Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The last person who told me that they loved me took 9 months to say it. And said it because we had gotten in to a fight about him not saying it when I was trying to end the relationship because he wouldn't say it and it had caused a lot of hurt and resentment to build over time. We stayed together another year after that, but shouldn't have.
I definitely think it can be said too late. When you really care about someone, continuing to not hear them say it can really cut deep. For me, feeling like I continually had to doubt how much he cared about me was the beginning of the end.
The fight to get him to say it should have been your exit. Good lord.
Anonymous wrote:The last person who told me that they loved me took 9 months to say it. And said it because we had gotten in to a fight about him not saying it when I was trying to end the relationship because he wouldn't say it and it had caused a lot of hurt and resentment to build over time. We stayed together another year after that, but shouldn't have.
I definitely think it can be said too late. When you really care about someone, continuing to not hear them say it can really cut deep. For me, feeling like I continually had to doubt how much he cared about me was the beginning of the end.
Anonymous wrote:I know someone who’s been in a relationship for 5 years and her boyfriend still hasn’t said it. I have no clue what she’s doing.
Anonymous wrote:Knowing what I know now ... too soon is worse than later. There’s so much more that goes into a good relationship.
That said, if it was a really long time, I might wonder. It could be that they aren’t actually committed or interested in commiting. It could also be a weird control thing. Or it could be a very inflexible way of thinking where they have some weird standard about what “love” means.
At the end of the day, for me, a solid relationship means that my partner doesn’t have any weird hangups or beliefs about relationships that stray really far from culturally expected behaviors. So yes, it would be a red flag if they refused to say “I love you” for a really long time. “I love you” just expresses that you feel happy, attracted, and very attached to your partner - if you can’t say that, for whatever reason, within a fairly standard time period (maybe 6-9 months tops) there’s an issue.
PP’s example of being patient with her aspie husband is interesting. For me personally, that would still be a red flag, because I need more emotional support and can’t be the one doing all the emoting. But I can believe she understood him well enough not to be worried. However, I think men refusing to say “ I love you” is far more often a sign of control, avoidant personality, or lack of committment.