MsJayne Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 11 hours ago, Betty145 said: How can I lead into this without completely blindsiding her? It starts like this..."Can we have a talk about something that's been worrying me?", and then you calmly explain that you care deeply for her but you're not ready to make a lifelong commitment. She'll cry a lot, and you'll feel like an a*****e, but soon enough the conversation will be over and the dust will settle, and you can help her to move out and do whatever she needs to do to re-establish herself. Unsure whether you're male or female, (name suggests female), but if you're a male you need to stop sleeping with her once you've had the conversation, because some women think getting pregnant will change a man's mind about ending a relationship or that it will at least tie her to you via shared parenthood. Quote
Nowherenear Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago In my country we say "Good is the enemy of better". If someone endlessly thinks they will find better, and better, and better, they will never appreciate the good that's in front of them. There's a reason marriage is called "settling DOWN". 1 Quote
Gebidozo Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) 1 hour ago, Nowherenear said: In my country we say "Good is the enemy of better". You probably meant to say “Better is the enemy of good”. Otherwise you’re sort of supporting my point 1 hour ago, Nowherenear said: If someone endlessly thinks they will find better, and better, and better, they will never appreciate the good that's in front of them. Why would you assume that there is an endless search for better on the OP’s side? And why would you think that a relationship that doesn’t make the OP happy, which he himself doesn’t see as a future long-term commitment, can qualify as good? In the context of love, “good” means something more and something different than “being with a good person”. As a bare minimum, ”good” in a romantic relationship requires strong romantic feelings. The OP doesn’t have them towards the person he’s currently with. That would doubtless make him and her miserable if he chooses to stay. What’s the point of encouraging him to do that? 1 hour ago, Nowherenear said: There's a reason marriage is called "settling DOWN". This is linguistically wrong. “Settling down” simply means “choosing one person to be with”. The “down” part refers to stability, symbolically represented by things standing firmly on the ground, like trees, houses, and so on. It doesn’t have the connotations of “below” or “beneath” in this case. It’s not the same as “marrying down”. Edited 3 hours ago by Gebidozo Quote
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