GirlFromTexlahoma
New member
Date night with Dag last night
It felt really good to have some quality time together. And sex. That too 
We had an interesting talk about long distance relationships ... It has always been another "does not compute" thing for me. I mean, I understand that sometimes over the course of a relationship people might be separated for work/school/family for a while. But the relationships that start between people thousands of miles apart despite no possibility of ever being closer ...

I said something along the lines of "why even bother?" and Dag's response really made me think. He said, "Sometimes just the human connection is enough... Just knowing there is someone in the world who cares."
First, damn, I am lucky to have people who make me feel loved and important. I don't usually think of myself as having lots of social resources. (I am much more of a "few close friends" type of person, and I leave the extended social network stuff to Andy, who is soooo much better than me at keeping in touch with people.) But - I am beyond lucky to have those half dozen people who will be there for me no matter what.
Second, the look on Dag's face when he said all that just about broke my heart. There was a lot of pain there. Loneliness. I don't know much about his marriage, and I really don't want to know. Partly because it seems like none of my business (beyond the obvious sexual health stuff). Partly because when someone I care about has a problem or is unhappy, I go into full blown "fixer" mode and obsess about it. It's easier for me to stay in denial about the possibility that Dag is unhappy at home than to face it and not be able to fix it.
From what little he has managed to tell me before I stick my fingers in my ears and sing lalala-can't-hear-you, he and his wife have just drifted apart since having kids. They're partners and co-parents, but not emotionally close. I know that his home life is 100% about the kids. He and his wife have gone out as a couple TWICE in the year+ I've known him. He has said things about not abandoning his kids, and not giving up on his family, that make me wonder if it's more complicated than that. Or maybe not. Not having kids, I can't imagine what it's like, to have something that takes priority over EVERYTHING.
Anyway, I'm seeing his "I miss you" texts in a different way since that conversation. Not as a guilt trip, but as a need for connection, a need to feel important to me. Helps me to understand and respond, knowing that what he *needs* in that moment is to hear that I miss him too and I'm thinking about him.
We had an interesting talk about long distance relationships ... It has always been another "does not compute" thing for me. I mean, I understand that sometimes over the course of a relationship people might be separated for work/school/family for a while. But the relationships that start between people thousands of miles apart despite no possibility of ever being closer ...
First, damn, I am lucky to have people who make me feel loved and important. I don't usually think of myself as having lots of social resources. (I am much more of a "few close friends" type of person, and I leave the extended social network stuff to Andy, who is soooo much better than me at keeping in touch with people.) But - I am beyond lucky to have those half dozen people who will be there for me no matter what.
Second, the look on Dag's face when he said all that just about broke my heart. There was a lot of pain there. Loneliness. I don't know much about his marriage, and I really don't want to know. Partly because it seems like none of my business (beyond the obvious sexual health stuff). Partly because when someone I care about has a problem or is unhappy, I go into full blown "fixer" mode and obsess about it. It's easier for me to stay in denial about the possibility that Dag is unhappy at home than to face it and not be able to fix it.
From what little he has managed to tell me before I stick my fingers in my ears and sing lalala-can't-hear-you, he and his wife have just drifted apart since having kids. They're partners and co-parents, but not emotionally close. I know that his home life is 100% about the kids. He and his wife have gone out as a couple TWICE in the year+ I've known him. He has said things about not abandoning his kids, and not giving up on his family, that make me wonder if it's more complicated than that. Or maybe not. Not having kids, I can't imagine what it's like, to have something that takes priority over EVERYTHING.
Anyway, I'm seeing his "I miss you" texts in a different way since that conversation. Not as a guilt trip, but as a need for connection, a need to feel important to me. Helps me to understand and respond, knowing that what he *needs* in that moment is to hear that I miss him too and I'm thinking about him.