Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ Sounds like revisionist history. If it’s true, that’s an even bigger red flag - why would ge marry someone he was not in love with? Frankly, he sounds very immature.
Terrible thing to say or believe, after the fact or not.
Sounds psycho, bitter or on the spectrum. Or all three.
Anonymous wrote:Dating someone who divorced after a long marriage with children (stayed till kids were raised to adulthood). I asked if he still loved her and he said “I don’t think I ever loved her.” Is this revisionist history? Do people really not love someone they married while young and had three children with and stayed with for nearly 30 years? Or is this just how they remember it when it’s over? He says that he didn’t really know what love was until more recently (also stuns me).
Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't see how this is a red flag. We all know about people who get married too young and don't know what they're getting into. We probably all have boyfriends/girlfriends from high school/college that we thought we were super in love with but it turns out we really weren't. All kinds of people stay in unhappy marriages for decades, especially if they're confused about why they're unhappy.
Someone said above this indicates OP's boyfriend is not "taking responsibility" for his part in the end of his marriage. I don't see that at all. It looks like he did some self reflection and realized his feelings weren't what he thought they were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a red flag to me. This is just rewriting history and not taking responsibility for what happened. He seems very manipulative and don't think that he didn't sell that "oh, I never loved anyone before you" crap to others before you. This is narcissistic behavior and he will play hot and cold until he will exhaust you. Did he tell you that you're the only one who understand him, too?
This. I would respect someone who would have said, we loved each other, but after 20 years and 3 kids, the love was eroded, we grew into different people, we no longer are compatible, whatever… just not this tired “I never loved her/him” refrain. If he didn’t love her, why did he stay so long, and how does he know he loves you?
People keep reading into this. He hasn’t said he loves me. We aren’t there. He did say “kids keep you together,” and theirs had special needs so he also stayed for that.
What he said to you is a red flag. But seeing how you are vehemently defending him you're going to keep seeing him and you'll learn the hard way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a red flag to me. This is just rewriting history and not taking responsibility for what happened. He seems very manipulative and don't think that he didn't sell that "oh, I never loved anyone before you" crap to others before you. This is narcissistic behavior and he will play hot and cold until he will exhaust you. Did he tell you that you're the only one who understand him, too?
This. I would respect someone who would have said, we loved each other, but after 20 years and 3 kids, the love was eroded, we grew into different people, we no longer are compatible, whatever… just not this tired “I never loved her/him” refrain. If he didn’t love her, why did he stay so long, and how does he know he loves you?
People keep reading into this. He hasn’t said he loves me. We aren’t there. He did say “kids keep you together,” and theirs had special needs so he also stayed for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Big red flag. Either he’s engaged in revisionist history (but to what end?), or he’s so disengaged from his own emotions that you two will never have a truly emotionally intimate relationship. If he were in therapist working on his emotional health, I might feel differently.
He is (in therapy).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such a red flag to me. This is just rewriting history and not taking responsibility for what happened. He seems very manipulative and don't think that he didn't sell that "oh, I never loved anyone before you" crap to others before you. This is narcissistic behavior and he will play hot and cold until he will exhaust you. Did he tell you that you're the only one who understand him, too?
Okay h, I don’t know where you’re getting this from what I wrote but not a single thing you wrote here has actually happened.
NP here. This is where my brain went to as well. Once you end up with a malignant narcissist, it is easy to see it everywhere. I get triggered by things. For example, was dating a guy until yesterday who was sweet until he made me defensive and started gaslighting me that his version of events was true. Done. Nope. I am out.
Anonymous wrote:Big red flag. Either he’s engaged in revisionist history (but to what end?), or he’s so disengaged from his own emotions that you two will never have a truly emotionally intimate relationship. If he were in therapist working on his emotional health, I might feel differently.
Anonymous wrote:red flag to me. a healthy divorced person will acknowledge that they loved their ex at one point but it is in the past.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this could happen when the person wonders if what they feel that might be called love isn't really love, or at least isn't nearly the same as how the other person in the relationship felt which they called love. Or maybe compared to other people they know and how they experience love.
I think it's not uncommon at all for some people, maybe especially men, to question what their feelings really are. Love vs companionship, admiration, attraction, protectiveness, appreciation, or just plain strong like.
I think it's also possible if someone decides or discovers they didn't love their spouse of 30 years, the mother of their children, it's also likely they aren't going to be able to really love anyone else either.
I'm a woman, and I feel this way about my husband. "Love" is a very western construct. The word doesn't even exist in some other languages. I have affection, respect and loyalty for my husband (and other times, frustration and scorn!). It's perfectly fine to question whether or not you "love" someone when the very word is so fraught, so loaded by American standards.
However this person really has to express some sort of positive feeling about their ex, otherwise it is a red flag. He stayed for years. I suppose he did feel some loyalty and sense of duty. Also apathy, probably, perhaps financial insecurity until he could feel secure enough to leave? Lots of different reasons and feelings. It's normal for such situations to be complex. Simplifying them would be silly.