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Sounds like he needed his own space to process. He got in touch in a reasonable amount of time, said nothing heavy.
The real question is will he be able to talk about his feelings in the follow up and hear you. If he can, then the way he handled it sounds pretty mature. If what he needs is to walk and never talk again then I would red flag that file as emotionally avoidant. |
| People who try to force an immediate resolution when you're not feeling it in the moment are the worst. |
| Never give up your own place, OP. Even if you eventually buy something together- have your own place too. |
What an overreaction. They had an argument. They both sat there in silence for a while. OP's boyfriend calmy said he needed some space and gave her kiss, went to his house, slept, started his day, then texted her. Jesus christ. |
Yes it is. I don't have a temper at all, but if I'm out in public and someone is trying to start something, I'm going to walk away. There's a reason I've never been in a physical fight -- better to walk away when things get heated to let things cool down. |
Same. If my several relationships have taught me is that this type of exchange is not healthy. No one is worth this. |
No. Leaving like he did is a form of manipulation to make her feel pain. She needs to move on. |
Agree. --married 17 years |
| Married almost 30 years. They don’t live together, so going to his place to give himself space is reasonable. I think he has died it well, assuming he was ready to talk the next day. |
Sounds about right. |
| ^ Oops! Meant Handled it well. |
I disagree with this. It really depends on the person. There is a difference between needing time alone to process something (which is a self-care measure) and giving the silent treatment (which is solely about punishing the other person). When I was in my early 20s my mother once made me sit for almost 2 hours talking about heavy emotional stuff that hurt so much. I later told it it felt like emotional rape, and it did. It was horrific. If a person who needs time alone can maturely articulate that to a partner, in a calm way, and then regroup and come back later to work it out, I think that's great. That's being respectful of their needs and their partner's needs. Now, in the long term, it may mean that a couple's arguing style isn't very compatible, and OP will have to figure that out. |
Yup. |
| How did the heated exchange start? I had a BF who would pick a fight then walk out, saying he needed "space" or "time to process". Turns out, he was cheating on me. |
| Why won’t op reply with what the fight was about? I guess op was in the wrong! |