Hello. I have lurked this board for awhile, but recently created an actual account. I need some advice pretty badly, as I have experienced my very first long distance relationship, and I am having an issue that I feel is best discussed among people that understand.
He and I hit it off very quickly, and unexpectedly became more than friends. We have only had contact via phone and internet, but we have Skyped a lot, so we have seen each other as close to in person as possible. There is no question that I love him and want to be with him.
Here's the problem: he and I are both introverted, and as we met online, it's fairly obvious that we have online friends. He is agoraphobic, and I am fine with that, but I am mentioning it here just in case it is relevant to anyone who is kind enough to give me advice. He mostly has female friends, which is fine with me. I was the girl that grew up around boys, so I know that friendships of opposite genders can work out just fine...as long as their are appropriate boundaries.
But I don't think he has appropriate boundaries with all of his online female friends. A big example of this is, there was a girl that lived somewhat nearby to him, and she wanted to meet up one day. He and I were together already at this point, and he told me that he wasn't going to meet up with her, because he felt that she wanted something more than friendship, so he just didn't go. Great, he was honest with me, and I thanked him for that. However, unknown to me, he continued his friendship with this girl, and made the conscious decision to not tell her that he had a girlfriend. In fact, he has told no one that he wasn't single. None of his friends know. I knew that he didn't want to tell his family, because, even though we have been together for awhile, we have not actually gone to each others countries and visited that way, so he felt that he would get laughed at and that his family would be quite upset. I do understand that, and figured we could just both work our way towards that in the future. Not a huge deal. But he won't even tell his online friends, and doesn't understand why I am so upset about it. I keep trying to talk to him about appropriateness in friendships and how the boundaries naturally change when you are in a relationship vs when you are single, but he just doesn't seem to get it. He thinks that, because he is not interested in anything more from these girls, that he doesn't need to tell him that he is not single, and thinks that I am being unreasonable.
I feel hurt and disrespected, and I have spent so much time trying to explain to him that I don't care that he has female friends. I do find it a little odd that he actually seeks out female online friends, and not male friends, to the point of, at one time, he had an online profile set to only accept messages and stuff from women. I just feel that some of his friendships are obviously inappropriate, and what makes it worse is that he refuses to tell any of them about me. I am hoping that, maybe by getting advice from others, I can work this out with him. He says he loves me and only wants to be with me, but these things he is doing seems to show the opposite.
Thank you so much for your time in reading this.
He and I hit it off very quickly, and unexpectedly became more than friends. We have only had contact via phone and internet, but we have Skyped a lot, so we have seen each other as close to in person as possible. There is no question that I love him and want to be with him.
Here's the problem: he and I are both introverted, and as we met online, it's fairly obvious that we have online friends. He is agoraphobic, and I am fine with that, but I am mentioning it here just in case it is relevant to anyone who is kind enough to give me advice. He mostly has female friends, which is fine with me. I was the girl that grew up around boys, so I know that friendships of opposite genders can work out just fine...as long as their are appropriate boundaries.
But I don't think he has appropriate boundaries with all of his online female friends. A big example of this is, there was a girl that lived somewhat nearby to him, and she wanted to meet up one day. He and I were together already at this point, and he told me that he wasn't going to meet up with her, because he felt that she wanted something more than friendship, so he just didn't go. Great, he was honest with me, and I thanked him for that. However, unknown to me, he continued his friendship with this girl, and made the conscious decision to not tell her that he had a girlfriend. In fact, he has told no one that he wasn't single. None of his friends know. I knew that he didn't want to tell his family, because, even though we have been together for awhile, we have not actually gone to each others countries and visited that way, so he felt that he would get laughed at and that his family would be quite upset. I do understand that, and figured we could just both work our way towards that in the future. Not a huge deal. But he won't even tell his online friends, and doesn't understand why I am so upset about it. I keep trying to talk to him about appropriateness in friendships and how the boundaries naturally change when you are in a relationship vs when you are single, but he just doesn't seem to get it. He thinks that, because he is not interested in anything more from these girls, that he doesn't need to tell him that he is not single, and thinks that I am being unreasonable.
I feel hurt and disrespected, and I have spent so much time trying to explain to him that I don't care that he has female friends. I do find it a little odd that he actually seeks out female online friends, and not male friends, to the point of, at one time, he had an online profile set to only accept messages and stuff from women. I just feel that some of his friendships are obviously inappropriate, and what makes it worse is that he refuses to tell any of them about me. I am hoping that, maybe by getting advice from others, I can work this out with him. He says he loves me and only wants to be with me, but these things he is doing seems to show the opposite.
Thank you so much for your time in reading this.
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