Gave Him a Deadline...2 months to go and he acts like nothing was ever said
[b]Okay SO I gave him a deadline
I know a lot of you out there would say that's the wrong they to do but for me in my relationship I think that he is the type of person who needs a little nudge or he could wait until we are 90
SO we have been together for 3 years and I told him that by August I wanted a ring or that I was going to have to move on
The reason for this is that I am 22 and he is 23. We are both in the prime of our lives. I am VERY VERY VERY much in love with him, but I want to know where this is going. I don't want to be together for like 8 years before he decides to make a move. I want a family and kids and I want to be young when I do these things. I want to start having kids when I am 27 or so
He tells me that he wants the same things and our relationship is great. I am not asking to get married right away (maybe within a year or 2 of being engaged) but I want an action that follows the words that the wants to spend the rest of his life with me
I guess my question is what kinds of signs do I look for the he is going to meet the deadline> the thing is our relationship is great right now and I want to know if he is just stringing me a long thinking that when it comes time I won't follow through...
I don't want to bring it up again but it really bothers me that it doesn't look like he has given any more thought about it
It's not a status issue at all, but I want to know where are relationship is going now. I understand if he is not ready to commit but it has been three years and if he is not ready then I am ready to move on. This has nothing to do with how much I love him but with the fact that if he doesn't want to commit then we are on different pages of our life and may never reach the same page. Also I gave the deadline and I was not asking whether giving a deadline was wrong or not. I know it was right for our relationship as i have said before
You're certainly entitled to a status check, but not an ultimatum. You're both in your early twenties... hardly the prime of your lives. Isn't he already commited to you by having this relationship?
Why is it right to give a deadline? Explain, please.
Maybe it's just me, but something's not right here.
Last edited by westernxer; 14th May 2005 at 8:13 PM..
I feel that is was right to give a deadline because I am ready. I understand that this is selfish and he might not be ready. But then you ask how long do you wait for someone to be ready? I am the type of person who knows what they want out of life. I am in my 3rd year of med school and so I am used to long term planning. I want to know if our goals in life are the same and if we are headed on the same path. For me that path mean engagement and later marriage. We are very much in love and I would wait a year or 2 to get married after we are engaged but if he doesn't want to get married or engaged I think that I should have a right to know that. You say that it seems like something is wrong, why?
I think that a deadline is like giving a push, sometimes men need this otherwise they will drive in the wrong direction for hours. Nothing is wrong with our relationship but for me it is time to know where we go from here and if we have to go in different directions while it would be sad I would rather know now.
Also would you give a person years of your life without knowing where that was going? I see nothing wrong with a status check and for me that check is deciding to be engaged or not be engaged. You told me earlier that i was being selfish, but the guy is also selfish if when you give a deadline he doesn't just respond with I am not ready and instead accepts and gives you the idea that he is okay with that?
Fair enough, but I'd have to question his motivation for having this relationship if you have to kick him in the ass just to get him to marry you.
Has he mentioned wanting to marry you in the past, or is this something you recently thought up on your own? Does he want to get married at all? Do you talk about your future together, or are you assuming it will all come together with a little pressure?
From the way you're describing it, it seems to me like he's very happy just keeping the vehicle in cruise control. Always a red flag when one person thinks they have to force the issue, but maybe he just likes to kick back and enjoy your company for what it is.
Maybe others on here will come to the rescue and offer their own opinions. To me, ultimatums are a sign of things to come... none of them good.
Originally posted by surely
I feel that is was right to give a deadline because I am ready. I understand that this is selfish and he might not be ready. how long do you wait for someone to be ready?
one thing i never understood about girls who give deadlines is this...
if you love the person so much that you want to marry them, HAVE to marry them, and NEED them to you marry you RIGHT NOW...then why is it so easy for you to say "i will leave you if you don't..."?
that doesn't sound very loving...or logical. it sounds like you just want a ring and a wedding and the right to say "i'm married."
you don't push someone you love into doing something they don't want to do.
it sounds desperate and sad, and as you said yourself, selfish.
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You didn't mention whether you had any discussions before the ultimatum. It is good to talk about plans for the future and marriage. The problem is that now you've turned it into a confrontation. If he proposes, is it because you "made" him? If he doesn't, is it because he doesn't want to be with you forever, or because he doesn't want you to call all the shots? Nobody likes to feel manipulated. You are probably on the offensive -- it sounds like you might be mad at him for not communicating with you, and that's going to affect the way the two of you interact. Plus, you probably are starting to feel insecure, if you didn't already!
You gave him a deadline -- but now it sounds like maybe you didn't mean it. Was it just a bluff? If it was, depending on how you've talked about your relationship in the past, you might want to enter into a mature discussion. For example, you could say, "Maybe I made a mistake when I gave you that ultimatum. What I really meant was, I love you and want to spend the rest of our lives together. I hope you feel the same way about me, but I'm worried I handled it badly and messed something up." Or something. See what he says.
If it wasn't a bluff, if you really, really meant that you needed a commitment soon or else -- then I hope your guy is as serious as you are. If he's not, I wish you the best of luck with what will be a really upsetting & sucky breakup!
Lastly -- I know you are probably only going to be annoyed by this, but 22/23 years old is actually really young, especially if you guys started dating in college. You may need to give yourselves a few more YEARS together. There are a lot of changes that are happening in your lives as you get used to being outside of school, and it may be worth waiting. You want to have kids at 27 -- you've got lots of time to figure this stuff out.
[BTW - I think it's a little harsh for some of the others to suggest that wanting to move the relationship into the next step -- i.e. making a long-term commitment -- is always selfish or status-seeking. If the other person doesn't feel as strongly about you as you do about them, then it's not necessarily healthy to stay in the relationship. And getting engaged is the way our society signals that commitment.]
Originally posted by Shaaz
[BTW - I think it's a little harsh for some of the others to suggest that wanting to move the relationship into the next step -- i.e. making a long-term commitment -- is always selfish or status-seeking. If the other person doesn't feel as strongly about you as you do about them, then it's not necessarily healthy to stay in the relationship. And getting engaged is the way our society signals that commitment.]
You're right, but ultimatums are not healthy. Can you blame people for reacting this way?
Well, I guess the "signs" you would look for that he is going to "meet your artificial deadline and capitulate to your ultimatum" would be things like a large chunk of money missing from his bank account, perhaps a trip to a jewelery store, or maybe even a receipt laying around?
Sorry, but I have to agree with the others. Either you love someone or you don't. There are lots of good reasons to leave someone, but that you would leave him for lack of a piece of paper after only 3 years when he has told you that he wants to spend the rest of his life with you is, well... I don't know what your BF does, but if he is also in med school, has it occured to you that he may wish to finish med school, or even residency (which is going to be hell, by the way) before popping a ring, and doing the whole family thing? If he feels that way, does that really mean he doesn't love you, or that he is jerking you around? I think not.
If the thought of leaving him (especially for something like failure to comply with your ultimatum) doesn't make your stomach turn, and if you could actually go through with leaving him forever over soemthing like that, you don't need to be marrying him anyway. Sometimes people date seriously and/or live together for 5 or 6 years or more before making it official. Also keep in mind that if things in your relationship are as wonderful just the way they are as you say, would you really throw that away for lack of paperwork or a ring "right now"? Don't get me wrong, I think marriage is great, if everyone is totally into the idea, and BOTH parties are totally comfortable with everything it means AND the timing of it, but it is not something to be rushed into, coerced, or done under duress. I hope you wouldn't really leave him for failure to meet your ultimatum, but quite frankly, if you can, you would be doing him a favor.
If you want an honest opinion, he is probably trying to forget you ever said it thinking you probably just said it out of frustration and didn't mean it, because he doesn't want to think of you, the woman he loves and who he would like to spend the rest of his life with, as someone who could actually say something like that, let alone actually do something like that to him. If a woman I was in love with, and wanted to marry eventually, started control stuff like that by putting me on a rigid clock with a horrible ultimatum, it wouldn't do anything to convince me to marry her sooner, and would pretty much kill the romance that is supposed to be associated with something that is supposed to be as special as asking someone to be my wife. I would just be thinking about whether she was actually serious or not when I was deciding whether or not to walk away as painful as that would be, and it would cause me to seriously question her love for me and possibly her motives for wanting to marry me in the first place. If I truly loved her, I would probably be doing exactly what he may be doing, desperately trying to forget about it, refusing to think about what her ability to say that to me means, and just trying to enjoy the relationship hoping that she did not bring it up again, but knowing that if she did, I might have to say goodbye as much as that hurts because she was playing games with me. If he is willing to forget it, I suggest you do the same.
Think about it. "I love you, I want you, I want to have children with you, you complete me, I want to spend the rest of my entire life with you, BUT no ring by August 1, 2005, and I'm LEAVING YOU FOREVER! Such love... If you are just a little frustrated, that's one thing, but like I said, if you could really go through with leaving for that particular reason, I suggest you do a rethink on marrying him at all, because it sure sounds like you just don't love him enough for that.
Good luck to you, and please do some thinking.
Last edited by WithOrWithoutYou; 15th May 2005 at 7:07 AM..
alright so you guys have all said that I am rushing him and even though its been 3 years that it's not long enough
First to give you more information, he is not in med school. He just graduated from college
SO then let me ask you all how long do you wait, what time "limit" is it acceptable to give a deadline or say move on. Marriage is important to me and I don't believe in sex or living together until you are married.
No matter how much you love someone I think that you have to be on the same page. Would I have gotten the same response if I had said My boyfriend chews and i gave him a deadline that he had to stop chewing if he wanted to stay with me. This is because chewing causes cancer and I don't want to spend years in a hospital watching him go through chemo. what would have been the response then "oh a deadline something is wrong in the relationship he will stop chewing when hes ready.: well hey what if he is never ready do i forget how I feel and squelch my own feelings just to keep the relationship a live
For me now getting married is the right thing in THIS relationship, if he does not feel the same way all he has to do is tell me and then I would know it's not meant to be because we are on different pages of our lives. But to wait 8-9 years and then to be having this converstation....I don't see why that would change the outcome ( and please don't say to know him better because we have known each other for a LONG LONG TIME)
SO please don't put having a deadling and how much youlove someone together. I love him very much and I probably always will no matter what he says, but if we are not going the same direction in our lives I would rather find out now then 8 years down the road
P.S I have a friend who has been dating the same guy since highschool (that's about 8 years now) she has brought up marriage along this time period and he has always said he wants to get married. She has just sat back to let things happen and still nothing and now a year later they are broken up. Maybe if she had had this converstation earlier about the direction they both wanted to go in then she wouldn't have wasted the dating experiences you get in high school and college because she already had a boyfriend
Surely, I understand your feelings about wanting to get married. Surely, I do (no pun intended).
Marriage is a noble aspiration, and you definitely don't need to wait 8 or 9 years for a ring to be put on your finger. Sometimes marriage is the only logical outcome.
However, has he ever brought it up? Or is it something you just happened to think up in recent weeks? Do you know for certain whether he wants to get married at all? Have you talked about it previously?
You didn't answer this last time, and I think it's important that you shed some light on it for us, so that we can see the situation more clearly. So far we only know your point of view.
The deadline was definitely wrong. I don't see any viable excuse for saying "Marry me by this time, or I will leave". Sorry.
If you love this man so much, and want to marry him, why won't you wait until he is ready? You can't make him be ready to marry you.
Also, twenty-two is a bit young, and him being twenty-three might not help, either. I thought that most people planned marriages when they were in their late twenties, or early thirties. How does your boyfriend feel about the whole marriage issue?
Hey,.............Mrs. ME-ME-ME..............ever stop and wonder whats right for HIM in this relationship. Better yet,.....ever ASK him what he wants? Maybe he's NOT ready yet. Maybe he wants to acheive his dream before he settles down. His own practice,...established in his field. You said you think your relationship with him is great right now. Well,..this ultimatum will KILL IT. You dont hold a gun to someones head and say "Marry me or else" He will resent you for the rest of your life. Everytime you guys argue and you make the mistake of using the words "marriage", "Wife", "husband" or any other matrimonial word,....he will respond with bringing this very issue up. Like "I TOLD you I wasnt even ready to get married" or "You MADE me propose to you" In his mind,....because he thinks you made him get married to you,....ALL fights and problem within your marriage will be YOUR fault.
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