dirigible
Mar 14, 2008, 01:17 PM
Hello there!
About a year and a half ago, I met a girl through mutual friends online, and we became very much attracted to each other. Over a series of months, we visited back and forth (she lived in Canada, and I in California), until I ultimately committed about this time last year to pack my stuff for the great white north and move in with her.
It was my first serious relationship, and the second for her (with almost no break in between). I am an artist who enjoys the company and shared activity of friends, but thrives in industrious solitude. She is not necessarily the opposite, but certainly needs much more social structure in order to be productive and happy. This is fine.
Except that, in this relatively small town where she's lived nearly all her life, I shoulder the vast majority of her support. She gets aimless and unhappy if I don't spend significant amounts of time with her -- which is to be expected to some degree, since we live together. I just don't believe it's a healthy pattern that I see; most 'eggs of happiness' in my basket, and few in that of her friends'. She seems resistant or fearful of the idea of making new friends or really branching out from her current bubble of familiarity. I've expressed my concern over this, and while some change has come, I still feel an uncomfortable burden placed upon me. I don't enjoy being the focal point of someone else's happiness.
I had to return to California for several months (work related), and brought her with me. During that time, I was a little shocked to see just how passive and reserved she was in a new setting, waiting dutifully for me to get off work each day instead of exploring anything on her own. She integrated with my friends well, but never on a level that was independent of me. I suppose independence is a big priority for me.
The tough part is that I really do love her. As weary as I am with conventional domesticity, we are highly affectionate, expressive, and supportive. She is cute (but not necessarily beautiful), insightful (but not necessarily brilliant), and reasonable (but certainly not always logical). Our tastes work very well together, and we enjoy much of the activities we do share. Being that she is my first serious girlfriend, I am leery of committing without having dated other girls and developed a good objective view of my needs and expectations in a mate.
Looking forward, with her wanting us to relocated to Vancouver in the Summer for her schooling to continue, I'm not sure that a committed relationship is my ideal next step. I have found myself over the past few months aching to reach a higher place of creative dedication. Namely, I am a songwriter, and find the activity most fulfilling and focused when I am alone. Instead of moving to accompany her college adventure, part of me would strongly prefer returning to California, re-connecting relationships with creative peers, and establishing a strict creative regimen for myself. I feel pretty strongly that I cannot maintain a healthy relationship with her and nurture a serious artistic pursuit simultaneously. If even because it's not in my nature (yet) to split my attention like that. I also think she'll benefit from time alone, as it will provide her with an opportunity to 'find herself' more (she's expressed the need).
If I decide to go, though it may be a very traumatic and emotional experience for both of us, she will understand. And if I stay, we'll both be periodically happy, but I'll probably end up wondering, as I am now, what "might have been" in an alternate life of focused creativity and other unexplored women.
I don't want to live with regrets. Before I go blow our world out of the water, am I missing something? What do you think would be best?
About a year and a half ago, I met a girl through mutual friends online, and we became very much attracted to each other. Over a series of months, we visited back and forth (she lived in Canada, and I in California), until I ultimately committed about this time last year to pack my stuff for the great white north and move in with her.
It was my first serious relationship, and the second for her (with almost no break in between). I am an artist who enjoys the company and shared activity of friends, but thrives in industrious solitude. She is not necessarily the opposite, but certainly needs much more social structure in order to be productive and happy. This is fine.
Except that, in this relatively small town where she's lived nearly all her life, I shoulder the vast majority of her support. She gets aimless and unhappy if I don't spend significant amounts of time with her -- which is to be expected to some degree, since we live together. I just don't believe it's a healthy pattern that I see; most 'eggs of happiness' in my basket, and few in that of her friends'. She seems resistant or fearful of the idea of making new friends or really branching out from her current bubble of familiarity. I've expressed my concern over this, and while some change has come, I still feel an uncomfortable burden placed upon me. I don't enjoy being the focal point of someone else's happiness.
I had to return to California for several months (work related), and brought her with me. During that time, I was a little shocked to see just how passive and reserved she was in a new setting, waiting dutifully for me to get off work each day instead of exploring anything on her own. She integrated with my friends well, but never on a level that was independent of me. I suppose independence is a big priority for me.
The tough part is that I really do love her. As weary as I am with conventional domesticity, we are highly affectionate, expressive, and supportive. She is cute (but not necessarily beautiful), insightful (but not necessarily brilliant), and reasonable (but certainly not always logical). Our tastes work very well together, and we enjoy much of the activities we do share. Being that she is my first serious girlfriend, I am leery of committing without having dated other girls and developed a good objective view of my needs and expectations in a mate.
Looking forward, with her wanting us to relocated to Vancouver in the Summer for her schooling to continue, I'm not sure that a committed relationship is my ideal next step. I have found myself over the past few months aching to reach a higher place of creative dedication. Namely, I am a songwriter, and find the activity most fulfilling and focused when I am alone. Instead of moving to accompany her college adventure, part of me would strongly prefer returning to California, re-connecting relationships with creative peers, and establishing a strict creative regimen for myself. I feel pretty strongly that I cannot maintain a healthy relationship with her and nurture a serious artistic pursuit simultaneously. If even because it's not in my nature (yet) to split my attention like that. I also think she'll benefit from time alone, as it will provide her with an opportunity to 'find herself' more (she's expressed the need).
If I decide to go, though it may be a very traumatic and emotional experience for both of us, she will understand. And if I stay, we'll both be periodically happy, but I'll probably end up wondering, as I am now, what "might have been" in an alternate life of focused creativity and other unexplored women.
I don't want to live with regrets. Before I go blow our world out of the water, am I missing something? What do you think would be best?