Anonymous wrote:I think you've already made a stain on this relationship. If I were him, I'd move on. I'm 39 years old and divorced. I don't commit after 4 months. I got out of an abusive marriage and realized I was dating the wrong people my whole life. I take things slow. Last year, I met someone recently divorced, but wanted an exclusive relationship right off the bat. I said that I wasn't willing to commit that quickly. That it's not a smart idea.
Four months is still brand new. At that stage, I would walk away from anyone who pressured me to commit. Even if we decided to stay together after the stunt you pulled, I'd date around until I found a better partner. You put out such a huge red flag. That you're unwilling to compromise and talk out major differences -- especially when it sounds like he would have come around quickly anyway. You're not great long term material for me.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, he's tried several times to reach out to you and you continuously shut him down?
That should be a red flag for him. I wouldn't be surprised if he he said he was confused by your definition of "commitment" but understands now, was willing to do it, but your harsh hard-line stubbornness and personal pride and lack of communication/extend an olive branch made him change his mind.
If you react like this to this type of situation, how unreasonable will you be for the larger things in life, other big permanent decisions, and curve balls life throws at you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
OP: I have kids. He does not. He told me he's indifferent about having his own kids; he's more interested in finding the right partner.
Having kids is a serious reason for you to take things slow.
OP: to be clear, I would not introduce anyone to my kids until we've been together at least a year and we've talked about this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
OP: I have kids. He does not. He told me he's indifferent about having his own kids; he's more interested in finding the right partner.
Having kids is a serious reason for you to take things slow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
OP: I have kids. He does not. He told me he's indifferent about having his own kids; he's more interested in finding the right partner.
Having kids is a serious reason for you to take things slow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You want what you want. Good for you for sticking to it. I don't think that 4 months is a long time, but it really depends on what has been happening for that four months. I would be interested in what a committed relationship means to him and what about it he feels unready for. I would do a lot of listening. The point is for you to get information to process, not convince him or explain yourself.
OP: Yes that makes sense. I'll go into it listening with an open mind. For the past 4 months we've been going out 2-3x/week. We spend the night at each other's places. He's met my friends.
That sounds like a relationship to meWhat are you asking him for that he is not into? As someone who divorced in my 40s there are so many possibilities
-he is being responsible about moving slow
-he's not that into you
-he is into you but also wants to see other people
-you are overly focused on BEING IN A RELATIONSHIP
-you know what you want and he is showing that he can't give you want you want
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
OP: I have kids. He does not. He told me he's indifferent about having his own kids; he's more interested in finding the right partner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
OP: I have kids. He does not. He told me he's indifferent about having his own kids; he's more interested in finding the right partner.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You want what you want. Good for you for sticking to it. I don't think that 4 months is a long time, but it really depends on what has been happening for that four months. I would be interested in what a committed relationship means to him and what about it he feels unready for. I would do a lot of listening. The point is for you to get information to process, not convince him or explain yourself.
OP: Yes that makes sense. I'll go into it listening with an open mind. For the past 4 months we've been going out 2-3x/week. We spend the night at each other's places. He's met my friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You want what you want. Good for you for sticking to it. I don't think that 4 months is a long time, but it really depends on what has been happening for that four months. I would be interested in what a committed relationship means to him and what about it he feels unready for. I would do a lot of listening. The point is for you to get information to process, not convince him or explain yourself.
OP: Yes that makes sense. I'll go into it listening with an open mind. For the past 4 months we've been going out 2-3x/week. We spend the night at each other's places. He's met my friends.
What are you asking him for that he is not into? As someone who divorced in my 40s there are so many possibilities
Anonymous wrote:Do you have kids? Does he?
Do you want kids?
If you go, try to listen more than talk. Make him do most of the talking. You want to know what he really feels. You don’t want him to just parrot what you say.