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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

Dealing with an unexpected rejection

33 replies

Wallowitzing · 11/07/2019 18:56

Last year I moved to a foreign country where I knew no one and did not speak the language. I love my new job (the reason I moved here) and I’ve worked really hard to feel at home. Part of that involved joining a church and the church choir which is one of the few places to meet English speakers my age. For the last couple of months I’ve been interested in the conductor of the choir. He arrived in the country a couple of months after me and we are part of the same friendship group ever since. Over the last few weeks we have been spending more time together without our other friends. We have gone out for dinner, gone to a museum and we usually go for a walk together after services and choir. He has been to my house for dinner and boardgames with our group of friends several times over the last few months, and he has twice come alone. I’m 30 and he is a couple of years older. We seem to have quite good chemistry but it has all been very innocent so far - lots of eye contact and casual touching, he put his arm around my shoulder when we sat together after dinner at my house, we held hands as we walked along the peer etc.

Yesterday we met up for drinks at my request. I had planned the evening intending to bring up how I feel. I had assumed he felt the same way because he seems to enjoy spending time with me. To my utter horror, he had absolutely no idea how I felt. He had assumed that we were friends and that we just spent more time together as we are the two newest arrivals in our friendship group. He is completely not interested and I am so embarrassed.

I don’t think he is likely to tell our mutual friends what happened, but some of them have already noticed that we spend a lot of time together and will be able to guess. I feel like I need to leave the choir but I can’t face the thought of trying to start my social life from scratch again. How can I cope with the awkwardness and embarrassment?

This has also been a huge hit to my confidence. I completely misread the situation and I don’t really trust my own judgement at the best of times. I feel so stupid. I think I built this up in my imagination and spent way too much time over-thinking every tiny thing so I ended up thinking it was a sign. I hadn’t realised how small the English-speaking community here is, so there is not much potential for dating because I don’t speak the local language very well yet. I am currently wallowing in self-pity and imagining that I will spend the rest of my life alone. Please help me gain some perspective!

OP posts:
NeatFreakMama · 11/07/2019 21:55

I agree with PP, the holding hands alone would make me think he was interested! I'd say he's a game player and you're better off out of it. I bet if you totally cooled on him then he'd start flirting with you again.

Scarlettmaid · 11/07/2019 21:56

Do you plan to stay in the new country long term? I am asking because it sounds like it would be difficult to date a local?
I guess that makes you more anxious about meeting someone?
I would say that at 30 you are young.
If your plan is to spend a couple of years in a foreign country, you might as well make the most of that amazing experience without worrying about a new man?

havingaKIDSparty · 11/07/2019 22:08

Just carry on don't leave your new friends. It's embarrassing now, but he's the one who's made an idiot of himself leading you on. You can still see him as part of the group just hold your head high. You are obviously good company so his loss.

TooOldForThis67 · 11/07/2019 23:02

You don't realise it now but 30 is young. You have plenty of time to find someone. Enjoy the experience of living abroad and everything that entails. Do not leave your church group. Act normal but resist any one to one time with this strange man. After a few days it'll be water under the bridge. He will see how his actions have had a negative affect and I hope he feels ashamed.

Rachelover40 · 11/07/2019 23:08

You've done nothing wrong, it wasn't unreasonable of you to think the friendship was going to lead somewhere. Of course it is hurtful and quite natural that you feel embarrassed but there is no need. If you are enjoying the choir, carry on enjoying it. Be happy and relaxed (or give the impression you are), life will go on and people who thought you might be an item will forget it.

Flowers
nutellalove · 11/07/2019 23:09

You are not stupid. Agree with what everyone has said. Holding hands etc is not what you do with your friends. You have nothing to be embarrassed about.

Noimaginationxyzz · 11/07/2019 23:51

like hell he had no idea! The first reply said it all. You have done nothing at all to be embarrassed about, unlike him! Don't even think about leaving the choir or friendship group!

StVincent · 11/07/2019 23:57

I’ve got a friend like this. The number of total head-fucks over the years is honestly too many to count. I always thought it was me misreading the signs, but given that the latest one involved him declaring his love for me and then disappearing for weeks tells me once and for all that the problem is definitely him!!

Normal people like us can only watch in bewilderment as they do these things that make no sense. I’ve learnt to ignore his emotional incontinence and treat him as a distant, occasional friend and nothing more. It’s the way forward for you. Treat this as an opportunity to deepen your friendship with other women at church and limit/cut out alone time with this guy for a bit.

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