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When Nothing (But Everything) Is Wrong

Q. Hi Jordan,

I started reading your blog earlier this year and I love it. I just needed to ask you something. I’ve read your posts about your love life, past and present, and I’ve been reading and re-reading this post [about being "certain" in a relationship]. I relate to this reader so much…and I do have one question: How do you break up with someone who has done absolutely nothing wrong to you, but you just know you’re not supposed to be together?

I have been with someone for almost a year now and everything is fine. Just fine. But that’s all. I have always, always had this nagging feeling that I am going to wake up engaged, and I’m scared because I have no reason to reject a perfectly nice proposal. My boyfriend has never treated me poorly, we rarely fight, he loves me so much…but I am just lacking something, and I feel like I need to end this sooner rather than later because I know in my heart that this is not the person I want to spend the rest of my life with.

Have you ever been the breaker and not the break-ee when it comes to ending a relationship? I honestly know what I need to do…I just don’t know how to do it. Do you have any words of advice from experience of your own?

Anonymous

A. I completely understand where you’re coming from, and I understand that just because you can’t put your finger on what’s “wrong” with a relationship (and may not logically feel like anything even is), doesn’t mean that it’s “right”. That knowledge also doesn’t make it any easier to break up with someone you genuinely care about.

I was in a very similar situation when I first moved to LA: my boyfriend of several years (off and on) was my first love, but the fact that I remembered being overwhelmingly in love with him when I was 17 didn’t mean that I still was when I was 22. Which was tough to come to terms with. I wanted so badly to feel as in love with him as I used to, so much so that I spent months and months trying to convince myself of something that simply wasn’t there.

I couldn’t put my finger on what, exactly, was missing from the relationship…but I was terrified at the idea of ending up married to him. And that made no sense either to me or to anyone else in my life, because not only was he wonderful on paper (smart, funny, handsome, my first love), but we had also co-created a show together, and by breaking up with him, I wasn’t just losing someone who I knew I was “lucky” to have…I was also quite possibly losing my job, my friends, and the life I had pictured having.

But I broke up with him.

And – surprise, surprise – I lost not only him, but also my job, my friends, and the life I had pictured having.

And in a perfect world the next thing that would have happened would have been that I immediately realized that it was the right thing to do, and my life would have immediately opened up in extraordinary and previously unimaginable ways.

But that wasn’t what happened: what happened was that I fell directly into an intensely destructive live-in relationship with a person who created problems in my life that in some ways I’m still unraveling to this day, and spent several years in a deep depression. There was a period when I constantly wondered whether I had done the right thing, and felt so completely alone that I started to curse myself for my immaturity and weakness for having left someone who was at the very least a man who loved me very much.

Truth? I kind of lost it. I pictured myself back in the relationship, back in my job, maybe not great but certainly not alone and probably not so sad it hurt to open my eyes in the morning, and just about wanted to collapse through the floor at the mess I had made of my future. I convinced myself that our relationship had been perfectly fine (after all, it was difficult for me to put a finger on what had been “wrong” in the first place), and that I had just been a whiny, dissatisfied, impossible-to-please kid who thought there were better things out there when really, there weren’t.

Guess what?

There are better things out there.

With the glorious 20/20 of hindsight, I now understand what had been missing from that relationship. My boyfriend was many wonderful things, absolutely…but he also had a very specific image of who he wanted me to be that had very little to do with who I actually was. He saw me as the wide-eyed 17-year-old he had met many years before who thought every word that left his mouth was the be-all end-all, and wanted to put me in a glass cage where I would stay that way forever. With him, I didn’t feel capable of having my own friends, my own career, or my own life. I wanted those things so badly.

Every day, I felt like I was being held underwater; I could barely even breathe when I pictured the years stretching out before us.

And again, it wasn’t that he wasn’t great in many ways. Or that I didn’t love him, because I did. It was that when I was with him, I was not myself. I could barely even remember who that person was, it was so hard to see past what he wanted.

As I said a couple of weeks ago, I do really regret writing that post that you say you’ve been reading and re-reading – I want to be clear about that – because I feel like it suggested (or rather outright stated) that you should be absolutely certain about who you choose as a life partner before making the decision to commit to them. And I don’t believe that at all. Doubts are not only normal; they’re important, because they keep you examining things, and constant examination is how you grow and evolve.

Do I ever question my relationship with Kendrick? Yes. Of course I do. Even on our wedding day itself, I had a moment of panic wondering if I was doing the “right thing.” And I’m not saying that to “keep it real”; I’m saying that because choosing to spend your life with someone is a big deal (not to mention how much our society hammers you over the head with how you must get married and it must be to the perfect person, and not to mention ridiculous books like Marry Him that make you feel like you should settle for a guy who’s “good enough”). Of course you will (and should) question a decision that will (and should) affect your life so enormously, both before and after you make it. But when you do make that choice, you should know deep-down that you’re choosing someone who loves you for you and who you love for who he or she truly is in return. Because that’s a big thing to know.

I definitely don’t want to tell you what to do with regards to your current relationship, but it sounds to me like you feel fairly certain about things already. With regards to the “how”…there’s really no “good” way to end a relationship, especially not when the breakup is one-sided (as it sounds like it may be, if that’s what you end up choosing).

But honestly…that’s OK. Breakups are an important part of figuring out who you are and where you want to go, and when it comes to such enormously emotional matters, there is nothing better that you can do than to be straightforward with yourself and with your partner.

Be kind and be gentle, of course – but be direct. I think that when you make it your policy to be honest with yourself and with others, life can take some pretty amazing turns.

I hope that helps.

Lots of love, and Happy New Year.

x

J



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  • http://barnardbabyblog.tumblr.com Adrienne

    Great advice. Great. Open, Honest and Direct. That is the best way to approach any kind of communication, difficult or otherwise. It is better for them to know exactly how you’re feeling and what you see in the future. Be open, be direct and then begin moving forward on your own terms.

  • AllisonH

    I just want to add that even if you don’t think you are actually being mistreated by this boyfriend, as Jordan realized she was after breaking up, that you could still frame your decision to break up with him as being the right thing FOR HIM, in addition to yourself. If you feel that one day you will leave him, and that that will destroy him, it’s better FOR HIM for you to do that now so that he can get on with his life, just like you want to get on with yours. I imagine a lot of us have been in your situation, and it’s definitely a difficult one. You feel like a bad person – selfish, dishonest, cruel, spoiled – and your guilt stops you from acting. Ultimately being honest with him will make you feel better, if not right away then ultimately, and will allow both of you to find partners to whom you are better suited. Good luck to you!!

  • MorganBrasfield

    Love this advice! Great post. I was watching a silly episode of Grey’s Anatomy a few weeks ago. The main character was having doubts about getting married. She expressed these doubts to her colleague, who responded something to the effect of “not having doubts is childish and naive. Having doubts means you’re an adult and are doing your best to make a responsible decision.” Love that reminder. xox

  • http://www.facebook.com/veryjackie Jackie Danicki

    I’d add that it’s important to bear in mind – not just in this but in all of life – one thing: You are not responsible for anyone else’s happiness. You are responsible for your own happiness.

    I broke up with an amazing, total package guy several years ago. Why? Because I knew he wasn’t interested in the real me, and he wasn’t able to show me who he really was either. I was “worshipped,” but without being known, which made it feel so undeserved and disingenuous.

    I put it off for a long time because I didn’t want to hurt him. I finally cried to my shrink, “I don’t ever want him to be sad or lonely or hurt!” To which my shrink replied, “Do you know how incredibly harmful it would be to him to never feel pain?” He explained to me that love can be painful because clarity and truth are often painful, and that we never grow if we never are faced with the pain of the truth.

    And any situation where the truth is being concealed is inherently toxic, and it WILL get worse.

    The kind thing is to act in your truth, in a kind and humane way. But don’t take responsibility for his feelings. They are his, and you have to let people feel what they are going to feel – disappointment, sadness, loneliness, despair. If you get in the way of that, you will extend, deepen, and prolong their suffering.

    (Also, don’t make the mistake that I did and talk to the guy every day on the phone for two months post-breakup. My shrink had to teach me that breaking up means you don’t talk for a set period of time, at least three months. By the time three months had passed, I had lost my feeling of responsibility for his pain, and talking didn’t seem good for either of us. Give time time.)

  • http://twitter.com/HopeVarnedoe Hope Varnedoe

    And this is why I love your blog so much. Such genuine, open and wise advice given with a warm heart. Your blog is so much more than just a fashion or DIY blog, it’s filled with such great heart.

  • jordanreid

    i’m gonna go with main character = meredith, colleague = christina? that sounds about right :)
    definitely agree with that advice!

  • doesjackieevershutup

    But don’t take responsibility for his feelings.

    Terrible advice Jackie, if you are in a long term relationship with someone you are very much responsible for their feelings.