bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,748
I am sorry to say this but- that sounds like a classic line of a man who is newly interested in someone else. Move forward, dont look back and take care of you.
It definitely does. When in a long-term relationship, many couples don't get all tingly every time they see each other (some do...but IMO that must be exhausting!)...sometimes people decide that no tingles = no "in love", when it's just a normal thing (one way of being normal, not the ONLY way). So I assume someone else is making him tingly and he's mis-reading it. Ugh.
A little compassion dude. Come on.
There is a time and a place for playing the "wonder what the other side of the story is". This is not that time, the day after the break-up. A simple "so sorry". Would suffice. Give the lady a little time to compose herself and to start reflecting on where this all might've come from.
Really.
I completely agree.
The biggest red flag to me was the call at work. It seemed to me like a way to mitigate what could be an emotional response which couldn't be done face to face.
Just in case you're ever in a situation where you *could* see a woman in person to break up, but choose to NOT, and choose to call at work to avoid big emotions, please remember this thread. If you do that, and do not have to (like if you're in Greenland for 8 years and 4 years into it you decide to break up with someone at home and you cannot get home at all and don't want to wait the 4 years to break up AND she doesn't have a means of long-distance communication except for while she's at work), you will be *causing* a worse scene than you were trying to avoid. You'll be taking a sad angry thing and making it even worse. Don't do it. Remember this thread, and the outrage that the phone call (at work) caused in almost everyone.
If a 51 year old guy is afraid of a womans emotions, no matter how strong, he should stay home with his mommy instead of dating
Agreed.
...from a guy that the OP has since admitted she wasn't all that into.
She has not!
...I believe what she stated was that she loved the man, but apparently is mourning the loss of the man she thought he was,{sweet, kind etc} not the man that he apparently is now,
Which is totally normal. I've had very conflicted feelings while in mourning over a breakup. Hating what the man did and what it means about who he truly is, while missing dreadfully the man I *thought* he was....
Saying there might be another side to the story doesn't equal an attack.
When the person has *just* been broken up with, it DOES equal an attack. To her heart at least. It's just not nice to do.


