My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Relationships

Please help - situation with good male friend

57 replies

TwattyBojangles · 06/03/2014 22:53

I don't even know where to start with this one. Sorry, it may be long.

I have a friend, lets call him Bob. Bob and I have been friends with 'undertones' for 10 years. Nothing sexual has ever happened, but for some reason we've always been drawn to each other. We get on fantastically, have both always liked each other, and in a way I've felt like I'd end up with him from the day we met.

In these 10 years, I've had relationships during which we've stayed in touch. Bob has had one serious, long term (3 years) and long distance relationship that he is still in now. During my last relationship I pretty much went NC with Bob, as I knew my feelings for him were too much to keep him as a friend. I had a child, the relationship with my ex broke down and I am now a single parent.

Bob always tried to maintain contact, and about a month after my ex and I broke up I finally got in touch with him again. Since then, we've texted/spoken nearly every day. He is still in his long distance relationship, and I am still very much single.

We both know we like each other. We always have. Nothing will happen. It's killing me, I know it needs to stop, but he's such a great friend and I'm finding it really hard to cut all ties again.

I know this is so stupid. I really do. And I know what I should do, so why can't I?

A few months ago we had a while of NC after a silly tiff. After this, we both acknowledged that our friendship was not helping either of us, and yet we've both been sucked straight back into it.

Again, I'd like to point out there has been nothing sexual. He has not been unfaithful and I'd never want to put him in that sort of position. There's just this funny thing that draws us to each other and we find it so difficult to cut it off again.

OP posts:
Report
TwattyBojangles · 09/03/2014 08:52

Funnily enough I watched that film the other day. I couldn't stand it. Anne Hathaways understanding of an english accent was horrific.

Anyway, I've kind of told him that I do like him. We've agreed to not talk for a while, so no great love story here!

OP posts:
Report
BeeInYourBonnet · 09/03/2014 08:17

Watch the film 'One Day' on C4 tonight at 9pm.
If that doesnt focus your mind, nothing will!

Report
shouldkeepquiet · 09/03/2014 08:00

Just get on with it rather than all this faffing around life is too short.
Sad story - my nan finally got together with her school sweethard at 62 after a lifetime of faffing around. The family said they never saw her so happy for 18 month - until she got stomache cancer and died quickly inside 4 months. We all only have so long and we don't know how long that is so get a move on!

Report
TwattyBojangles · 08/03/2014 22:27

Yes, I should tell him. Now I need to grow the balls to do it... Ugh. This does not bode well with my cool 'I don't give a fuck' air I try and give off Grin

OP posts:
Report
NewNameForSpring · 08/03/2014 12:38

I agree with many above. For god's sake just tell him you would like to have a proper relationship. He can then say whether or not he would he would be happy to give up his girlfriend to then embark on a proper relationship with you.

Hopefully he will.

Not just for your sake but for the girlfriend who I fell a bit sorry for.

Courage! (said in a French accent) Smile

Report
Twinklestein · 08/03/2014 12:18

I think I am worried about losing face. He's asked me if I've wanted more and I've always played it cool. I suppose I just don't want to come across desperate.

If he asks you you should tell him the truth. Being honest and being desperate are completely different things. He's not going to be open with you if you are covering up how you feel.

Report
Owwwwwwwwwww · 08/03/2014 08:09

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

TDada · 08/03/2014 08:05

Is he your ideal man or a Mr Fallback?

Report
TDada · 08/03/2014 08:04

Sounds as though you savour this foreplay.

Report
Allofaflumble · 08/03/2014 07:49

PS. I feel sorry for the girlfriend to be honest. Sounds like you are both using each other to avoid reality.

Report
Allofaflumble · 08/03/2014 07:45

Nothing more tedious than trying to drag someone's emotions out in a relationship. Maybe Bob's current girlfriend is less complicated than you. Most men prefer an easy ride and hate angst and analysis.

Report
TwattyBojangles · 08/03/2014 07:10

Maybe I am being a twat. I'm not very good at talking about emotions or really admitting I have any!

OP posts:
Report
beaglesaresweet · 08/03/2014 01:18

sorry but this sound quite irrational from you Confused! why the heck are you playing cool so much? how can you lose face if HE suggested going further by asking you if you wanted more? If you said 'yes, but not while you are in r-ship' that would just put you on equal footing, not 'lose face', as he's already confessed.
Are you actually sure you want more?

Report
TwattyBojangles · 07/03/2014 23:21

Thank you everyone. I don't think we're back up for each other, we've just never been single at the same time and in the same country. He's never told me how he's felt while I've been in a relationship, so I kind of feel I owe him the same?



I think I am worried about losing face. He's asked me if I've wanted more and I've always played it cool. I suppose I just don't want to come across desperate. I even organised another date (that I cancelled ffs!) and he knows this.

OP posts:
Report
beaglesaresweet · 07/03/2014 19:22

sorry for many typos

Report
beaglesaresweet · 07/03/2014 19:20

cross posted with most posters, before seeing 2d page Grin

Report
beaglesaresweet · 07/03/2014 17:59

well why not make sure he knows how you feel by saying you wouldn't want an affair with anyone - see if he then says he'd be happy to finish his r-ship for you. Obviously no need to raise this subject, but next time he tries to tell you how he feels (which he does reguularly buy the sound of itGrin). It's a waste of time wondering what if he doesn't know how you feel. Make it's clear without spelling it out with love declarations. It's still then up to himto take initiative, but if he start asking for any 'guarantees' obviiously say that you can only see how it goes. If he does want guarantees and wouldn't take a risk and split up, then it's not wort it.

Report
Wigsy · 07/03/2014 10:21

I wish I knew you in RL to listen to you talk about this over an afternoon. You sound like me 14 years ago before I took the plunge to be with my best friend of 10 years. Best decision I ever, ever made.

Be honest. Really really no-nonsense elbows-on-table honest with yourself.

Do you want Bob, or the way Bob makes you feel?

Can you trust him?

Can he trust you?

If you like/love him and are genuinely there for him in life, good times and bad times, let him know.

When did you last see him in person? How has his being in a long-term relationship made you feel? Honestly?

Report
JollyGolightly · 07/03/2014 08:52

Come clean.
Be clear that you don't want an illicit affair.
Then back off.

Report
littleballerina · 07/03/2014 07:52

Dp and I were close friends for over twenty years beforewe were brave enough to admit that we had feelings for each other.
We fit perfectly.

Report
Kandypane · 07/03/2014 07:46

Oh FFS. Do you want this situation continuing for more years? Instead of all this naval gazing why for out jut grow a set and tell him how you feel. Balls in his court what he then does with this information.

Simple.

Report
Casmama · 07/03/2014 07:19

It sounds like you are a bit of a safety net for each other- when single/lonely you are someone for each other to fixate on but when in a relationship with someone else it feels a bit much.

I think Mrscakes advice is good- tell him you are backing off and why and if he doesn't do anything about it then you are not his priority.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

TwattyBojangles · 07/03/2014 07:16

log, he's not a steady Eddie, it's more circumstance than anything else. Bobs job has meant during the last 10 years he's been working abroad a lot, sometimes for years. I've also moved around a bit too.

I've got lots to think about here... And a slight wine head on. Ick.

OP posts:
Report
212smj · 07/03/2014 04:26

I had a 'friend' like this for 12 years. Through that time we both had relationships with other people and I had spent the best part of that 12 year friendship thinking he was 'the one' and that eventually we'd be together when the time was right......
Fast forward to us finally getting together and we were in a relationship for 3 years, when I realised that the 12 year friendship wasn't this awesome base for a relationship but it had been a toxic flirtation that ruined every relationship I ever had when we were friends! We had both put this stupid romantic spin on things that truthfully was probably nothing more than a build up of sexual tension! We just let it build up too long. We broke up about 5 years ago and we have zero contact now. I look back with utter abhorrence that I allowed this friendship to become so toxic an influence on all of my other relationships, simply because I romanticized a flirtation.

I'm sorry to say that it worked out like that, but it's one of the biggest regrets of my life. I cannot look back on how I was then without shuddering and feeling utterly foolish.

Either scratch the itch or move on, but don't waste more time building up romantic ideas. I wish I never had.

I hope he is the love of your life and your experience isn't like mine, but it could be. You both may have built sexual tension/flirtation up to fever pitch!

Good luck whatever you do.

Report
Logg1e · 07/03/2014 04:21

I agree with Amanda. It's not the romance of the century if neither of you have prioritised the other. It just sounds as though he's the Steady Eddie you're turning to now there's no one else around.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.