Anonymous wrote:The only weird thing is the movie but I kind of understand that since they don't have many friends.
Texting multiple times a week even for hours with a friend is normal especially if they live far apart.
So is sending a birthday greeting.snd holiday greeting.
I honestly think this relationship is doomed despite him agreeing to go no contact which is an inappropriate ask.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP trust your gut.
Others will call you controlling and jealous but he is in essence having an emotional affair.
I was in this scenario when I was younger. It did not end well.
OP here, that's what I'm trying to do. I feel like we're doomed but since he agreed to cut contact with her, I'm willing to feel it out for a month or two and see if he is serious.
I don't know if you are doomed. Give him a chance to separate himself from this other woman and see if you can both invest in what you have.
Been there -- and I was your boyfriend in the situation. Broke up with a long-time ex I had been good friends with before dating. We used to chat literally every day for about an hour, even when we had both started dating other people, and would meet in person about once a month for a drink.
My boyfriend and his girlfriend were always kind of sad about it, but never made demands that we stop.
Eventually I realized that I wasn't investing in my new relationship, told the ex I needed to stop chatting every day, and held to it. I still missed him but I did have the energy to pay attention to my new relationship, and actually got engaged within 6 months and have now been happily married for 15 years. Haven't seen or chatting with my ex since getting engaged (aside from very infrequent mutual facebook thumbs up for big life events.) We both ended up marrying the people that we had been with when we were chatting daily with each other.
So, here's why I think i kept talking to the old guy:
1. I knew him much better than the new boyfriend and valued that history
2. We had some old business we need to bring to closure
3. We enjoyed the intimacy of the conversation
It really wasn't malicious. Its sometimes hard to stop caring about someone just instantly... it takes a little while to ramp down.
If you really like this guy, a little patience may pay off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP trust your gut.
Others will call you controlling and jealous but he is in essence having an emotional affair.
I was in this scenario when I was younger. It did not end well.
OP here, that's what I'm trying to do. I feel like we're doomed but since he agreed to cut contact with her, I'm willing to feel it out for a month or two and see if he is serious.
Anonymous wrote:OP trust your gut.
Others will call you controlling and jealous but he is in essence having an emotional affair.
I was in this scenario when I was younger. It did not end well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I was the ex once in this situation. Was super close friends with a guy but due to a myriad of factors we could not make it work romantically. We’d always take time away from each other then find our way back to each other, creep in as “friends” and be close again.
I eventually had to cut off the relationship precisely because a) I wasn’t fully emotionally available to begin a new relationship and b) our friendship was not appropriate for two people who would eventually be in other relationships, and I didn’t want to be iced out like your BF will eventually have to do when he gets serious about someone else.
Knowing how my friendship was- and what information about us that I am sure my “friend” kept from the women he dated - I would not have been comfortable being the person he was dating. I did us all a favor. You are right to be uncomfortable. He shouldn’t be texting/calling anyone that intensely/frequently, let alone an ex.
Btw, sometimes we miss each other. I know because it’s obvious when we do talk, which is rarely. We can pick up right where we left off. I have zero regrets about our relationship not working out, and am happily married now, but having that type of dynamic be a constant presence in my life now would not be a good thing for any marriage. It’s sad that we can’t be friends because we really were great friends, but that’s how it has to be.
Thank you for this. I believe there are no romantic feelings (maybe?) but its the fact that they can just pick right up again. I agree that its the stress of it constantly being in my life that is holding me back in this relationship.
PP here. The complicated part is that you have to be the one instigating this, and he hasn’t come to that conclusion himself. You don’t want him to resent you over this, but you shouldn’t tolerate it either. He should realize he can’t have a friendship like that long term if he intends to be in a serious relationship.
My husband was fresh out of a long term relationship when we met. He still spoke to her often and I had to tell him it made me uncomfortable. He didn’t go no contact, but they never saw each other and speak occasionally. It sort of happened naturally as the years went by. He should want to be respectful of his current relationship. [/quote
NP. My husband had a friend who had expressed her interest in him and they remained close friends even though he told he her was not interested in her romantically. She would text at all hours but especially, somehow, when we were in bed together, like weekend mornings. She also weirdly asked me to compete with her in social situations (like trivia or singing) when my now DH, then BF was around. I asked DH to tone down the friendship and at first he didn’t see an issue but as a few weeks went by and I pointed out what she was doing, he did see it and did dial it down. I think they still email a few times a year, a decade later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I was the ex once in this situation. Was super close friends with a guy but due to a myriad of factors we could not make it work romantically. We’d always take time away from each other then find our way back to each other, creep in as “friends” and be close again.
I eventually had to cut off the relationship precisely because a) I wasn’t fully emotionally available to begin a new relationship and b) our friendship was not appropriate for two people who would eventually be in other relationships, and I didn’t want to be iced out like your BF will eventually have to do when he gets serious about someone else.
Knowing how my friendship was- and what information about us that I am sure my “friend” kept from the women he dated - I would not have been comfortable being the person he was dating. I did us all a favor. You are right to be uncomfortable. He shouldn’t be texting/calling anyone that intensely/frequently, let alone an ex.
Btw, sometimes we miss each other. I know because it’s obvious when we do talk, which is rarely. We can pick up right where we left off. I have zero regrets about our relationship not working out, and am happily married now, but having that type of dynamic be a constant presence in my life now would not be a good thing for any marriage. It’s sad that we can’t be friends because we really were great friends, but that’s how it has to be.
Thank you for this. I believe there are no romantic feelings (maybe?) but its the fact that they can just pick right up again. I agree that its the stress of it constantly being in my life that is holding me back in this relationship.
PP here. The complicated part is that you have to be the one instigating this, and he hasn’t come to that conclusion himself. You don’t want him to resent you over this, but you shouldn’t tolerate it either. He should realize he can’t have a friendship like that long term if he intends to be in a serious relationship.
My husband was fresh out of a long term relationship when we met. He still spoke to her often and I had to tell him it made me uncomfortable. He didn’t go no contact, but they never saw each other and speak occasionally. It sort of happened naturally as the years went by. He should want to be respectful of his current relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. I was the ex once in this situation. Was super close friends with a guy but due to a myriad of factors we could not make it work romantically. We’d always take time away from each other then find our way back to each other, creep in as “friends” and be close again.
I eventually had to cut off the relationship precisely because a) I wasn’t fully emotionally available to begin a new relationship and b) our friendship was not appropriate for two people who would eventually be in other relationships, and I didn’t want to be iced out like your BF will eventually have to do when he gets serious about someone else.
Knowing how my friendship was- and what information about us that I am sure my “friend” kept from the women he dated - I would not have been comfortable being the person he was dating. I did us all a favor. You are right to be uncomfortable. He shouldn’t be texting/calling anyone that intensely/frequently, let alone an ex.
Btw, sometimes we miss each other. I know because it’s obvious when we do talk, which is rarely. We can pick up right where we left off. I have zero regrets about our relationship not working out, and am happily married now, but having that type of dynamic be a constant presence in my life now would not be a good thing for any marriage. It’s sad that we can’t be friends because we really were great friends, but that’s how it has to be.
Thank you for this. I believe there are no romantic feelings (maybe?) but its the fact that they can just pick right up again. I agree that its the stress of it constantly being in my life that is holding me back in this relationship.
Anonymous wrote:So wait, her boyfriend is jealous of him, and you're jealous of her, and what a mess....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As much as I agree that it can be problematic with the amount of contact he was having with her, I think it's equally problematic you telling him who can and cannot be friends with.
Maybe, instead of him having to go no contact, you ask to be introduced. If they're FaceTime movie watching (that's just weird in my opinion, but whatever), ask to join and be with him on the couch. Join in group texts. If either of them waffles at that, then you've got your problem. But start treating her like you would any other friend he has, and see what happens.
It's a little complicated, but we sort of tried that. We were friends on social media and I talked to her sometimes, until she said that her boyfriend had issues with my boyfriend commenting on her social media posts, and defriended/blocked both of us. I don't even care about the social media aspect, but just the amount that they are texting. Before I said anything to him about it, it was constant, like almost daily. It was cut down but even then, who has a 3 hour phone call with a female friend, let alone an ex? Something isn't 100% kosher.