kileina_hana
Sep 6, 2004, 07:33 PM
Sigh... I've never written to one of these things before, but the situation I'm in now is too tough not to look for some objective outside advice...
I'm 22 and my boyfriend is 24; we've been dating for two and a half years. I love him more than I ever thought I was capable of. I know that he loves me too, and we are very committed to each other.
About a month ago, I was offered, and I accepted, a teaching job an hour away from where he lives. Being in a new town with a new job has been hard for me, and for the first few weeks I called my boyfriend several times a week; we would visit each other on weekends.
Last weekend, after he went back home from visiting me, we had a long phone conversation about our relationship, and he told me he needed space. He said he thought I shouldn't call him during the week anymore, but that we could still visit on the weekends. This was hard for me to accept, but, determined to make things work out, I decided to respect his request and give him all the space he needed.
This weekend, I visited him, and everything started great. We were happy to see each other, we watched a movie together, had some better-than-usual sex, and fell asleep curled up together. Sunday morning, I was checking my email on his computer while I waited for him to wake up, and I found a journal entry he had written. It was one of the most painful things I've ever read.
He mostly wrote about feeling depressed, and he talked about how I was too dependent on him and how he hoped that me not calling him would make things better--all these feelings I already knew about. But the other thing he talked about was an 18-year-old girl he works with. He wrote that he was lonely and was thinking about asking her to a movie, but he didn't think it was a good idea because he knew she liked him and he was attracted to her too. He wrote that he still really loved me, but that he enjoyed being around her because it was fun and new and exciting. He said he hadn't done anything with her, but that it was getting harder for him to stay faithful.
Of course reading this was very upsetting for me. I knew the girl he was talking about, and I knew that they were friends, but it hadn't even occurred to me that they might have other feelings for each other.
There was no way I could just pretend I hadn't read what he had written, so I decided to be honest and tell him what I'd done. He wasn't angry at me for reading his private writing--he even said that what he'd written was something he wanted to talk to me about and he had been too afraid to do it. He told me he was really sorry about the way he felt and that even though he liked the other girl, he loved me too much to leave me for her.
Despite everything he said to comfort me, it hurts so much to think about him having feelings for anyone else--even if he doesn't plan on acting on those feelings. After being with him for two and a half years, I love him too much to decide not to see him anymore, and I want to trust him and believe that things between us will work out.
My question is this: Is it reasonable for me to stick it out and hope for the best? Is this a situation that lots of couples go through and come out stronger afterwards, or is this whole thing just the beginning of the end? I want to be optimistic, but it's hard...
I'm 22 and my boyfriend is 24; we've been dating for two and a half years. I love him more than I ever thought I was capable of. I know that he loves me too, and we are very committed to each other.
About a month ago, I was offered, and I accepted, a teaching job an hour away from where he lives. Being in a new town with a new job has been hard for me, and for the first few weeks I called my boyfriend several times a week; we would visit each other on weekends.
Last weekend, after he went back home from visiting me, we had a long phone conversation about our relationship, and he told me he needed space. He said he thought I shouldn't call him during the week anymore, but that we could still visit on the weekends. This was hard for me to accept, but, determined to make things work out, I decided to respect his request and give him all the space he needed.
This weekend, I visited him, and everything started great. We were happy to see each other, we watched a movie together, had some better-than-usual sex, and fell asleep curled up together. Sunday morning, I was checking my email on his computer while I waited for him to wake up, and I found a journal entry he had written. It was one of the most painful things I've ever read.
He mostly wrote about feeling depressed, and he talked about how I was too dependent on him and how he hoped that me not calling him would make things better--all these feelings I already knew about. But the other thing he talked about was an 18-year-old girl he works with. He wrote that he was lonely and was thinking about asking her to a movie, but he didn't think it was a good idea because he knew she liked him and he was attracted to her too. He wrote that he still really loved me, but that he enjoyed being around her because it was fun and new and exciting. He said he hadn't done anything with her, but that it was getting harder for him to stay faithful.
Of course reading this was very upsetting for me. I knew the girl he was talking about, and I knew that they were friends, but it hadn't even occurred to me that they might have other feelings for each other.
There was no way I could just pretend I hadn't read what he had written, so I decided to be honest and tell him what I'd done. He wasn't angry at me for reading his private writing--he even said that what he'd written was something he wanted to talk to me about and he had been too afraid to do it. He told me he was really sorry about the way he felt and that even though he liked the other girl, he loved me too much to leave me for her.
Despite everything he said to comfort me, it hurts so much to think about him having feelings for anyone else--even if he doesn't plan on acting on those feelings. After being with him for two and a half years, I love him too much to decide not to see him anymore, and I want to trust him and believe that things between us will work out.
My question is this: Is it reasonable for me to stick it out and hope for the best? Is this a situation that lots of couples go through and come out stronger afterwards, or is this whole thing just the beginning of the end? I want to be optimistic, but it's hard...