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What to do when He/She Leaves? — 757 Comments

  1. Hi Al,
    My husband and I have known each other for 14 years. We have been married only 2 ½ years. Majority of our relationship has been long distance because of his love for music and his desire to make it big. 2 years ago, he left his old band in Florida on a whim because an opportunity opened up for him in the Philippines. I didn’t have a choice but to let him move there because we were fighting constantly. I didn’t want him to fly there. I have to stay behind because I had to financially support him (for 2 years). Now, after 1 successful album and numerous weekly gigs, he doesn’t want to come back here in the States anymore. He comes here to visit 2x a year. Last time he was here was Holiday 2010. I got pregnant. While he was here, we both knew from several blood tests and ultrasound that the pregnancy is not going well. He was scheduled to leave Jan 31. I had begged him to stay for a few more weeks because I live by myself and I didn’t think I’d be able to handle the possibility of losing the baby by myself. He left as scheduled and I was devastated. Because of the inconsideration, I shut down. He was mad at first because I was not very responsive and my text messages were short and cold. It’s been 2 months since we lost the baby. And he wants a divorce. I am here wondering if it was my fault. I just really wanted him to own up to what he did. But all he ever did was text and threat. We hardly text anymore and everything is going down the drain. I am angry, depressed, confused. Part of me wants to leave because he clearly doesn’t want to be there for me when I need him. Part of me wants to fix it because I love him and I want to be with him. But at the same time, being with him always puts me in a dark place.
    Thanks for your time. I hope you can give some advice.
    J-Marie

  2. Dear Tami, Must seem confusing to you. You started off by mentioning Master/Slave and Dialogical and then (from my point of view) shifted into the difficulties of Clinger/Avoider which I refer to as the issue of Reliable Membership. I think people need the skills to deal with both issues.
    Most often at the point of someone leaving, the one left behind is acting Clinger. And the distancing partner is acting Avoider. My guidelines are designed for that.
    But as is common, you guys seem to have switched back. He moving into clinger and you wondering about avoiding. I think that is good as you can get to experience both sides.
    Now for the solutions. Check out my paper on Reliable Membership and go from there.

  3. Hello Al,
    My name is Tami and I'm fast becoming a fan of your experiences and your very valuable opinions on relationships. It has been enlightening to read about the differences between dialogical relationships and master/slave relationships. I never realized how much I followed the traditionally taught master/slave relationship style and that realization was horrifying for me.
    It should be pretty straight forward that recently my partner left me. We are both young lovers, both of us are 23. I love my partner, and am trying to work on drawing him back by following your steps and keeping an open heart. I find myself struggling with step number four. My partner contacts me very frequently, and I follow step 1 and make sure to never initiate contact, and do my best to practice pre-validation, validation, and mirroring. He has asked to see each other a few times (five times in the month that we have been broken up), and he text messages me almost everyday for hours at a time.
    My struggle with step 4 is that I worry that if I don't try to fulfill my partner's needs for connection then he will seek others to fill them. I understand the concept in my mind (drawing a deer out with feed, not feeding them too much so that they become hungry and seek you out more), but putting it into practice is really hard. I'm not sure if my partner's need for connection is a personal connection to me, or a need for human connection in general. I will continue to work on not being so available, or “over” visit. I'm really working on not pushing at all…my partner commented on my lack of intiating contact and said it felt one-sided and “As friends I shouldn't feel like I can't talk to him when I want.”
    Any suggestions on further steps I can take or any papers of yours you recommend?

  4. Help… I told him I couldn't be his friend and he shouldn't contact me again (aside from work, as we work together) and that I wouldn't be contacting him as i deleted his numbers…. he hasn't replied to that email, nor has he text or spoken to me other than work… yes that's what I asked him to do, but I didn't want to fall in to the friend zone… have i ruined my chances?

  5. Hi Al,
    Its been a while since I post something here, I have finished reading the book, “getting the love you want” twice amd I think that I still havent quite grasp your comment back in Dec above about tje Imago concept on picking the 'right' partner. Could you please elaborate more on that?
    Thanks
    Confused

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