Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. He’s not that into you. If he was, and was just embarrassed, he would have laughed and said nothing. But that’s not what happened. Better to know now. Sorry, OP.
+1. Or really, it sounds like OP is way more into him than he is into her, which is functionally the same thing.
Wrong. I did something similar with my husband when we first started dating. I knew I loved him but I didn’t think he felt the same. My sister, in front of him, and said, “oo you’ve got the love bug for sure”. I rolled my eyes, waved my hand, and said “love bug my arse”. I was mortified that I was put on the spot and didn’t want him, or anyone for that matter, to know how she was right because how humiliating would it have been if he didn’t feel the same or this scared him away because it was too soon.
You are a woman and that was a good way to handle that. This guy is a man. Not the same sorry!!
Anonymous wrote:Give him a break, he can't say he loves you for the first time right in front of his friend who was teasing him about it.
Anonymous wrote:How old are you and bf?
Did either of you express love before before his father died?
I understand that he was devastated by his father’s death, but to the level that he had to move away?
What transpired during the years you were apart?
Did you stay connected in a deep or superficial way?
During the time apart were you in a long term relationship? Was he?
Anonymous wrote:Surprised no one has asked this yet but how was he/your relationship years ago? Was he a jerk who played games? Did he seem insecure?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. He’s not that into you. If he was, and was just embarrassed, he would have laughed and said nothing. But that’s not what happened. Better to know now. Sorry, OP.
+1. Or really, it sounds like OP is way more into him than he is into her, which is functionally the same thing.
Wrong. I did something similar with my husband when we first started dating. I knew I loved him but I didn’t think he felt the same. My sister, in front of him, and said, “oo you’ve got the love bug for sure”. I rolled my eyes, waved my hand, and said “love bug my arse”. I was mortified that I was put on the spot and didn’t want him, or anyone for that matter, to know how she was right because how humiliating would it have been if he didn’t feel the same or this scared him away because it was too soon.
You are a woman and that was a good way to handle that. This guy is a man. Not the same sorry!!
Anonymous wrote:OP, he wasn't laughing because the idea of being in love with you is laughable to him. He was laughing because he felt awkward in the moment ("I'm not there yet - don't put that idea in her head!" "Those are private thoughts, don't make them public!" "[Some toxic masculinity garbage]!") and didn't know how to respond, so he tried to paper over the moment by laughing. Which was dumb, but I just don't think he meant "This bridge troll? Please, as if."
Anonymous wrote:How old are you and bf?
Did either of you express love before before his father died?
I understand that he was devastated by his father’s death, but to the level that he had to move away?
What transpired during the years you were apart?
Did you stay connected in a deep or superficial way?
During the time apart were you in a long term relationship? Was he?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“Why are you so amazing?” Ugh, that line just turns my stomach.
A man calls the woman he’s with amazing and somehow he’s still wrong. Now that’s amazing.
Anonymous wrote:OP, he wasn't laughing because the idea of being in love with you is laughable to him. He was laughing because he felt awkward in the moment ("I'm not there yet - don't put that idea in her head!" "Those are private thoughts, don't make them public!" "[Some toxic masculinity garbage]!") and didn't know how to respond, so he tried to paper over the moment by laughing. Which was dumb, but I just don't think he meant "This bridge troll? Please, as if."