Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who calls people they dated a decade ago “my ex”? That’s like for very recent ex boyfriends or ex husbands.
Seriously? After 10 years they stop being your ex and it's like (poof!) all that history of you being together never even happened?
Nah. Dude is Op's ex.
I’m a woman, and when women do this they seem very pathetic. Ex husband, fine. Some guy you dated in college? Seriously? “My ex”? Gives a very specific title to someone who just passed through your life... is every boyfriend ever “my ex”? How do people possibly know who you’re talking about?
Anonymous wrote:I believe we grow the most mentally and emotionally between 18 and 30. People you knew/dated at 18 are very different at 25. You still found him attractive. Only you know if there is too much hurt from the past to go back down that road. IMO, there is no harm in meeting him for a drink and discovering if there is interested or not. It would be different if you were in another relationship.
We learn for experiences. Go out and have that drink. You will learn if there is still a spark and maybe learn if there is an interest in pursuing it. Maybe it will just be more water under the bridge and you will just knock down any remaining barriers. It will make your journeys home less stressful since he will be an afterthought.
Plus, there is the naturally human instinct of wanting to feel like you won. He made you insecure. Seeing he wants you and knowing that he knows moving on was a horrible mistakes gives you that win. You will gain confidence, which is very sexy in a woman or a man.
Basically, I see no downside to the drink. To use a Seinfeld term, you have "hand".
Anonymous wrote:Just to offer an alternative- i did have an ex randomly call me a couple years later to apologize. It was completely out of the blue and he felt guilty for being a cheater and also just generally treating me like crap. Apparently he met someone later that he got serious with and she was kind of a trading wreck from someone like him messing with her head.
So it’s possible he does just want to apologize (although the meet in person for drinks part makes it seem less likely)
Even if that is the case though, it’s just a lame attempt to assuage guilt. At best. Skip it.
Even the best case scenarios stink. He didn’t just cheat, he did it with your best friend. And if they were soul mates, a decent human would have at least broken up with you first and tried to be upfront about things. There are a lot of character flaws and insecurities that caused the breakup and this haven’t changed. Stay strong - you’re handling things the right way by maintaining distance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who calls people they dated a decade ago “my ex”? That’s like for very recent ex boyfriends or ex husbands.
Seriously? After 10 years they stop being your ex and it's like (poof!) all that history of you being together never even happened?
Nah. Dude is Op's ex.
Anonymous wrote:Who calls people they dated a decade ago “my ex”? That’s like for very recent ex boyfriends or ex husbands.