My GF of two years left for grad school in September. Though she's only 150 km away, the rigour of her MBA programme, and its novelty (she was trained as an art teacher) has her overwhelmed. Of course, I miss her but don't want to place undue pressure on her when she clearly has enough as it is.
Nonetheless, I'm left with loneliness whilst she has the excitement of a new, larger city and a challenging but bracing course of study. When she left, we made no commitments beyond trying to do what we had been doing for the preceding two years.
It seems to me that one of the ways one renders a long distance relationship tolerable is to have a goal at the end, but GF is maddeningly -- if perhaps pragmatically -- open-ended ("who knows what will happen in two years when I graduate? I may stay here, or go somewhere else. It's too early to tell."). Again, I'm loathe to pressure her to do anything at this point; perhaps a light touch now will be rewarded later.
Or perhaps it won't be and I will be rewarded at the end of this interval with yet more loneliness.
Did I mention that I am 53 and she is 39? We're both divorced, she by her own choice, and me when my wife left me for a colleague at work. We're not kids, but I feel like one when I'm around her.
The other day, when I asked her view of the current situation, she said, "We'll try our best to make this work day by day, as we always have done. Distance is tough, and you never know. You might meet someone in whom you're interested, and I would hope that you would pursue that interest, as I would do should the same thing happen to me, but I'm not looking for it. I'm too busy."
Well, I was stunned. Sure, in the end, all relationships are essentially day-to-day, but isn't this analysis a bit TOO clear-eyed, even cynical? Or was she testing me (I think not; last year our relationship cooled when, as she put it we "became too much like being married." Still, who knows?).
Now I'm wondering if this is not the sort of person who is interested in making a commitment of any kind.
Should I pursue some sort of goal or hope the pressure she's under is colouring her thinking at the moment and wait to see what happens? This episode has brought terrifying echoes of my marriage, and I fear for the health of our relationship.
Nonetheless, I'm left with loneliness whilst she has the excitement of a new, larger city and a challenging but bracing course of study. When she left, we made no commitments beyond trying to do what we had been doing for the preceding two years.
It seems to me that one of the ways one renders a long distance relationship tolerable is to have a goal at the end, but GF is maddeningly -- if perhaps pragmatically -- open-ended ("who knows what will happen in two years when I graduate? I may stay here, or go somewhere else. It's too early to tell."). Again, I'm loathe to pressure her to do anything at this point; perhaps a light touch now will be rewarded later.
Or perhaps it won't be and I will be rewarded at the end of this interval with yet more loneliness.
Did I mention that I am 53 and she is 39? We're both divorced, she by her own choice, and me when my wife left me for a colleague at work. We're not kids, but I feel like one when I'm around her.
The other day, when I asked her view of the current situation, she said, "We'll try our best to make this work day by day, as we always have done. Distance is tough, and you never know. You might meet someone in whom you're interested, and I would hope that you would pursue that interest, as I would do should the same thing happen to me, but I'm not looking for it. I'm too busy."
Well, I was stunned. Sure, in the end, all relationships are essentially day-to-day, but isn't this analysis a bit TOO clear-eyed, even cynical? Or was she testing me (I think not; last year our relationship cooled when, as she put it we "became too much like being married." Still, who knows?).
Now I'm wondering if this is not the sort of person who is interested in making a commitment of any kind.
Should I pursue some sort of goal or hope the pressure she's under is colouring her thinking at the moment and wait to see what happens? This episode has brought terrifying echoes of my marriage, and I fear for the health of our relationship.
Comment