Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forget about him. You need to join a codependent anonymous group and go to at least five meetings. Stop focusing on and complaining about him now and forced and focus on what matters—your own issues.
Um, thanks for your comment? Yes I’m familiar with CODA and have been to meetings before.
I don’t think I’m complaining about him but instead dealing with sadness about ending things with someone I care about.
Your later posts do not support this position. You're enabling him and you feel guilty cutting it off.
Enabling him how?
Anonymous wrote:He suckered you into being his codependent, ready to fix his problems for him, in short order. It doesn’t matter whether he realizes that he did this or if it’s just habit. Or whether he cares about you or not. The only thing that matters is that this is a dysfunctional, codependent relationship that you can’t make healthy and must end. And the only thing that you should consider is why you were attracted to the dysfunction and actually thought that it was your job to do something about it. Because an emotionally healthy person would have stopped seeing him at the first sign of addiction and dysfunction. In other words, fix yourself, not him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh, I think I am addicted in a way…my codependency is very strong. I’m having second thoughts about ending it with him. This isn’t good.
Logically I know I have to but emotionally I don’t want to let him go. I feel like I’m not strong enough to do to this.
Lady how old are you? I stopped giving a shit about hurting men's feelings when I was 35.
Anonymous wrote:Op, I had my fair share of unhealthy relationships for far too long. Not all addicts but…the common denominator was me. I focused so much on solving their problems, rescuing “brilliant” men with “potential” while ignoring what everyone else could see so plainly. Took lots of therapy and unpacking my early life (borderline needy/waif mentally ill
mother; distant, genius, hot/cold father, no nurturing childhood) to see that I was attracted to catastrophes because if I could fix them, maybe I could fix myself , etc etc.
I can guess why you can’t see him the way the rest of us do. You want to believe in his potential, his love, with the right person he could flourish etc…but I also think you do know, deep down inside, that you can’t save him and that you deserve better but you also feel deeply conflicted. The conflict is within you. Even feeling terrible about braki you is you assuming a kind of responsibility for his emotional well being that is not necessary.
You deserve a healthy relationship with a well adjusted , healthy, normal man who loves you for who you are.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh, I think I am addicted in a way…my codependency is very strong. I’m having second thoughts about ending it with him. This isn’t good.
Logically I know I have to but emotionally I don’t want to let him go. I feel like I’m not strong enough to do to this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ok, keep dating a gambling addict who lives with his mommy because you can't make a phone call.
That makes total sense.
Unhelpful
Anonymous wrote:Ok, keep dating a gambling addict who lives with his mommy because you can't make a phone call.
That makes total sense.