ChatterBank18 mins ago
Unsure of what to do
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Little Lady. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.As I don't know him or you telling you what to do would be wrong. Ultimately this is your call, and yours alone. The reason I'm replying is to say that your use of the phrase "I don't know what to say to him as he always belittles me" concerns me.
Relationships can be terribly hard work - but ultimately you should surely be supportive of each other. This doesn't rule out occasional teasing and mickey taking - but shouldn't leave you feeling worse about yourself or with the impression that one partner thinks the other is less valuable.
I broke up with my ex nearly 6 months ago and being on your own can be daunting - but if you choose to end it, it is perfectly possible to be happy alone. I have a certain confidence from knowing that I can manage perfectly well on my own and don't need another person to make me happy. My ex was, and still is, a fantastic person. Basically he was offered his absolute dream job - on a different continent - there would have been nothing for me to do there and I didn't want to leave family, friends and my own career. Long distance was too hard so we ended on best of terms.
At uni however I had a relationship with someone who - looking back - was terribly insecure. He seemed to need to put people down to make himself feel better. He was a master of the subtle dig - if someone made a joke and people laughed he'd make a comment like " that was quite funny - for you." After a few months of this I began to feel my self esteem being eaten away and ended it. All the little digs soon added up.
I went on to my most recent relationship which lasted for 6 years - and even when things were difficult I never felt unvalued or undermined. I heard that my rubbish ex later had an affair with his best mate's fiancee - all about him proving himself to be more attractive. Which as you'd expect ended messily.
You know whether or not your bf is good for you. Your call...
Good Luck with whatever you choose =)
I had all this with an EX and I was convinced that he suffered with Asbergers. Not sure how it is spelt. But once I had read up on it, it answered a lot of ?'s for me, regarding his attitude and behaviour ( it does sound very similar to yours) We eventaully split as I had enough of the up-down of it all, it was too draining on me and not giving me what I wanted from a relationship, think that is what you need to ask yourself, is this good for me?
Good Luck!
It sounds like the honeymoon period is over and his true colours are beginning to show. A rollercoaster of emotions may sound exciting, however for every high there is a low. You say you want him to change, and know you could find something better, so you aren't happy with him the way he is? What if he can't or won't change?
In my experience people usually don't.
If you have to come on here and ask strangers what to do, I think you really know the answer but just want to hear affirmation.
Hi Little Lady - it looks like you've been given some good advice, just as I did when I asked a kind of similar question in this section. Unfortuately my experience is far from happy. I decided to give a guy I cared very deeply about a second chance after he finished our relationship as I thought his feelings for me had changed - unfortunately they hadn't and I ended up getting hurt all over again. I felt like I was walking on eggshells all the time around him and it was, like your relationship, a rollercoaster of emotions until he finished things suddenly and without warning - I'm not saying that no men can change, it's just that I've never met one who genuinely can - sorry if some people think that's a huge generalistion, it's just my experience.
There is a brilliant book that I read whilst in a previous 5 year relationship that I couldn't decide to leave because I didn't want to be on my own - again I wondered if he would change if I gave it time but eventually found the strength to 'go it alone'. The book is called 'Too good to leave, too bad to stay' I think, and is available in most bookshops under the self help section. I'm sorry I can't remember the author. It helps you through your feelings and guides you towards unmuddling them and coming to an objective decision - it was the best �7 odd I ever spent, and I have never looked back after dumping my ex, even with recent events. Anyway, good luck and be strong. x
P.S. Sorry to hijack this thread, but andy hughes and Romeo - how come you two guys are so good at answering this sort of question? profession or life experience?