I broke up with my first girlfriend of 2 years last night; did I do the right thing? / What am I doing with my life? *CAUTION: WALL OF TEXT *
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I broke up with my first girlfriend of 2 years last night; did I do the right thing? / What am I doing with my life? *CAUTION: WALL OF TEXT * When we first started dating, I was infatuated with her. I thought she was beautiful, and I had never dated before. We started dating 6 months before I graduated, she is 20 now and I am 19 (we both lost our virginity to each other). What developed initially from a typical horney adolescent relationship turned into something strong and with actual integrity. She confides in me for almost anything she has to say, and we can talk to each other about pretty much anything. She has a lengthy dysfunctional family history, which she is currently seeing a therapist for. I think to some extent she finds stability with me for that reason. There is not a day that goes by where I doubt she loves me unconditionally, faults and everything. Most days we get along great. Neither of us likes to go out much, and weâre totally content staying in and watching Netflix all weekend. We have a great chemistry and sometimes bicker at each other like we are some old couple. I can also make her laugh, which was a big confidence booster when I first met her. I consider her to be my best friend, and Iâm pretty sure she does to, since both of us rarely hangout with other people. Although she never said she would marry me, she has told me she believes I am the person she is supposed to be with. Now for the negative stuff.. The longer we have been together, the more I have an anxiety about whether I should be focusing on this relationship at this point in my life, and I started to realize all of the faults we have. For instance, when it comes to movies, music she likes the more bubblegum shallow stuff (justin beiber,90210), which is fine and I realize nothing to break up over. But my interests are a lot deeper and passionate when it comes to movies and music. I try to expose her a bit to what songs and bands I like, but she just writes it off as âstoner musicâ. Itâs probably not important but it bothers me a lot for whatever reason. I mean, I think at a basic level, weâre just opposite personalities. She is very extroverted, very chatty and deals with her problems by talking them over with someone. But I am more introverted and feel better when I go over my problems internally. This can drive me up the walls sometimes, because she can just talk and talk and talk about things in the car without interruption about things I couldnât care the slightest about, although not always. It frustrates me when I would rather enjoy my own thoughts. Other things worth noting: She can be very emotional and irrational at times. I am very socially awkward when it comes to being at her house and chatting family, so I rarely go to her house (which she doesnât like and finds rude). Although she works very hard, she is not very good with money. She has a maxed out credit card from buying a vehicle with it and owes money to several family member and myself for bad decisions she made in the past. I guess Iâve been having these doubts since a few months ago when I decided I wanted to move to my dadâs (5 hours away) and go to university there. It has made me think about what I might be missing out on being in this relationship, and being in my first relationship, I donât want to miss out on my university years of dating for a relationship which is already showing its cracks. But more than anything, I feel like Iâm at an age where I should be figuring out what I am doing and who I am. As trite as that sounds.. So I broke up with her last night. It killed, and now I have this awful sense of guilt. I had been distant weeks up to telling her, and Iâm sure she could see it coming. We had a long talk on the phone and she was really emotional and just didnât understand. It just sucks that I have hurt her so much, we were so close personally. A part of me regrets it. But again, how am I supposed to know I am with the right person if I have never been in another relationship before? If breaking up was the right thing to do, why do I feel so terrible about it, and was it even the right thing to do? Or am I just being naive, letting a few nagging doubts ruin an overall good relationship? I think what really caused my anxiety was I am not sure what I am doing with my life at this point. I didnât want our relationship to hold me back from experiences. Although I have never really liked going out much, I feel like I should be going out at my age. Even if we are similar in that we donât like to go out, maybe that isnât such a great thing. To be totally frank we are both really boring people, and I donât like the idea of settling for a boring life. Yet, now that we are broken up itâs not like Iâm going out partying every day. I donât even know who I am or what I am doing in a lot of ways. Iâm in the process of choosing a major, and even that has given me anxiety about what I am doing with my life. I donât even really know what things I am really interested in or enjoy. I thought by breaking up with her would help me clear my head and figure things out, but so far it has just made me feel more depressed about everything. But at the same time, I feel like I need to be able to be happy with myself before I can be in a functional relationship with someone else. I donât know is anyone will be able to make sense of what I just wrote, but if anyone can draw from experiences in their own life, or just give some reassuring words in general. I realize this was very long and drawn out, itâs mostly just me venting in some sane manner, while also to be able to get some feedback. I really appreciate the AskMefi community for their great responses, and thought this would be the best place to put this Thanks,
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Answer:
You are nineteen years old and have been, and for some time longer, will be spending a good portion of your life asking yourself "what the fuck is going on? What did I do? Did I do the right thing? Did I fuck up and ruin everything?" I can honestly say that life gets a lot easier when you trust that your decisions will come out for the best. Try to ignore that confused, unsure part of your brain that tries to make you second-guess everything you did, and trust in yourself. It's not easy, but god-damn is it ever worth it. You just did something that many people will never do, for better or worse (but usually for worse.) And it hurts and it's going to hurt whether it was the right thing or the wrong thing to do. Your pain is indicative of the fact that you two have a deep, intense, emotional connection, but it says nothing about whether that connection is viable. Whether you two, together as a couple, is something that needs to be. And by what you're telling us, it sounds like it doesn't. It's wrong to be in a relationship for someone else. If you're not in it, if you don't want to be in it, you need to get out. And you did. This isn't about conflicting taste in music or being awkward around her family. Chances these things might not go away even when you find the young lady of your dreams, so hang tight. This is about you not wanting to be in a relationship. And, as an adult, you do not have to do anything you don't want to do. You can stop eating and breathing if you wanted to. You're a free man. Obviously, you want to eat and breathe, but you don't want to be in this relationship. So you stepped up and got out of it. And you hurt someone you love and that hurts you and that's okay. It means you're alive and empathic and all sorts of other good things for you. I feel like I need to be able to be happy with myself before I can be in a functional relationship with someone else. Yes, you're young and naive, but you stumbled on a truth there that many people never will, or can't grasp when they face it. How can you be a good boyfriend (or, later, fiancee, or husband or whatever) when your grasp on your own being is so tenuous? Well, the answer is that someone in your situation can't. And that's okay because you're at the point in life where fucking up is necessary and important. Did you fuck up by breaking up? Well, maybe. But what you're going to go through, starting now, is going to be an Important Lesson in yourself and your heart and you damn well better pay attention to it.
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Other answers
You'll figure it out like all of us figured it out. Some parts will suck. Some parts will be awesome. You'll meet people that you love even more, entirely different plateaus of love, and you'll break up with them or they with you and it will be a million times worse. Sometimes you will hurt others, sometimes others will hurt you. You'll make friends and lose them. People you were close with will drift away. You'll ignore old friends' phone calls because you have nothing in common any more and talking to them make you sad. You'll see people on the street and have day crushes, and and perhaps you'll have a love of your life, someone you are more in sync with than anyone else you have ever met. Even this relationship will take work. You will fight and make each other cry and beg for forgiveness and be forgiven and forgive. You'll make new friends, lifelong friends. At the time you won't even know it. You'll watch them grow into fascinating complex people and you'll grow with them. You will change. I can't even explain how much you will change. You will look back at your young self and it will seem like a total stranger. You will have good memories, and bad memories, and some memories that are so embarrassing you can't even think of them without feeling sick to your stomach. You will have cherished memories that you drag out during hard times and roll around your tongue like rich red wine. Some of your friends will die. Through it all you will be ok. It's life, you know how to live it deep down even if you think you don't.
nathancaswell
You pretty much said this yourself... You don't know who you are or what you're doing. You're young. This is part of being young. Is it the right thing? I don't think any of us are able to say, but the chances of a first relationship lasting the test of time is pretty slim. I think it's perfectly acceptable for you to go forth and explore yourself, your likes, dislikes and everything in between. Cut yourself some slack. Also... be kind to the ex-girlfriend but do not in any way, shape, or form give her false hope or string her along on your journey of self discovery.
FlamingBore
This is a really common situation, so don't beat yourself up too much about it. Breaking up and experimenting with other possibilities is a legitimate choice, even if the way you rationalize it to her and do yourself doesn't completely make sense. What you ought to try to do is own your decision. You did this because it's what you wanted, and not because your former girlfriend is flawed in some way. Her enjoyment of fluffy music is not a flaw. Her chattiness is not a flaw. If you were ready for a committed relationship then those things might not matter much at all; they might even charm you. But you're not ready for that, and that's okay even though it hurts you and her both. Don't go down this path of listing her weaknesses as if they made your decision for you; that would be both dishonest and cruel.
jon1270
This is such a typical scenario as to be a rite of passage. Congratulations, you basically broke up with your HS girlfriend to go to college. It's a prudent choice. Now you're there and you should take the confidence you achieved with her and throw yourself into enjoying the full uni experience.
DarlingBri
You feel guilty because your ex-girlfriend is a human being, not an "experience" that you are having. You did the right thing though - she deserves better than to feel like an obstacle to your life journey.
AlsoMike
Also seconding FlamingBore - make sure, no matter how much you're pressed to say 'Yes, there's a chance we can get back together,' do not say that! Say something like: 'I just don't know right now - I'm really sorry, this isn't easy for me either.' Or, 'I really wish I knew - this is why it's so hard for me. I know it's hard for you, too. Is there someone you can talk to?' It will be okay - trust me.
glaucon
As the breakup-er, it's also on you to avoid contact with the breakup-ee until both of you have found an emotional place where you can see each other as people first and exes second. Don't let the guilt you're feeling now let you become the guy she turns to for comfort, because that gives false hope and that's just cruel. Unless she's uncommonly well-advised, she will try to get you to change your mind. So when she contacts you, you need to stay on-message: I'm really sad that you're hurting but I'm just not the appropriate person to help you with that any more, so please don't make this bad thing any worse by calling/writing/texting/visiting me again.
flabdablet
All the good stuff you mentioned? There's nothing rare about it. That's what the good stuff in relationships is pretty much like. Y'all aren't very much alike, you don't thrive or benefit from your differences. Nothing you've said makes any argument that this relationship is so fantastic that you should settle down at an age when most relationships just aren't going to work out. It kind of sounds like you were together just because you were together. You feel bad/indecisive about breaking up because change is hard and it sucks. It'll pass. Go do things. You'll probably have some more relationships, you'll probably make some mistakes and learn. Eventually you will understand what you really want, and then you will meet a person who fits many of those qualities.
Lyn Never
Additional thought: think back to two years ago, and the person you were then. How much have you changed? How much might you change in another 2 or more? Also, you're heading off to college, where you'll find the next (but not last) thing you'll be doing with your life, and with that will come more changes. Pick an interesting major, join college clubs, make new friends, and maybe change your major a few times. Don't worry, you can do that. Learn about yourself!
filthy light thief
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