OnceAndFuture
Member
Ah, I was hoping for all to go well with Kristof too. The nosy side of me wants to know too what happened, but the pragmatic side of me says that if you felt something wasn't right about him, you should trust your instinct.
Ah, I was hoping for all to go well with Kristof too. The nosy side of me wants to know too what happened, but the pragmatic side of me says that if you felt something wasn't right about him, you should trust your instinct.
And this is why I now disregard the "don't talk about politics or religion on the first date" advice![]()
Not sure if this is wanted or helpful, but when people's pronouns are difficult for me, I practice talking about them aloud to friends over and over until my brain just accepts it. When I misspeak, I apologize, correct and move on.
I am, at best, deeply envious that he seems to have no trouble at all finding people who he has mutual attraction to and rapport with, who will spend all the live-long day chatting with him, and, at worst, I am becoming slightly resentful of the historical imbalance there.
Oh, this has SO been a thing with me and TheKnight recently - while on the one hand I have a closer / more significant partner right now, most of the people I've been involved with in the past couple years have NOT been chatters / texters and I so very much miss the thousands of texts HipsterBoy and I used to send. I've been channeling a lot of that energy into FB and other forums like this, but it's really not the same thing at all. (On the other hand, it's a good exercise in learning to be more present...)
It's normal to feel some jealousy or discomfort when your partner starts a relationship or has an attraction to someone else. In fact, it would be foolish not to. Jealousy is your mind and body's "early warning system" that a threat to your much-valued relationship MAY be on the horizon.
Because other people really are the biggest POTENTIAL threats to our relationships. If your existing relationship has flaws in it, the presence of and NRE with a new person are going to highlight those. And even if your relationship is solid and that new person is just closer to your existing partner's ideal, you may find yourself getting displaced. Any time your partner has a new attraction, that is a risk. So it's totally normal to feel jealous at first because you don't yet know how REALISTIC of a risk the new person is. So then you have to determine whether or not the threat is real.
First, you have to take a realistic look at your relationship. Does it have flaws that could make it be abandoned for a new relationship? If so, are they flaws that you and your partner are willing to work on before introducing the destabilizing influence of a new person? Do you both value your connection that much? Are the flaws fixable? If you're not willing to work on the flaws, or if you suspect they can’t be fixed, or if your partner doesn't want to put their new connection on hold long enough to work on them, then you are right to be jealous, because there is a real threat.
If your relationship is actually solid and healthy, and there is nothing to worry about on that front, then pay attention to your partner's behavior.
Is your partner acting in such a way that suggests that the new person is displacing you—REALISTICALLY? Are you getting a lot less time than you used to? Are large portions of your partner’s energy now devoted somewhere else? Love is infinite, but time and energy are finite, and sometimes changes in how that time and energy are allocated can be painful or disagreeable. We can be afraid of these things irrationally, but it bears taking a hard realistic look at them. If you are, indeed, being displaced, the jealousy can be healthy and normal, and you need to have a frank talk with your partner about their actions and what they actually want.
And you have to be able to trust them to be honest with you—and they have to BE honest with you, even if they are afraid of hurting you. If they want the new relationship to occupy more space in their life than their relationship with you, or than their relationship with you currently makes space for without losing something, you have to decide if that’s something you’re willing to live with, or if it is less painful for you to move on. Things aren’t always meant to last forever, and they should only continue to last if everyone is on board and wants the same things.
But if you’re not actually being displaced, if you just have an IRRATIONAL FEAR of it due to low self esteem or insecurity, and you’re not believing your partner when they honestly reassure you that you still hold the same place with them that you always did, then it’s time to work on yourself. You need to build up your own self esteem so that you won’t irrationally believe yourself to be able to be displaced by whoever comes along. You will no longer believe your fears and will only believe evidence one way or the other.
Have you said some of that to Rider? You say you've discussed it with him, but have you phrased it the way you did here? Like, "I've noticed when you have a new interest, you sometimes get distracted when we're together. That hurts me. I love that usually when we're together, you're completely focused on me, and I'd like that to be the case even when you have someone new on your mind. Could you maybe shut off your phone or leave it in the other room when it's my time with you?"
You've read about NRE on this forum. That's pretty much what's causing Rider to behave differently with a new interest than he does at other times. The "new, shiny, can't wait to talk to them again!" thing.
To be honest, if it were me, I would print out the post you have here and show it to him. Maybe seeing it written out will get through to him.
Rationally, I know that being distracted by text messages when we're supposed to be hanging out is a tiny, relatively insignificant thing. He should be able to apologize, do better in the future, and have it not affect me so intensely. But the inner part of me that harbors the terror that he's going to start being thoughtless of me again as a matter of course won't shut up.
Rationally, I know that he loves me very much, and that in most circumstances he would do almost anything for me. But it does not make me feel loved to feel like he'd rather be somewhere else or doing something else or talking to someone else.
I know he wants to spend his life with me. We're supposed to get married. But what kind of life will it be if it's peppered with this the whole way through? And how can I trust that it won't be when he says one thing and then does another?