Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
+5 million. It takes a good deal of self awareness, but you know when you're a priority. It also takes a tremendous amount of strength to walk away from "potential" that, ultimately, is never realized.
What exactly is it that's making you ask this question?
OP here. Im dating my bf for a year and a half and I don't feel included or accepted into his family.He told me at the start that his mother, especially, was never very nice to his girlfriends and that is why his relationships failed. So he kept me away from her for a long time until I insisted I be a part of his family life and that they should know I exist. His mother now knows I exist, we've met thrice. And she's cordial but I'm not close with his siblings either. All his best friends are best friends with his mom and dad and used to hang around his house growing up. Its weird to me to know that here I am so in love with him but...I'm not a part of his life back home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
+5 million. It takes a good deal of self awareness, but you know when you're a priority. It also takes a tremendous amount of strength to walk away from "potential" that, ultimately, is never realized.
What exactly is it that's making you ask this question?
OP here. Im dating my bf for a year and a half and I don't feel included or accepted into his family.He told me at the start that his mother, especially, was never very nice to his girlfriends and that is why his relationships failed. So he kept me away from her for a long time until I insisted I be a part of his family life and that they should know I exist. His mother now knows I exist, we've met thrice. And she's cordial but I'm not close with his siblings either. All his best friends are best friends with his mom and dad and used to hang around his house growing up. Its weird to me to know that here I am so in love with him but...I'm not a part of his life back home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
+5 million. It takes a good deal of self awareness, but you know when you're a priority. It also takes a tremendous amount of strength to walk away from "potential" that, ultimately, is never realized.
What exactly is it that's making you ask this question?
OP here. Im dating my bf for a year and a half and I don't feel included or accepted into his family.He told me at the start that his mother, especially, was never very nice to his girlfriends and that is why his relationships failed. So he kept me away from her for a long time until I insisted I be a part of his family life and that they should know I exist. His mother now knows I exist, we've met thrice. And she's cordial but I'm not close with his siblings either. All his best friends are best friends with his mom and dad and used to hang around his house growing up. Its weird to me to know that here I am so in love with him but...I'm not a part of his life back home.
Anonymous wrote:You know you are being strung along when there are repeated red flags that arise and something strikes you wrong instinctively.
When you find yourself making excuses for the person you're dating, or hiding things about them from people that you care about.
When you're repeatedly being let down, when they start making excuses on a regular basis for why things aren't happening as they should.
When you're obviously the last on the priority list and everything else comes first.
Desperate people tolerate this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
+5 million. It takes a good deal of self awareness, but you know when you're a priority. It also takes a tremendous amount of strength to walk away from "potential" that, ultimately, is never realized.
What exactly is it that's making you ask this question?
OP here. Im dating my bf for a year and a half and I don't feel included or accepted into his family.He told me at the start that his mother, especially, was never very nice to his girlfriends and that is why his relationships failed. So he kept me away from her for a long time until I insisted I be a part of his family life and that they should know I exist. His mother now knows I exist, we've met thrice. And she's cordial but I'm not close with his siblings either. All his best friends are best friends with his mom and dad and used to hang around his house growing up. Its weird to me to know that here I am so in love with him but...I'm not a part of his life back home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
+5 million. It takes a good deal of self awareness, but you know when you're a priority. It also takes a tremendous amount of strength to walk away from "potential" that, ultimately, is never realized.
What exactly is it that's making you ask this question?
Anonymous wrote:Nope. I don't subscribe to the belief that there are Machiavellian daters out there who are dating for the sole purpose of.... I dont know what. Wasting their own time? Getting someone else's hopes up just for the sick pleasure of seeing disappoint?
Nope. Dating takes time/money investment from both sides, so I tend to believe that if the relationship doesn't progress in the way i wanted it to, that I did something to mess it up. Or we aren't compatible. Or they realize I'm not the one for them.
But think that I've been "strung along"- somehow bamboozled? Nah.
Anonymous wrote:"Strung along", to me, is equivalent of "not that into you" OR "not that into being in the kind of relationship you want".
You know it's happening when the other person doesn't reciprocate your level of interest and/or committment. Want to know if it's happening to you? Ask the other person where they see the relationship going and how they feel about it. Compare that to what you want and how you feel. A mismatch indicates that it is time to reevaluate the relationship and likely move on. GL.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, OP? If you have to write a post asking what it looks like, I can guarantee you're being strung along.
A partner should make it known in no uncertain terms that you are important to him/her. If they don't, they aren't that into you. Let it go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 38 year old SIL is constantly strung along. It's so obvious to everyone but her. She is desperate to find someone to marry and she is repeatedly put in to a situation where she is waiting for a guy. Waiting for him to work on his problems in life, end his marriage, get over his divorce, his kids aren't ready for him to date, he's having health problems, and so on.
It always ends badly for her.
Sounds like she seeks out "unavailable" men. Some women do this. There's a whole cottage industry of therapists who deal with this.
PP here. Bottom feeders are the only ones that seem to give her the time of day. They're always full of problems. She's a 38 year old single mom, never married, never lived on her own.
Lives with her 65 year old mom. I am a believer that we don't attract what we want, we attract what we are. Until she's willing to step up and become something, her cycle will repeat.
And she is hardly likely to step up and believe she is worth more with relatives like you standing in the wings to cut her down.![]()
And there we go with the uninformed cheap shot. You have no idea what's been done to help her. That we've paid for her continued education, or that I've spent 7 unsuccessful years encouraging her in ways to transcend this situation.
It's no cheap shot it's a comment on your negative attitude. Doesn't matter what you think you may have done to help her, your lack of respect shines through and if we can see that she is bound to pick up on it. It sounds like you have infantilized her with interfering also.
And the SIL's choices have NOTHING to do with anything.