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Relationships

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

Breaking up with someone you really love

40 replies

warmite · 06/03/2021 13:33

I am on the verge of breaking up with someone I really love because he has issues up the wazoo and I feel really bad about it. I know when I post here everyone will tell me to run (I know that's the logical decision) but wanted to ask if anyone has left someone they really, properly love and who loves them?

The relationship has always been just potential, there's always some reason he can't fully be there or can't give me what I want and three years on we love each other more than ever but it's affected me deeply now because I am a hostage to his anxiety.

His entire life is based on anxiety and that's how he makes all his decisions. His issues are mainly fear of abandonment, Aspergers which makes him rigid, deep-seated phobia of dependence on me and some severe childhood trauma along with abusive previous relationships.

The first year it was great in so many ways, we fell in love easily and had a great time, but he was also reluctant to do some things that would have made me happy. That might have meant things like having to drag him by the teeth to a mini-break or something like that.

When the time came to "move in together", the took a job really far away (he says he deeply regrets that now) but we've basically been "long distance" for a couple of years now which has really sapped my quality of life.

Over these past years, we tackled a lot of his issues. He now feels safe in this relationship, he's vulnerable, he wants to get married and he's so loving and we get on so brilliantly. It's the most lovely relationship I have ever had in so many ways.

He's also taken steps the last few months to tackle his past wounds, and work on himself. He's been in counselling, reading self-help books and we have a weekly "intimacy hour" where we talk about the big stuff. He's grown SO much, and I love him more than ever.

However, I want to live together and be able to do normal things like hang out on Sundays and spend time together and while he says he desperately wants this, I sense he is still avoiding it.

He misses me terribly and is miserable. I miss him terribly and I am also miserable. But right now, he is due to come home in May when his contract ends, and he's hesitant.

His reason is not having a new job to go to yet, so he wants to extend his contract past May so he can keep his current job in place until he finds a new one.

My position is "no way", we agreed two years and I can't live a minute longer with my life on hold. We hardly ever see each other and life is passing us by. I told him to come home and look for a job, we can easily live on just my income and we have lots of savings.

I can only describe his reaction as truly phobic.

If I tell him "fine, stay there longer if you want but I am moving on" then he suddenly gets rational and says he understands and of course he will come home and start a proper life with me.

As soon as things are back on track, he wakes up in the morning anxious and starts saying he thinks he might never get a job and then what if his career is ruined and what if I leave him.

I know Aspie people need structure and I know anxiety and rigidity of thinking is an issues, and I know his past fears play into this but it is literally maddening.

We have split up for a few days over this and he has literally been crying all week. He cries when he wakes up and at lunchtime (and he is not a cryer). He says he can't imagine a life without me at all and please if I stay he will come home.

I know if I renege, he will go back to being anxious and trying to get out of coming home. It's really bleak to be honest, and he's been so stressed he's currently at the doctors trying to get help.

All this taken into account, he is the most wonderful person I have ever. We have a lovely relationship and we're stupidly in love and happy with each other and it's such a shame he just can't seem to get a grip on his anxiety.

It's almost like he is afraid to begin our life together and after three years I am at the end of my tether. I know I have to walk away to live a life, but I am just so sad about it.

Has anyone got any experience of anxiety that is so powerful? I thought the counselling would help, and it does with some things, but his anxiety is so pronounced that he get anxious about the counselling!

OP posts:
warmite · 06/03/2021 18:06

I wish people would listen. I am not making him give up his job.

  1. He had a job here.
  1. He got offered a two year gig overseas, and persuaded me to "wait" for him while he took a two year contract.
  1. I was VERY reluctant on this idea, didn't want a LDR and have not enjoyed it at all.
  1. He said at the end of two years he would be home and we would have a wonderful life / buy a home together
  1. I have sat here for 21 months, loyally.
  1. Now at the last minute he is saying he wants to stay longer because he wants a new job in place before he arrives. W

We had an agreement. I have sacrificed nearly two years. Now he wants more. He can just as easily look for a job here as there and we don't need the money.

OP posts:
MiddleAgedLurker · 06/03/2021 18:37

This reply has been withdrawn

This has been withdrawn by MNHQ at the OP's request.

Branleuse · 06/03/2021 18:42

its ok to give an ultimatum. He needs to work out what HE wants. You couldnt have been clearer about your needs and he needs to stop faffing and decide if he wants to come back and commit, because you have held your side of the bargain and now hes moving the goalposts.

autumnalrain · 06/03/2021 19:25

I think he’s future faking you, look it up OP. (Saying just enough to keep you hopeful).

How old are you both?

warmite · 06/03/2021 19:40

@MiddleAgedLurker I am nursing a gin and your post made me cry. I am so glad you waited and got that time.

OP posts:
warmite · 06/03/2021 19:41

@autumnalrain Early 40s. I don't feel I have more years to waste.

OP posts:
Landlubber2019 · 06/03/2021 19:51

I broke up with someone I loved deeply, he couldn't give me what I wanted. Commitment and security.

He eventually grew and settled and became the man I wanted him to be, but it took him 10 years and another woman before he was ready to commit. I waited 7 years and had I waited a further 10 yrs I would have been deeply resentful.

I subsequently met my husband, we have 2 kids and I have no regrets about leaving, despite it being deeply painful at the time.

autumnalrain · 06/03/2021 20:18

I agree you shouldn’t have to wait.

But in his defence this is the worst possible time to be unemployed. If the economy wasn’t how it is now I’d say he’s dragging his feet, but being voluntarily unemployed right now is just foolish.

Therefore breaking up might be the only option.

GreenlandTheMovie · 06/03/2021 22:28

Would you not consider moving overseas to the country he is in? Might be a way forward. Its always refreshing to live in a new country.

YellowHello · 06/03/2021 22:33

I feel like you've been more than patient OP, very few people would have waited this long. I dont really understand his health issues well enough to comment on those, but it seems to be impacting you really negatively and you deserve to be happy. I think ending it is the only option. Sorry

warmite · 07/03/2021 09:07

@GreenlandTheMovie I have a son, so couldn't leave him behind

OP posts:
RantyAnty · 07/03/2021 09:27

I think you're wasting your life waiting on him.

It's easy to have the perfect relationship with someone you don't see.

Seems he was all settled there in London. Had he been looking for work where he is now?

He could have have not taken the job and stayed there but he didnt.

Now he's asking you 2 waste another 2 years of your life waiting in him.
Entirely unfair.

It sounds like you have a good thing going where you are with work etc.

Has he been looking for work back in London?

NotaCoolMum · 07/03/2021 13:03

@rawalpindithelabrador you come off as overly aggressive.

@warmite I don’t think you’re being unreasonable in your wants and needs in the slightest. I’d definitely tell him to come back or there is no “us”. He begged for you to wait for him and you’ve put your life on hold long enough xxx

SendMeHome · 07/03/2021 13:15

@warmite How likely is it that he likes the lifestyle you’ve currently got? The routine; and how structured it is, and the low pressure nature of it being long distance?

That’d be my concern. It may well be that he prefers it because of his issues, but if his preference is for this and yours is not... it sounds like he’s tearing himself to bits to try and agree with what you want, and then how much he doesn’t want that hits him, and he’s spinning in circles.

I suspect you both need a deeper chat about what you both want this to look like and what the actual options are, all things considered. To an outsider; you’re miles apart, and you might just be prolonging the pain for both of you.

Crimeismymiddlename · 07/03/2021 14:28

I think you should stick to the original deal, he is back when his contract ends or you walk. This OP is all about his feelings/anxiety/Aspergers/problems. He seems a lot of hard work. If he was so worried about losing you he would have not purposely taken a job an 8 hour flight away. He would have stayed. If he was worried about being unemployed he would not have taken a contract job, in another country he would have stayed in-I am assuming stable employment. He has been happy for you to support him and put your life on hold yet has done nothing to support you or make decisions that factor your happiness into the equation. He doesn’t want to be with you they way you want him to be, and honestly would you not be happier with someone who does not need ‘intimacy hours’ and just wants a nice life with you, being single would mean that your life is not on hold-your child will leave home soon, you have a good income-you could have a great time when the restrictions lift-without your partner having a breakdown because you-god forbid-want to go on a mini break! I mean he moved country’s ffs.

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