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- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!usc!cs.utexas.edu!ut-emx!ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
- From: llama@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu (sine nomine)
- Newsgroups: alt.angst
- Subject: Re: more commitment angst
- Message-ID: <86643@ut-emx.uucp>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 04:53:41 GMT
- Sender: news@ut-emx.uucp
- Lines: 65
-
-
- steve@estel.uindy.edu writes:
- >with me if she's not happy. Still, I don't feel like her abandoning her
- >commitment to me, so she can get on with her life, lets me off the hook.
- >I've got to let *myself* off the hook. I still feel really committed to
- >[...]
- >if I heard someone else saying those same words I'd say "You &^%&$!#
- >idiot! You've got to face reality! You've got to get on with your life!
- >Wake up and smell the &^$%#$# coffee! If people treat you like &*^*& they
- >don't *deserve* your commitment." But they're still your children. They're
- >still your parents. She's still my wife. {NOT! :-(.} I guess it's really a
- >family thing for me. She is/was a member of my family. We have a
- >commitment thing in my family that goes way back. I'm guess I'm just not
- >ready to give it up.
- >
- >I think I've got it bad. Or maybe I just don't get it.
-
- it sounds like you've got a really good handle on your feelings about
- the situation, actually. there are only a couple of things i can add
- to your analysis:
-
- first, one of the hardest things there is to learn is that you can't
- make people feel things that they don't want to feel, no matter how
- good your reasons for thinking they should feel that way are. it's
- frustrating as hell and it's something i keep finding myself knocking
- up against in life. doesn't matter how logical *i* can be, all those
- weird people out there insist on ignoring me and being stupid. so you
- have your feelings of commitment that are undisturbed, and that's fine
- *so long as* you realize that she doesn't feel them anymore and isn't
- going to act as if she does.
-
- second, the only way around this stuff is time. i've come to think
- about breakups as being similar to the way i felt about christmas when
- i was a kid. when i was about 10, i suddenly noticed that adults
- didn't get toys for christmas and figured out that there would be a
- day when i wouldn't get toys for christmas, either. and i hated the
- idea! i couldn't stand to think about the concept of christmas without
- toys. if you'd told me then that by the time i had to deal with the
- reality of toyless christmases i'd be ready and it wouldn't be nearly
- ass painful as i'd feared, i'd've thought you were crazy. but it's
- been like that with lots of things in my life: stuff that seemed just
- too hard and too painful from where i was standing when i first saw it
- managed to become doable by the time i actually approached it in
- reality.
-
- that doesn't mean that it's not going to hurt. i was ready for my
- marriage to be over when it ended and there were still painful
- moments. but the reality of being divorced was nowhere as huge as it
- seemed the first time i realized it was going to happen. and painful
- breakups since then have been difficult, but by taking just as much as
- i can manage at a time and letting the rest of it worry about itself,
- i've found that eventually, in time, even things i'd thought would be
- too exquisitely painnful to even think about have turned into bearable
- experiences.
-
- so i'm babbling again, and i'm not sure if anything useful has
- appeared in this. but really, in six months or a year, you'll surprise
- yourself with how you feel about the whole situation.
-
- --
- sine | deb
- "the things you hold dearly are scoffed at and yearly judged once and
- then left aside, 'cause they're blind, they hold you too close to the
- line. and i see what they only might if they learn but they're letting
- you burn 'cause they're blind" -- the replacements
-