Hi, So let me start off with some introductions and basic info before I start going into the issue.
I'm Drew, I'm 20, I live in Mississippi. Adie (My girlfriend, 18) Lives in Brampton, ON. We met online in June last year, and began our relationship in October. Our relationship has been steadily growing in emotional attachment, physical longing, and there has been a lot of personal growth on both sides when communication has been really strong. This could very well just be something we'll have to weather, but I'd just like to hear someone else agree with that, or even offer ideas to help.
The issue:
I have a job, I sell auto parts while I go to school for Psychology, My family and home life is very well balanced. Adie, on the other hand, has just gotten her first job, which she's never been prepared for, because her home life has been an over all mess. Her parents are divorced and live together. They tend to argue constantly, and Adie gets caught in the crossfire. They also have a tendency to be emotionally detrimental to her. I overheard (we were on skype) her having a conversation with her parents about changing her major from sociology to business, and that she wanted to open a bakery ( a conversation I encouraged her to have because sociology wasn't fun for her) and all I could her were them shouting at her and calling her worthless for wanting to do something that wasn't going to work out in "the real world." Which they have done nothing to prepare her for, and have now been leaving her to her own devices to figure it all out, she's researching tax codes, and everything else that a lot people learn in personal finance classes or by working as a teenager and asking your parents questions, on her own and without support. This added on to her hatred for being in an office job, filing papers, makes her feel confined, and resent this part of life that her family did nothing to expose her too.
This has made her very distant. She becomes overly stressed as each day becomes tonnes of things she feels she has to master and perfect immediately. I continually offer my love and support and positivity to help her, and sometimes it helps, but other times it just feels really bothersome that I can't help her. She loves me, and I love her, and we do make sure to give each other attention, texting often, and skyping when we can, though she feels her stress will bring her down on skype and wants to "save me from that." It also affects the idea of intimacy, her self-esteem basically being none, she feels ashamed of her body and guilty, so I feel worthless and frustrated because I can't help her get over that hurdle, though she sometimes does come out of her shell, only to talk about her guilt the next day. I've been trying to talk about communicating through this issue, among the others, but it seems to only just add to her stress. I'm so lost on what to do, and I don't think leaving is the right thing to do. Is this just something I'll have to keep weathering through until it all gets better?
I am planning on visiting in the fall, we're looking at a week in September-October, planning it specifically in a few weeks, after we check our school and familial schedules for the best time to go down there.
Any advice or tips would be appreciated, and if you need any more info, don't hesitate to ask. Thanks guys!
Drew
I'm Drew, I'm 20, I live in Mississippi. Adie (My girlfriend, 18) Lives in Brampton, ON. We met online in June last year, and began our relationship in October. Our relationship has been steadily growing in emotional attachment, physical longing, and there has been a lot of personal growth on both sides when communication has been really strong. This could very well just be something we'll have to weather, but I'd just like to hear someone else agree with that, or even offer ideas to help.
The issue:
I have a job, I sell auto parts while I go to school for Psychology, My family and home life is very well balanced. Adie, on the other hand, has just gotten her first job, which she's never been prepared for, because her home life has been an over all mess. Her parents are divorced and live together. They tend to argue constantly, and Adie gets caught in the crossfire. They also have a tendency to be emotionally detrimental to her. I overheard (we were on skype) her having a conversation with her parents about changing her major from sociology to business, and that she wanted to open a bakery ( a conversation I encouraged her to have because sociology wasn't fun for her) and all I could her were them shouting at her and calling her worthless for wanting to do something that wasn't going to work out in "the real world." Which they have done nothing to prepare her for, and have now been leaving her to her own devices to figure it all out, she's researching tax codes, and everything else that a lot people learn in personal finance classes or by working as a teenager and asking your parents questions, on her own and without support. This added on to her hatred for being in an office job, filing papers, makes her feel confined, and resent this part of life that her family did nothing to expose her too.
This has made her very distant. She becomes overly stressed as each day becomes tonnes of things she feels she has to master and perfect immediately. I continually offer my love and support and positivity to help her, and sometimes it helps, but other times it just feels really bothersome that I can't help her. She loves me, and I love her, and we do make sure to give each other attention, texting often, and skyping when we can, though she feels her stress will bring her down on skype and wants to "save me from that." It also affects the idea of intimacy, her self-esteem basically being none, she feels ashamed of her body and guilty, so I feel worthless and frustrated because I can't help her get over that hurdle, though she sometimes does come out of her shell, only to talk about her guilt the next day. I've been trying to talk about communicating through this issue, among the others, but it seems to only just add to her stress. I'm so lost on what to do, and I don't think leaving is the right thing to do. Is this just something I'll have to keep weathering through until it all gets better?
I am planning on visiting in the fall, we're looking at a week in September-October, planning it specifically in a few weeks, after we check our school and familial schedules for the best time to go down there.
Any advice or tips would be appreciated, and if you need any more info, don't hesitate to ask. Thanks guys!
Drew
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