Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe therapy will help sort out all your issues.
+1
There's a lot more going on than your ex.
Anonymous wrote:This doesn’t sound good. It was a nice gesture, but I’d leave it alone. Not even to say thank. Why open that door again. FYI if you argued all the time, it was a shitty relationship. Cheating is not the only benchmark here. You can do better.
Anonymous wrote:My ex broke up with me in early October saying she was just exhausted from all the arguing. She tried to get back with me a week later and I told her no. I admit I messed up and sent her a lot of messages the next and the days that followed after I rejected her. A week later I told her I was struggling.
She is the first person I could see myself marrying and having kids with. Hell, I even told her when we were dating I though about what our house would be like and what our kids would look like. All my other exes cheated on me, but she was loyal and I know she'd never cheat on me, but at the same time I didn't trust her.
Sadly, my mother passed away a year ago. She sent me a card, well the entire family really, saying she knew the anniversary of my mom's death was coming up and evertyhing with the holidays she imagines that it's hard, and all that other good stuff.
Since I’ve been cheated on the other breakups were really different and now I don't know what to make of this. Should I say anything to her? I don't know, this means she's a really good person doesn't it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe therapy will help sort out all your issues.
+1
There's a lot more going on than your ex.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe therapy will help sort out all your issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn’t sound good. It was a nice gesture, but I’d leave it alone. Not even to say thank. Why open that door again. FYI if you argued all the time, it was a shitty relationship. Cheating is not the only benchmark here. You can do better.
Not saying thank you is extremely rude. Just because something didn’t work out doesn’t mean you have to be rude.
I disagree. You can learn to argue properly and it the relationship be better. Plus it’s not really our place to say if OP can do better or not.
Personally if I loved someone enough who is loyal, supportive, and as caring as OP’s ex seems to be, learning to communicate better could be worth it.
I’m the pp who suggested not responding. Of course not thanking someone is rude, but in these types of situations people are just doing these things to keep the back and forth going. For example my ex, who was abusive, still sends me two dozen roses every Valentine’s Day. He also sends me a card every year for my birthday. I don’t ever call him up to say thank you because I know that is his m.o. for how he manipulates. When I said do better, I meant op could be happy. I’m much happier alone then in a bad relationship.
+1 also had a pathological liar ex who would leave me love notes all over the place. Still finding them in books 12 years later. Sweet? Not really coming from a psycho. Like the PP he also tracked me down to say happy birthday or congratulations on your wedding day. It's all about control with these weirdos. I used to respond harshly then I ignored. He's since stopped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn’t sound good. It was a nice gesture, but I’d leave it alone. Not even to say thank. Why open that door again. FYI if you argued all the time, it was a shitty relationship. Cheating is not the only benchmark here. You can do better.
Not saying thank you is extremely rude. Just because something didn’t work out doesn’t mean you have to be rude.
I disagree. You can learn to argue properly and it the relationship be better. Plus it’s not really our place to say if OP can do better or not.
Personally if I loved someone enough who is loyal, supportive, and as caring as OP’s ex seems to be, learning to communicate better could be worth it.
I’m the pp who suggested not responding. Of course not thanking someone is rude, but in these types of situations people are just doing these things to keep the back and forth going. For example my ex, who was abusive, still sends me two dozen roses every Valentine’s Day. He also sends me a card every year for my birthday. I don’t ever call him up to say thank you because I know that is his m.o. for how he manipulates. When I said do better, I meant op could be happy. I’m much happier alone then in a bad relationship.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn’t sound good. It was a nice gesture, but I’d leave it alone. Not even to say thank. Why open that door again. FYI if you argued all the time, it was a shitty relationship. Cheating is not the only benchmark here. You can do better.
Not saying thank you is extremely rude. Just because something didn’t work out doesn’t mean you have to be rude.
I disagree. You can learn to argue properly and it the relationship be better. Plus it’s not really our place to say if OP can do better or not.
Personally if I loved someone enough who is loyal, supportive, and as caring as OP’s ex seems to be, learning to communicate better could be worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's about if you want to be a good husband
Does she want to be a good wife
To make it work you both - independently - need to be of the mindset that you want marriage. I don't understand what there is to argue about. That's not normal. Some couples are just in a continuous loop of drama and wanting attention. Is that you?
No it’s not. My ex pointed out how I never grieved properly and she knew this was affecting kid relationship. Also, she believes I have trust issues. My ex cheated on me around the same time my mother was diagnosed with cancer. We broke up and I moved home to help my father out. I automatically went into autopilot and went numb for a long time. I was numb until I met her.
Anonymous wrote:It's about if you want to be a good husband
Does she want to be a good wife
To make it work you both - independently - need to be of the mindset that you want marriage. I don't understand what there is to argue about. That's not normal. Some couples are just in a continuous loop of drama and wanting attention. Is that you?