Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop talking to him about the relationship except to listen empathetically as much as you can stand to. No advice or perspective.
Focus on enforcing boundaries about everything else (skipping practice would have serious consequences in our house) and building him up about the other parts of his life.
How so? I don't want to punish him for having feelings, even big ones. When this first started, I was sitting with him trying to convince him to go and he was literally crying into his pasta. What was I supposed to do? Then yesterday he was lying on his bed refusing to move. He's literally taller and heavier than me now. I can't just pick him up and push him out the door anymore.
As far as listening goes. I tell him "I know this is hard, I've been there. Everyone goes through this. I know you feel disappointed. But it's going to be ok. This too will pass." Is there anything else I should be saying? I think he only tells me the actual details though to get advice on what he should do.
I wouldn't add the bolded. That's not listening. It's telling him that what he feels doesn't matter because it will pass. It's diminishing his feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop talking to him about the relationship except to listen empathetically as much as you can stand to. No advice or perspective.
Focus on enforcing boundaries about everything else (skipping practice would have serious consequences in our house) and building him up about the other parts of his life.
How so? I don't want to punish him for having feelings, even big ones. When this first started, I was sitting with him trying to convince him to go and he was literally crying into his pasta. What was I supposed to do? Then yesterday he was lying on his bed refusing to move. He's literally taller and heavier than me now. I can't just pick him up and push him out the door anymore.
As far as listening goes. I tell him "I know this is hard, I've been there. Everyone goes through this. I know you feel disappointed. But it's going to be ok. This too will pass." Is there anything else I should be saying? I think he only tells me the actual details though to get advice on what he should do.
I wouldn't add the bolded. That's not listening. It's telling him that what he feels doesn't matter because it will pass. It's diminishing his feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop talking to him about the relationship except to listen empathetically as much as you can stand to. No advice or perspective.
Focus on enforcing boundaries about everything else (skipping practice would have serious consequences in our house) and building him up about the other parts of his life.
How so? I don't want to punish him for having feelings, even big ones. When this first started, I was sitting with him trying to convince him to go and he was literally crying into his pasta. What was I supposed to do? Then yesterday he was lying on his bed refusing to move. He's literally taller and heavier than me now. I can't just pick him up and push him out the door anymore.
As far as listening goes. I tell him "I know this is hard, I've been there. Everyone goes through this. I know you feel disappointed. But it's going to be ok. This too will pass." Is there anything else I should be saying? I think he only tells me the actual details though to get advice on what he should do.
Anonymous wrote:Stop talking to him about the relationship except to listen empathetically as much as you can stand to. No advice or perspective.
Focus on enforcing boundaries about everything else (skipping practice would have serious consequences in our house) and building him up about the other parts of his life.
Anonymous wrote:I would give him this piece of advice. If he can step back a little, it will give her room to step forward. It can be hard to reciprocate in a relationship where one partner is doing everything; there’s no room for her to do her part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your role is to listen to him, empathize, but not fix the relationship. This is how he learns what type of gf he wants, what kind of boyfriend he wants to be, etc.
Is it normal for him to be so depressed about this? He has refused to go to practice ever since this started, about a week ago. He is barely studying. He seems like a different person, very sad. I don't understand why he is so intense and extreme about her. They've only known each other a few months, since January.
Anonymous wrote:Your role is to listen to him, empathize, but not fix the relationship. This is how he learns what type of gf he wants, what kind of boyfriend he wants to be, etc.