that your brain chemicals have been altered and you will need to do a bit of neurological rewiring (metta/loving kindness meditations and a daily gratitude practice are fantastic ways to do this) *Sign up for a class or group activity that meets weekly...you will expand your social circle and have built-in structure that prevents you from ruminating *Eat well. It's amazing how much your diet effects your mood. Bananas, leafy greens, turmeric, legumes, and salmon (or omega 3 supplements) are fantastic feel good foods for your brain *Exercise - move your body in a way that pleases you, and if you can do it outside even better. Dance, yoga, mindful walks, hiking *Take a trip, explore a change of scenery, give yourself something to look forward to *Music is an incredibly powerful tool. Create an uplifting playlist. Have an "anthem" song - play it first thing in the morning and whenever you feel down. Mine is "Feeling Good" by Nina Simone *Go to therapy so you can figure out why you participated in an unfulfilling relationship for so long - It's never just about "the connection"
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Post by tnr9 on Jan 11, 2018 17:33:57 GMT
Best ways to move on: *No contact *Give yourself a time limit to grieve the end of your relationship (for me it was 30 days) and truly grieve. Journal every day during this time. *Know that your brain chemicals have been altered and you will need to do a bit of neurological rewiring (metta/loving kindness meditations and a daily gratitude practice are fantastic ways to do this) *Sign up for a class or group activity that meets weekly...you will expand your social circle and have built-in structure that prevents you from ruminating *Eat well. It's amazing how much your diet effects your mood. Bananas, leafy greens, turmeric, legumes, and salmon (or omega 3 supplements) are fantastic feel good foods for your brain *Exercise - move your body in a way that pleases you, and if you can do it outside even better. Dance, yoga, mindful walks, hiking *Take a trip, explore a change of scenery, give yourself something to look forward to *Music is an incredibly powerful tool. Create an uplifting playlist. Have an "anthem" song - play it first thing in the morning and whenever you feel down. Mine is "Feeling Good" by Nina Simone *Go to therapy so you can figure out why you participated in an unfulfilling relationship for so long - It's never just about "the connection" I agree with all points but number 2....I understand why a time limit is a good thing....but it doesn't work for everyone. I am 9 months old and I still am processing through grief for my ex. Now..in all fairness I did see him 2 months ago, so everything is a bit fresh again.
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brie
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Post by brie on Jan 11, 2018 18:56:50 GMT
I think you're misunderstanding it - the purpose of a time limit for grief is to give yourself a set amount of time to allow SPACE for sadness and reflection instead of beating yourself up for feeling down or covering emotions up with busyness and shallow dating.
It's when you cry all the tears, listen to sad songs, eat ice cream in bed or whatever self-soothing behaviors feel good. Journaling every day during this period is a crucial aspect to the emotional processing.
As an avoidant, I'm not great at feeling feelings. This allows a safe space to do so while knowing there is a light at the end of the emotional tunnel. That doesn't mean I'm done processing at the end of it - just that my mourning period is over and it's time to move on to the next phase.
I've found doing this frames my experience towards closure and progress rather than ruminating over when or if I will.
We are not robots of course but this has been an incredibly helpful tool in my journey. Something to consider: Maybe if setting a time limit on grief doesn't feel "right" it's because you don't truly want to move on?
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Post by tnr9 on Jan 11, 2018 19:33:22 GMT
I think you're misunderstanding it - the purpose of a time limit for grief is to give yourself a set amount of time to allow SPACE for sadness and reflection instead of beating yourself up for feeling down or covering emotions up with busyness and shallow dating. It's when you cry all the tears, listen to sad songs, eat ice cream in bed or whatever self-soothing behaviors feel good. Journaling every day during this period is a crucial aspect to the emotional processing. As an avoidant, I'm not great at feeling feelings. This allows a safe space to do so while knowing there is a light at the end of the emotional tunnel. That doesn't mean I'm done processing at the end of it - just that my mourning period is over and it's time to move on to the next phase. I've found doing this frames my experience towards closure and progress rather than ruminating over when or if I will. We are not robots of course but this has been an incredibly helpful tool in my journey. Something to consider: Maybe if setting a time limit on grief doesn't feel "right" it's because you don't truly want to move on? Oh...that is so what my mom who is DA with me would say and she would likely agree with you because she is super stoic. I get that you need a set amount of time to really feel and then be done. It is good that you do grieve because I think some people don't grieve...they just move forward and stuff their feelings. I am very in touch with my feelings....I journal every day.....so I was very much in touch with the grief from day 1. Did I want to move on after he broke up with me? No....it took a while to even process that that happened because it was not a mutual decision...more of a unilateral decision that he had been mulling over (I guess) for a while but only shared with me when he decided to tell me. Then there was dealing with the stuff, dealing with friends...all the while, I left the NC door open in case he changed his mind...because, as I said...it was not a mutual decision. Also...I find that breakups tend to bring up more stuff..not just the person, but grieving everything tat person represented, along with processing through what that means regarding me....guilt/shame stuff. So no...I am not a 30 day and I am done griever...but that is ok....because we are all different.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 11, 2018 20:08:41 GMT
Best ways to move on: *Know that your brain chemicals have been altered and you will need to do a bit of neurological rewiring (metta/loving kindness meditations and a daily gratitude practice are fantastic ways to do this) I do remember that just before my ex ended things I was dealing with a lot of stress. Family drama, serious issues where I felt a responsibility to be there and help these individuals more than usual. Then my best friend of 10 years did something that really hurt me. We had never had a REAL disagreement. I was difficult for me to confront her about it but I did and her reaction was to completely cut me off without as much as one conversation about the issue. The family members that I had spent so much time supporting cut me off too as my ex-best is dating my nephew. I now have no contact with that part of my family because of her reaction to my expressing my hurt about what she did. I was grieving this loss when my ex decided to end things. I was traumatized. I don't get truly close to a lot of people so this was a large number of the people I was closest to that cut me off all at once. I remember telling my friends that something snapped in my brain. This wasn't normal stress or anxiety. Something chemically felt off. I kept telling people, I'm not well and it terrified me! I had never felt like that before and I had been through some pretty traumatic stuff in my past. I went to therapy but talking about it wasn't helping. I asked my doctor to give me antidepressants which alleviated some of the symptoms but the anxiety persisted. I battled looping thoughts and the feeling of operating on high alert longer than I felt was reasonable was making me feel insane! It was so miserable. I wasn't able to function in life or at work anymore. My brain had been chemically altered and I wasn't myself anymore. It truly wasn't something I was going to be able to just "talk out". This was PTSD. I had dealt with trauma from my past by seeing a therapist who used EMDR, it doesn't work for everyone and I'm not making any medical recommendations, but it worked wonders for me. This time though, I couldn't find a therapist that did EMDR withing my network that I could afford as I have a high deductible insurance plan. Ok TMI...any whooooose it.... Realizing this was not an option, I did seek the assistance of a super kind psychiatrist. Between him and my primary care physician we were able to find the right anxiety medication. I worked closely with them as one class of medications that deal with brain chemicals I am allergic to and had a very negative reaction to. But once I found the right one, the anxiety stopped being so persistent. Intrusive thoughts lessened greatly and secure thoughts, my normal thought process, returned. He made sure he prescribed me a medication that I would not get addicted to and I was told by my doctor that I would not have to stay on these medications forever but that I was experiencing a high level of grief and when I had fully grieved these issues I could stop taking them. The medication was just an aide to my healing process. Some people feel a certain stigma is attached to those who take meds for the brain but I see it this way: I deal with a thyroid condition. Now, since my body attacks my thyroid so that it doesn't produce enough of the hormone that the body needs, I have to monitor those hormones about every 3-6 months and take medicine that makes up for the deficiency. No one judges me for needing thyroid meds. when they find out. I'm not ashamed of taking care of that part of my health. Likewise, because something happened in my brain which caused my body to no longer the chemicals it needs to regulate my anxiety, I needed medicine for that. There is no shame in my game BABY! I'M BACK! People have differing views about seeing medical help so again, I am not recommending any specific treatment for anyone here. But it is an option one might want to consider. I just wanted to share my personal experience with using therapy and medication to help find my center once again.
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Post by david21 on Jan 11, 2018 20:25:48 GMT
How do you deal with the "push" behaviors when they start up? Have you found that push-pull is a cycle with the DA in your life? With my DA boyfriend of 6 months, who I love very much, he can only handle intimacy for a certain period of time. Then there's a shift, a mysterious change in the winds, and I start seeing avoidant behaviors popping up, and I know the cycle has gone back to "push." Things like: - Adapting a cool, detached demeanor when we're together - Less affection and interest in sex - Starts taking his time responding to texts; sometimes doesn't respond at all - Sometimes speaks in a cold, indifferent tone during phone calls - Begins treating me as though I am low priority, like I am someone he squeezes onto his schedule only after all other obligations and hobbies have been attended to. - Manufactures an illusion of "busyness" in order to keep me at arm's length (it took me months to figure out that he's not really that busy) - In general seems to withdraw so that he is doing the bare minimum to keep the relationship going. - Doesn't communicate his thoughts and feelings and doesn't want to talk about anything that's bothering him. - Displays little interest in hearing my thoughts and feelings. - I start getting the feeling that I have to chase him down in order to extract common courtesy type information from him, or to spend time with me. This is what I don't get. My ex of 5 months displayed every single one of these traits to a T......FROM DAY ONE THOUGH! Am I the only one who never experienced this "coming on strong at the start" business? And before anyone gives me the "maybe she just wasn't that into you" line. I brought that up numerous times during the relationship only to have her adomately maintain that she felt the same way I did but "just didnt show it the same way as me". And before anyone suggests she was just using me. Well, I'm not sure what she was using me for. She made almost 3 times as much as I did and she certainly wasn't using me for sex as she didn't initiate sex one single time during the relationship and when we did have sex....it was awful. I just don't get it. Reading these boards leaves me more confused then before I got here.
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Post by ladyda on Jan 11, 2018 23:11:08 GMT
How do you deal with the "push" behaviors when they start up? Have you found that push-pull is a cycle with the DA in your life? With my DA boyfriend of 6 months, who I love very much, he can only handle intimacy for a certain period of time. Then there's a shift, a mysterious change in the winds, and I start seeing avoidant behaviors popping up, and I know the cycle has gone back to "push." Things like: - Adapting a cool, detached demeanor when we're together - Less affection and interest in sex - Starts taking his time responding to texts; sometimes doesn't respond at all - Sometimes speaks in a cold, indifferent tone during phone calls - Begins treating me as though I am low priority, like I am someone he squeezes onto his schedule only after all other obligations and hobbies have been attended to. - Manufactures an illusion of "busyness" in order to keep me at arm's length (it took me months to figure out that he's not really that busy) - In general seems to withdraw so that he is doing the bare minimum to keep the relationship going. - Doesn't communicate his thoughts and feelings and doesn't want to talk about anything that's bothering him. - Displays little interest in hearing my thoughts and feelings. - I start getting the feeling that I have to chase him down in order to extract common courtesy type information from him, or to spend time with me. This is what I don't get. My ex of 5 months displayed every single one of these traits to a T......FROM DAY ONE THOUGH! Am I the only one who never experienced this "coming on strong at the start" business? And before anyone gives me the "maybe she just wasn't that into you" line. I brought that up numerous times during the relationship only to have her adomately maintain that she felt the same way I did but "just didnt show it the same way as me". And before anyone suggests she was just using me. Well, I'm not sure what she was using me for. She made almost 3 times as much as I did and she certainly wasn't using me for sex as she didn't initiate sex one single time during the relationship and when we did have sex....it was awful. I just don't get it. Reading these boards leaves me more confused then before I got here. I'll share my perspective as a DA at the end of a LTR as I can relate to what you've posted about your relationship with your ex. For 7 years I truly believed I was in a two-way loving, close relationship. The romantic relationships I witnessed firsthand growing up were highly dysfunctional (my parents had several divorces & marriages between the 2 of them and there was a fair amount of abuse/trauma involved), but they were my ONLY frame of reference for adult romantic relationships. When compared with what I'd seen, my relationship seemed amazing, and so I told myself (and everyone else) a story that the relationship was fine and any perceived issues with it were inconsequential, and subconsciously avoided any line of thinking that would lead me to conclude otherwise. In hindsight this was deep denial; I've since learned from this forum that creating an illusion of intimacy without the risk (long-distance relationships, long-term relationships that are devoid of closeness) is a common pattern for DAs. It took a dramatic shift in perspective for me to look at my relationship differently: first by opening up emotionally to an old friend, then by realizing emotional intimacy is possible AND was missing in my relationship, then by forcing myself to confront this new apparent problem by re-evaluating my relationship against my new perspective. All of these things go completely against the natural instincts of an avoidant.Now that I'm confronting my behavior and attachment style I realize this relationship was codependent and unhealthy. My superficial needs were being met, which is why I described the relationship positively, but my boundaries were not respected -- I wasn't able to vocalize the extent for my need for space, and was constantly triggered, increasing my avoidant behavior (primarily self-repression) and furthering the cycle. I also discovered a new need that wasn't being met in emotional intimacy. For the record, my partner is AP and is just as emotionally unavailable as I am. Since becoming aware of my attachment style I've been forcing myself to identify and vocalize my emotions and needs, and have been shut down. He responds to displays of emotion with one-word responses like "gotcha", changing the subject, or awkward childish/deflective behavior. Emotional unavailability is not exclusive to DAs.
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Post by tnr9 on Jan 11, 2018 23:33:48 GMT
This is what I don't get. My ex of 5 months displayed every single one of these traits to a T......FROM DAY ONE THOUGH! Am I the only one who never experienced this "coming on strong at the start" business? And before anyone gives me the "maybe she just wasn't that into you" line. I brought that up numerous times during the relationship only to have her adomately maintain that she felt the same way I did but "just didnt show it the same way as me". And before anyone suggests she was just using me. Well, I'm not sure what she was using me for. She made almost 3 times as much as I did and she certainly wasn't using me for sex as she didn't initiate sex one single time during the relationship and when we did have sex....it was awful. I just don't get it. Reading these boards leaves me more confused then before I got here. I'll share my perspective as a DA at the end of a LTR as I can relate to what you've posted about your relationship with your ex. For 7 years I truly believed I was in a two-way loving, close relationship. The romantic relationships I witnessed firsthand growing up were highly dysfunctional (my parents had several divorces & marriages between the 2 of them and there was a fair amount of abuse/trauma involved), but they were my ONLY frame of reference for adult romantic relationships. When compared with what I'd seen, my relationship seemed amazing, and so I told myself (and everyone else) a story that the relationship was fine and any perceived issues with it were inconsequential, and subconsciously avoided any line of thinking that would lead me to conclude otherwise. In hindsight this was deep denial; I've since learned from this forum that creating an illusion of intimacy without the risk (long-distance relationships, long-term relationships that are devoid of closeness) is a common pattern for DAs. It took a dramatic shift in perspective for me to look at my relationship differently: first by opening up emotionally to an old friend, then by realizing emotional intimacy is possible AND was missing in my relationship, then by forcing myself to confront this new apparent problem by re-evaluating my relationship against my new perspective. All of these things go completely against the natural instincts of an avoidant.Now that I'm confronting my behavior and attachment style I realize this relationship was codependent and unhealthy. My superficial needs were being met, which is why I described the relationship positively, but my boundaries were not respected -- I wasn't able to vocalize the extent for my need for space, and was constantly triggered, increasing my avoidant behavior (primarily self-repression) and furthering the cycle. I also discovered a new need that wasn't being met in emotional intimacy. For the record, my partner is AP and is just as emotionally unavailable as I am. Since becoming aware of my attachment style I've been forcing myself to identify and vocalize my emotions and needs, and have been shut down. He responds to displays of emotion with one-word responses like "gotcha", changing the subject, or awkward childish/deflective behavior. Emotional unavailability is not exclusive to DAs. So he doesn't then apologize for boundaries he crossed? I know that I missed several of my ex's "boundary requests" not on purpose but because he phrased it in a way that it did not come across as a request but more of a statement. Still...I take responsibility for not understanding and thus addressing his needs. I am sorry you feel invalidated.
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Post by ladyda on Jan 12, 2018 0:10:56 GMT
So he doesn't then apologize for boundaries he crossed? I know that I missed several of my ex's "boundary requests" not on purpose but because he phrased it in a way that it did not come across as a request but more of a statement. Still...I take responsibility for not understanding and thus addressing his needs. I am sorry you feel invalidated. Those times that I had the presence of mind to identify the behavior that was crossing a boundary and vocalize that to him, he would stop and apologize. Many of these behaviors reoccurred regularly despite my repeated requests to stop; sometimes he'd realize it and apologize again but they would eventually come back. My ability to identify/vocalize these things decreased over time as I continued to be triggered without the self-awareness to realize what was happening. Armed only with the knowledge that I behaved "differently" from most people in relationships, I told myself I was overreacting to small problems and that "normal people" wouldn't consider them significant enough to derail a relationship, and silently vowed to work on controlling my reactions. This led to further self-repression/emotional shutdown which increased his anxious behavior, furthering the push-pull cycle. I'm not sure how you could address this with a DA who isn't self-aware enough to understand or verbalize their own needs. Self-awareness has made all the difference in my situation. Regardless, I think the responsibility to identify/communicate needs falls on the person who has them.
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Post by tnr9 on Jan 12, 2018 1:42:26 GMT
So he doesn't then apologize for boundaries he crossed? I know that I missed several of my ex's "boundary requests" not on purpose but because he phrased it in a way that it did not come across as a request but more of a statement. Still...I take responsibility for not understanding and thus addressing his needs. I am sorry you feel invalidated. Those times that I had the presence of mind to identify the behavior that was crossing a boundary and vocalize that to him, he would stop and apologize. Many of these behaviors reoccurred regularly despite my repeated requests to stop; sometimes he'd realize it and apologize again but they would eventually come back. My ability to identify/vocalize these things decreased over time as I continued to be triggered without the self-awareness to realize what was happening. Armed only with the knowledge that I behaved "differently" from most people in relationships, I told myself I was overreacting to small problems and that "normal people" wouldn't consider them significant enough to derail a relationship, and silently vowed to work on controlling my reactions. This led to further self-repression/emotional shutdown which increased his anxious behavior, furthering the push-pull cycle. I'm not sure how you could address this with a DA who isn't self-aware enough to understand or verbalize their own needs. Self-awareness has made all the difference in my situation. Regardless, I think the responsibility to identify/communicate needs falls on the person who has them. What I am beginning to understand is that boundaries are really important to avoidants.....I am AP and boundaries have not really been important...because my mom's boundaries were so very tight. I am not saying that is a good thing...because it has meant that I don't know where my actual boundaries are (and as such, would not be as attuned to the boundaries of my partner) and I let my partner usually determine what if any boundaries exist. BTW...you are not the only one to be triggered and then think what you are triggered for is considered "normal" so you have to work on it....happened all the time with me....I often felt like my ex was physically there but emotionally checked out and I kept trying to be ok with it but inside I wasn't. I kept reading article after article trying to figure out what I had done wrong and how I could "fix" it. I still do that and he isn't dating me anymore....still I keep thinking the issues in our relationship were all mine and if I could just get it right he would change his mind about me. I am glad you are on these forums. I have to say that I am learning a lot through these threads. Again, I am sorry for the experience you went through.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 12, 2018 6:50:38 GMT
Hi! I'm new to this forum, but it's been a great resource to me.
I'm involved with a DA for the past 9 months. 1.5 months ago, he suddenly texted me that he needed less "us" time and immediately withdrew, keeping communication to a minimum and at a very regimented schedule (i.e., no more "i love yous", msgs only every 4 hours, no cutesy stickers). as an anxious (self-diagnosed), this sent me into a tailspin and I read every single article I could to deal with it. I stopped pursuing, replying only when he texts (still texts the bare minimum of asking how am I but not having real conversations), and mirroring his behavior (if he says i love you, i say it too. if he takes 5 hours to reply, i take another 5 hours to reply).
Now, he's back to normal and seeking closeness (sending me i love yous, striking up deeper conversations), basically going back to what it was before. and now I am terrified. that if we go back to what was before, it'll just trigger him again at some point where he is overwhelmed but doesn't say, and cuts the cord so violently. I am ok with him needing space, but cutting the emotional cord so quickly and decisively was extremely traumatic to me and it is not acceptable to me. To protect myself, I'm staying in the same communication pattern as per the past 2 months - rare immediate replies, short replies, not sharing much information on where I am and so on (we are in different countries most of the time due to work), not opening up to him with my thoughts.
I have a few questions and hope to seek some opinions!
1. Is it ok to be withdrawn from DAs? do they feel hurt or would they not even notice?
2. How do I manage the communication/closeness over time so that it does not trigger such a violent reaction from him? I need stability and consistency, with a certainty that my partner does not leave me (very anxious I know), so I do not want to get overly close and trigger his stress response.
Thanks!
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Post by tnr9 on Jan 12, 2018 16:15:30 GMT
Hi! I'm new to this forum, but it's been a great resource to me. I'm involved with a DA for the past 9 months. 1.5 months ago, he suddenly texted me that he needed less "us" time and immediately withdrew, keeping communication to a minimum and at a very regimented schedule (i.e., no more "i love yous", msgs only every 4 hours, no cutesy stickers). as an anxious (self-diagnosed), this sent me into a tailspin and I read every single article I could to deal with it. I stopped pursuing, replying only when he texts (still texts the bare minimum of asking how am I but not having real conversations), and mirroring his behavior (if he says i love you, i say it too. if he takes 5 hours to reply, i take another 5 hours to reply). Now, he's back to normal and seeking closeness (sending me i love yous, striking up deeper conversations), basically going back to what it was before. and now I am terrified. that if we go back to what was before, it'll just trigger him again at some point where he is overwhelmed but doesn't say, and cuts the cord so violently. I am ok with him needing space, but cutting the emotional cord so quickly and decisively was extremely traumatic to me and it is not acceptable to me. To protect myself, I'm staying in the same communication pattern as per the past 2 months - rare immediate replies, short replies, not sharing much information on where I am and so on (we are in different countries most of the time due to work), not opening up to him with my thoughts. I have a few questions and hope to seek some opinions! 1. Is it ok to be withdrawn from DAs? do they feel hurt or would they not even notice? 2. How do I manage the communication/closeness over time so that it does not trigger such a violent reaction from him? I need stability and consistency, with a certainty that my partner does not leave me (very anxious I know), so I do not want to get overly close and trigger his stress response. Thanks! Welcome to the forum.....it is good that you are mirroring him as it is likely allowing him to not feel pressured or smothered....however, is this something that you can maintain? Answer honestly. What I am beginning to see is that 1 partner gives 150% to the other partner...and then the other partner all of a sudden gives 100% and the first partner goes "great, he or she is finally responding the way I want him or her to on a consistent basis" and the first partner tries to figure out what he or she needs to do to have the other partner at 100% all the time.....however what is often lost is that to get the 100%, you have to change what is your natural pattern of being in a relationship....in essense, you have to maintain 150%...which can be exhausting. And...there is no guarantee what worked today, will work tomorrow...to your point....mirroring worked when he pulled away...but if you mirror him now will he feel smothered and withdraw? If you don't mirror him, will he feel unloved/rejected? Not easy questions to navigate....but in the meantime...I would also suggest you ask yourself whether he is truly trying to meet you in any way? Is he trying to reduce your anxiety the way you are trying to meet his? The answer doesn't require you to breakup with him...but just don't lose sight of your needs while you are trying to meet his. . Good luck.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 13, 2018 2:23:21 GMT
Hi! I'm new to this forum, but it's been a great resource to me. I'm involved with a DA for the past 9 months. 1.5 months ago, he suddenly texted me that he needed less "us" time and immediately withdrew, keeping communication to a minimum and at a very regimented schedule (i.e., no more "i love yous", msgs only every 4 hours, no cutesy stickers). as an anxious (self-diagnosed), this sent me into a tailspin and I read every single article I could to deal with it. I stopped pursuing, replying only when he texts (still texts the bare minimum of asking how am I but not having real conversations), and mirroring his behavior (if he says i love you, i say it too. if he takes 5 hours to reply, i take another 5 hours to reply). Now, he's back to normal and seeking closeness (sending me i love yous, striking up deeper conversations), basically going back to what it was before. and now I am terrified. that if we go back to what was before, it'll just trigger him again at some point where he is overwhelmed but doesn't say, and cuts the cord so violently. I am ok with him needing space, but cutting the emotional cord so quickly and decisively was extremely traumatic to me and it is not acceptable to me. To protect myself, I'm staying in the same communication pattern as per the past 2 months - rare immediate replies, short replies, not sharing much information on where I am and so on (we are in different countries most of the time due to work), not opening up to him with my thoughts. I have a few questions and hope to seek some opinions! 1. Is it ok to be withdrawn from DAs? do they feel hurt or would they not even notice? 2. How do I manage the communication/closeness over time so that it does not trigger such a violent reaction from him? I need stability and consistency, with a certainty that my partner does not leave me (very anxious I know), so I do not want to get overly close and trigger his stress response. Thanks! Welcome to the forum.....it is good that you are mirroring him as it is likely allowing him to not feel pressured or smothered....however, is this something that you can maintain? Answer honestly. What I am beginning to see is that 1 partner gives 150% to the other partner...and then the other partner all of a sudden gives 100% and the first partner goes "great, he or she is finally responding the way I want him or her to on a consistent basis" and the first partner tries to figure out what he or she needs to do to have the other partner at 100% all the time.....however what is often lost is that to get the 100%, you have to change what is your natural pattern of being in a relationship....in essense, you have to maintain 150%...which can be exhausting. And...there is no guarantee what worked today, will work tomorrow...to your point....mirroring worked when he pulled away...but if you mirror him now will he feel smothered and withdraw? If you don't mirror him, will he feel unloved/rejected? Not easy questions to navigate....but in the meantime...I would also suggest you ask yourself whether he is truly trying to meet you in any way? Is he trying to reduce your anxiety the way you are trying to meet his? The answer doesn't require you to breakup with him...but just don't lose sight of your needs while you are trying to meet his. . Good luck. You’re exactly right! Right now, while I’m figuring out what I can do and want for myself, I’m just holding him at a distance. I’m contemplating if I want to even continue in the relationship as I feel like I’m not getting anything out of it. I briefly spoke to him about the sudden withdrawal and told him that it was very stressful for me. He apologized and that was that. I didn’t push. I also told him that I need consistency in calling (we called everyday as a default and during the push, it became unpredictable and every few days, always at his control). He said ok and we came up with an agreement that calls are defaults and if we can’t, he’ll let me know. Somehow that feels like a lie because he can hide behind his busyness (he’s rather senior in a big firm), and I will have nothing to say against that. So even though he’s said all these things to “meet” me, it’s said when he’s in a good state of pull, and I don’t quite trust him anymore. So there’s this question of am I over reacting by wanting to run for the hills too early versus am I doing what is right by myself. I’ve never been so stressed out by dating before - and I’ve dated a lot.
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