Pook, your emphasis on the reality of the here and now is always very grounding. Thank you.
I also appreciate your focus on not just evaluating a relationship once then setting things in stone, but re-evaluating as more things happen and new information comes to like. My former partner was incredibly sweet, conscientious and loving, until he wasn't. Rather than clinging to the memory of the past, it's really helpful to ask myself, 'What do you know *now*? You know this person is capable of acting as a cruel, manipulative liar. Where do you want to be in relation to that?'
The answer is far, far away.
I also appreciate your focus on not just evaluating a relationship once then setting things in stone, but re-evaluating as more things happen and new information comes to like. My former partner was incredibly sweet, conscientious and loving, until he wasn't. Rather than clinging to the memory of the past, it's really helpful to ask myself, 'What do you know *now*? You know this person is capable of acting as a cruel, manipulative liar. Where do you want to be in relation to that?'
The answer is far, far away.
I completely understand. In your case (and everyone's, really), your partner was/is sick and not realizing how much chaos they're creating around them. Why? Because their focus is inward, on the mental health that's crushing them at every turn. It deserves sympathy and compassion for sure, but at the same time that doesn't mean we need to remain in the middle of the storm with them.
Looking back, I had no idea how much my relationship had changed over the years and how much of my life I spent waiting on things to feel normal again. The answer now is so clear- it would never have been normal without some serious work on both our parts.
I couldn't do that work alone though, we both had to contribute equally to have a solid relationship. And my ex just wasn't capable then. I hope things are better now, but I wouldn't know because that's not the center of my world anymore. The storm has truly passed.
You'll feel differently in time- sometimes you'll go back to "what ifs", other times you'll be angry or sad. And that's fine, feel the emotions and process them. That's how we learn to truly let go and move on to the next thing.


