Originally Posted by
wanderlustboy
I'm not really satisfied; I'm willing to live with the pseudo-romantic relationship we have because I suspect, deep down, that he wants to get back together.
I suppose the problem is that, even assuming that there was no chance of us getting back together, I don't think I could bear to live without his friendship. And if I'm entirely honest, I'm not sure he could live without mine. We're very dependent on each other emotionally, which is why I cannot understand why we're best friends, why he'll cuddle up to me, sleep in the same bed as me, but the second I cross the line to, say, trying to kiss him, he pulls back and says we're not together anymore.
Particularly frustrating because he's not seeing anyone, and doesnt appear to be seeking any relationship, or even no strings attached sex!
Why do you allow him in your bed, to cuddle you, to do everything that you did as a romantic partner except the sex? You enable him to be complacent and you also allow him to ruin any romantic prospects you do manage to superficially form. You are a co-dependend enabler who allows this man to be who he is with you.
Make a choice or suffer this fate until he has enough strength to be in a relationship and dumps you like a hot potato. You "cherish" this more than he does.
Or, so it seems from where I'm sitting.
Would you want to be with someone like you if you were a guy?
Op is a guy, no? No matter Op's sex... OP is indeed totally co-dependent either way.
It also causes problems with guys that I date when I introduce them, and after a very short period they really resent him and the friendship that I have with him.
If your "friend" respected you at all he'd realize that and he'd back off instead of sabotaging things for you. You're co-dependent and don't have the emotional maturity to leave on your own so you'd think he'd ball up and take the lead here so you're not suffering like you are.
Last edited by Wakeup; 19-10-11 at 06:48 AM.
“The willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life is the source from which self-respect springs.” ~Joan Didion