Long Distance Relationships

RocketR

New member
This isn't quite poly specific, but have noticed a lot of poly people seem to be in long distance relationships, so I'm curious to know how you all cope with being apart?

Thor and I were in a LDR about seven years ago and it ended for several reasons, all stemming from the fact that we were apart. We are back together after all this time with plans on moving into the same home, but that isn't going to be for several months.

We are trying very hard to manage our feelings, but it can be difficult, and it seems like whenever we get frustrated we start speaking different languages and keep having miscommunications about what we are trying to say to each other.

I know part of the issue Thor and I have is the intensity we have with each other. When we are doing good that intensity is great, but when we are doing bad it is really horrible (we aren't getting into nasty fights or anything, we both just end up feeling really bad in one way or another.) Neither of us have ever been in a relationship where things were this intense before, except with each other the first time around, and it was terribly mishandled back then.

Anyone have any advice on managing these feelings/this type of relationship?
 
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Hi RocketR,

I can't give much in the way of advice. I only had an LDR one time (a long time ago), and I hated it. The only thing that got me through was knowing we had a plan for me to move to be with her.

What I've heard from other people in LDR's is that communication is doubly important, and that you must be able to communicate productively, in a way that is not hurtful. Sometimes things work out okay, but not always. :(

Sincerely,
Kevin T.
 
We have regular check ins to check in on how each of us are feeling about our relationship. These are very respectful and open and honest.
 
Both of my LDRs are with women I have known a long time. We do lots of talking. We do see each other in person. Sometimes there is miscommunication, especially with texting, but it is usually cleared up with a phone call.

It can be very frustrating to be apart. No way could I do it if was a monogamous thing.
 
Hi RocketR,

I can't give much in the way of advice. I only had an LDR one time (a long time ago), and I hated it. The only thing that got me through was knowing we had a plan for me to move to be with her.

What I've heard from other people in LDR's is that communication is doubly important, and that you must be able to communicate productively, in a way that is not hurtful. Sometimes things work out okay, but not always. :(

Sincerely,
Kevin T.

Yeah I think we are going to have to cling to the knowledge that we have a plan for him to move in.

We are both trying really hard to work on our communication, hopefully we are able to weather it without too much trouble.

We have regular check ins to check in on how each of us are feeling about our relationship. These are very respectful and open and honest.

Thank you.

Both of my LDRs are with women I have known a long time. We do lots of talking. We do see each other in person. Sometimes there is miscommunication, especially with texting, but it is usually cleared up with a phone call.

It can be very frustrating to be apart. No way could I do it if was a monogamous thing.

We did discover that when we are having a problem we need to talk on the phone to sort it out because we just have way too many misunderstandings over texts, once we have one misunderstanding it just gets more and more messed up.

Thank you all for your replies.
 
We work a lot on communication. I use NVC language a lot, and when I don't, at least try to work from the base that communicating emotions is the single most important thing. I may be sometimes very mad at my boyfriend, but what I am communicating is not lots of accusations but what has happened and how I feel. It souns simple, but is sometimes really hard to do, as feelings can get too wrapped up in facts or thoughts to be commuicated efficiently.
 
Hi Rocket,

I've been in a long-distance relationship for going on 5 years. It's super long-distance - we live on opposite sides of the Atlantic, and visa options are somewhat grim. Pretty much every relationship I've been in has had at least 2 hours of travel time difference. So, yes, you could say I'm fairly familiar with LDRs. ;) Haha.

Incoming wall of text.

We are trying very hard to manage our feelings, but it can be difficult, and it seems like whenever we get frustrated we start speaking different languages and keep having miscommunications about what we are trying to say to each other.

I've definitely found that the phone helps too, as texts can get convoluted. Video can be even better if it's possible.

The other thing that we've found can help if things are seriously messy is to stop, spend the night apart and write a letter to each other. In the morning, we send our letters to each other at the same time. This can help when neither person is feeling heard, because it gives you each the space to express yourselves without the restriction of a small text box and without the other interrupting or invalidating.

Other things that we've found immensely helpful for LDR communication include:

- Don't get into difficult topics if either of you are tired, hungry or overly-emotional. It's such a simple thing, but can often be overlooked, especially when you can't physically see what's going on in each other's world. If you're in the middle of a tricky conversation and it's heading south and one of you needs to sleep, eat or do something important, honour it. Working on this has saved so many upsets between my partner and I!!

- Agree that either of you can call a timeout at any point if things are getting sticky or you can't think straight.

- If you do take a breather, try to make it 30 minutes. I've read various studies that say that we tend to feel calm after 15 but our body does not settle until around the 30-minute mark. I've found this to work well.

- Never leave each other hanging. It's so important in an LDR not to just hang up or end the conversation mid-way without letting each other know when you'll be back. Give a time frame.

- Learn to be less reactive. This has been a huge one for me. I'm slower to anger than my partner, but I realised that I could still be very reactive. I'd be very quick to feel scared, defensive, anxious, etc. in the face of conflict. I learnt that even though I might not have been the one shouting most of the time, I still wasn't helping because I wasn't able to listen with a clear head.

- Continue to educate yourself on communication, no matter how much you already know! Books like Non-Violent Communication and The High Conflict Couple are brilliant. I've also found books designed for BPD relationships to be extremely useful, even if you're not dealing with a borderline partner, because borderline interactions often require the person on the receiving end to be very conscious of validation, patience, good boundaries, etc.

- Active listening all the way. When things are getting messy, stop and revisit when you're both feeling calmer. One of you then has to be the bigger person and let the other go first. If you're the one always letting him go first, so be it. This is one time that text (or preferably typing on a laptop) can be helpful. Let him know that you are listening, express patience. Really listen. Don't interrupt him. Wait until he's finished and give him time. Mirror back to him what you understand. Show him that you hear him. Empathise and validate as much as you can. Own what you can own. Then switch.

When we are doing good that intensity is great, but when we are doing bad it is really horrible (we aren't getting into nasty fights or anything, we both just end up feeling really bad in one way or another.)

I used to be very much this way, as my relationship with my partner was also extremely intense during the first couple of years. However, such intensity (as you probably know) isn't always healthy or helpful.

What helped me here was to learn more about emotional regulation. If you're feeling so bad after an argument that you can't function (spending all day in bed, not eating properly, spending all day crying, not being able to focus, being a general mess ;) ), this might be something you can benefit from. The calmer you can train yourself to be in the face of conflict and difficulty, the easier things will become. That starts within you and it's something you can start doing straight away. it's something that will improve the situation even if your boyfriend changes nothing on his end!

My final piece of advice...

Try not to look at distance as the enemy! If you look at it as a situation you share, you're more likely to remain bonded and avoid distance-related conflict. If you look at it as this awful thing that needs to be eradicated as soon as possible and you're just scraping through until he can move in, it's going to cause more issues. Have fun with the distance. Send each other physical postcards. Have a Skype and wine night once a week. Send each other articles and videos and songs. Go into Utherverse or Second Life and play around with virtual presence. Start a private Pinterest board with ideas for dates or trips or things to buy for when you live together. Do things that embrace the relationship rather than getting down about the distance.

Good luck!
 
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Hi Rocket,

I've been in a long-distance relationship for going on 5 years. It's super long-distance - we live on opposite sides of the Atlantic, and visa options are somewhat grim. Pretty much every relationship I've been in has had at least 2 hours of travel time difference. So, yes, you could say I'm fairly familiar with LDRs. ;) Haha.

Incoming wall of text.



I've definitely found that the phone helps too, as texts can get convoluted. Video can be even better if it's possible.

The other thing that we've found can help if things are seriously messy is to stop, spend the night apart and write a letter to each other. In the morning, we send our letters to each other at the same time. This can help when neither person is feeling heard, because it gives you each the space to express yourselves without the restriction of a small text box and without the other interrupting or invalidating.

Other things that we've found immensely helpful for LDR communication include:

- Don't get into difficult topics if either of you are tired, hungry or overly-emotional. It's such a simple thing, but can often be overlooked, especially when you can't physically see what's going on in each other's world. If you're in the middle of a tricky conversation and it's heading south and one of you needs to sleep, eat or do something important, honour it. Working on this has saved so many upsets between my partner and I!!

- Agree that either of you can call a timeout at any point if things are getting sticky or you can't think straight.

- If you do take a breather, try to make it 30 minutes. I've read various studies that say that we tend to feel calm after 15 but our body does not settle until around the 30-minute mark. I've found this to work well.

- Never leave each other hanging. It's so important in an LDR not to just hang up or end the conversation mid-way without letting each other know when you'll be back. Give a time frame.

- Learn to be less reactive. This has been a huge one for me. I'm slower to anger than my partner, but I realised that I could still be very reactive. I'd be very quick to feel scared, defensive, anxious, etc. in the face of conflict. I learnt that even though I might not have been the one shouting most of the time, I still wasn't helping because I wasn't able to listen with a clear head.

- Continue to educate yourself on communication, no matter how much you already know! Books like Non-Violent Communication and The High Conflict Couple are brilliant. I've also found books designed for BPD relationships to be extremely useful, even if you're not dealing with a borderline partner, because borderline interactions often require the person on the receiving end to be very conscious of validation, patience, good boundaries, etc.

- Active listening all the way. When things are getting messy, stop and revisit when you're both feeling calmer. One of you then has to be the bigger person and let the other go first. If you're the one always letting him go first, so be it. This is one time that text (or preferably typing on a laptop) can be helpful. Let him know that you are listening, express patience. Really listen. Don't interrupt him. Wait until he's finished and give him time. Mirror back to him what you understand. Show him that you hear him. Empathise and validate as much as you can. Own what you can own. Then switch.



I used to be very much this way, as my relationship with my partner was also extremely intense during the first couple of years. However, such intensity (as you probably know) isn't always healthy or helpful.

What helped me here was to learn more about emotional regulation. If you're feeling so bad after an argument that you can't function (spending all day in bed, not eating properly, spending all day crying, not being able to focus, being a general mess ;) ), this might be something you can benefit from. The calmer you can train yourself to be in the face of conflict and difficulty, the easier things will become. That starts within you and it's something you can start doing straight away. it's something that will improve the situation even if your boyfriend changes nothing on his end!

My final piece of advice...

Try not to look at distance as the enemy! If you look at it as a situation you share, you're more likely to remain bonded and avoid distance-related conflict. If you look at it as this awful thing that needs to be eradicated as soon as possible and you're just scraping through until he can move in, it's going to cause more issues. Have fun with the distance. Send each other physical postcards. Have a Skype and wine night once a week. Send each other articles and videos and songs. Go into Utherverse or Second Life and play around with virtual presence. Start a private Pinterest board with ideas for dates or trips or things to buy for when you live together. Do things that embrace the relationship rather than getting down about the distance.

Good luck!

THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU! This is incredibly helpful. I had my bf read it as well and we talked about it a little bit. We both especially found the last paragraph helpful. We will definitely both be using some of the tools here.
 
Sparklepop's post is brilliant :)

I don't have her history (14m in for us, but we have no plans to move, this will be the shape of our relationship for the next decade or so).

I'm a HUGE believer in sharing the mundane. Our morning texts are generally 'what are you doing today?' And our evening texts are pretty much 'here's what I did today'. We send photos of projects we are working on (be it crafting, or gardening or bike repair. We ask each other's advice about purchases. Just 'life' stuff. There's even some science behind this. https://www.psychologytoday.com/blo...prising-ways-communicate-better-your-partner?

On top of that, we do phone date night every week (this is new, and somewhat in response to Djinn and Aladdin having a sleepover every week now). We try to watch the same TV shows/read the same books/etc so we can talk about them. One thing that was crazy fun when my daughter was living away was we went to the same movie at the same time, separated by two time zones! I saw the early show and she saw the late one, but with the time difference they started 5 minutes apart! We talked on the phone before and after the movie, just like we would have if we'd been together :) it was fun.
 
Sparklepop's post is brilliant :)

I don't have her history (14m in for us, but we have no plans to move, this will be the shape of our relationship for the next decade or so).

I'm a HUGE believer in sharing the mundane. Our morning texts are generally 'what are you doing today?' And our evening texts are pretty much 'here's what I did today'. We send photos of projects we are working on (be it crafting, or gardening or bike repair. We ask each other's advice about purchases. Just 'life' stuff. There's even some science behind this. https://www.psychologytoday.com/blo...prising-ways-communicate-better-your-partner?

On top of that, we do phone date night every week (this is new, and somewhat in response to Djinn and Aladdin having a sleepover every week now). We try to watch the same TV shows/read the same books/etc so we can talk about them. One thing that was crazy fun when my daughter was living away was we went to the same movie at the same time, separated by two time zones! I saw the early show and she saw the late one, but with the time difference they started 5 minutes apart! We talked on the phone before and after the movie, just like we would have if we'd been together :) it was fun.

Thank you!

I think we are going to try to do a bit more of the mundane stuff. We do that a bit, but a little more if it won't hurt.

That going to see the movie at the same time idea is really interesting. We might have to try that sometime.
 
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU! This is incredibly helpful. I had my bf read it as well and we talked about it a little bit. We both especially found the last paragraph helpful. We will definitely both be using some of the tools here.

You're so very welcome!! I'm so glad to hear that it struck a chord with you and your boyfriend and that it's given you some positive motivation going forward!
 
Rocket scientist and I were long distance the first 5 years we were together. We found that we were both much happier when we had a life wherever we were: friends, hobbies, school, whatever. When we just sat around being sad that we were apart, it was miserable.
 
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