BUT the big reveal from us meeting is: the harsh reality. I am not a priority. Our friendship is not a priority in his eyes. I drove an hour each way to meet up with him. A 2 hour roundtrip for barely 25mins of his time.
Sounds like you had a big insight. It must have been starkly clear "how things were" when you got together. How is it feeling to you to have that kind of "aha" moment or realization?
Part of me feels it may be best for me to message him some thing along like:
'I have enjoyed the relationship we have had together. In order for me to continue to respect your boundaries and to give you the space you need for your new relationships to flourish, I will be gently detaching from you. I know after you ended things we explored friendship, and I will cherish those memories. I will continue to value and respect you from a distance. If you do have time for
two-way friendship with me in the future, you have my number.'
What would be the "most ideal" outcome of sending that? I.e., what would be the "perfect" result of sending that "in an ideal world" / what do you hope for via sending that message?
Or would it be simpler to let friendship die from neglect, as it is one way
Interesting that you are having this insight, too.
As you think through what you want to do now, one concept to keep in mind is:
boundaries don't have to be announced or explained to others, to still be boundaries and to be effective for us.
When we find ourselves in a position where we are considering verbally describing boundaries to others (whom we want to be "affected" by our boundaries), that's an important tipoff to think about what we want to achieve by "announcing" the boundaries.
What we do -- our actions and choices -- are our boundaries. And our actions already communicate things inherently.
I'd be interested to hear your take on those ideas!
kells76