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TheRealJuliane
Guest
I can’t take credit for that line, it belongs to Dr. Laura.I agree that the OP should move on, though I find the idea that people get what they want to be, with all due respect, crazy. Perhaps in some obscure philosophical way that I’m too dull to grasp, but certainly not in any practical way, and not in the business of love. I really, really, really want a better job that will support my family, and have really, really, really wanted it for 4+ years now. I pursue every opportunity that comes along, apply to every job I’m remotely qualified for, etc. Still waiting. What is the timing of this principle? Have I not waited long enough? I would say it applies even less to love than to work. Unrequited love is one of the great tragedies of human history, and some souls drink deeply from its well. Those of us who are older and have been married for years may smile at this man’s story and downplay the significance of it. Maybe it is just a youthful crush that will pass in a few months. Or maybe it’s a devastating heart-break whose effects will last a lifetime, though time may dull them. (Time heals nothing, though we may forget.) Based on the description I would guess its more the former than the latter, but who can judge another person’s heart?
Love the distressed damsel line though, have to remember that!
To the OP: hang in there. Bigger disappointments surely await you, and greater suffering than you are experiencing now. But happiness and pleasures await as well. I find it helpful to remind myself that the purpose of life is to become a saint. That puts everything else in perspective. The trick is to believe that enough to live like it’s true. Every time I pray the faith bead on the rosary lately I ask for faith to believe this. Helps me a lot. For that matter, devote yourself to the Blessed Mother if you haven’t already. Pray the rosary every day. Go to adoration and mass as often as you can. It will all be over sooner than you think.
ld
As for what I wrote about people getting what they want in life, that applies to people who create and live chaos, disruption, dysfunction, etc. - the ones who are always needing to be rescued and can never seem to get it together. Or the people who do what the OP’s love interest do - break up, get back together, break up, etc. I probably am not explaining it well enough. I’ll try again. When we see people who seem to need rescuing, we assume that with just a little assistance, they will get back to “normal,” which means functioning the way most of the rest of us do, right? But people construct their lives the way they want to live them. The people who thrive on chaos and co-dependency go out and make it happen. The people who like calm and order usually have more of that in their lives.
The problem is when there’s some little illusion in the life of what might be an otherwise sane person’s mind, and they intersect with one of the chaos-bringers…Spark! Wow, maybe if I just love this person enough, he or she will get it together and then, oh, boy, I will get the prize. If I fix this person’s problem, I will have helped her and all will be well.
I came to this recognition because my sister was one of those always in distress people. There was always something going on, reasons why she was broke, excuses as to why she got behind on car payments, drama and trauma galore. My father tried to help her most of his life. He wasn’t helping, he was just participating in her antics. It wasn’t that outside circumstances were in control of her, it really was that she CHOSE that way of life.
I have other people in my life that cause way more chaos than my sister ever did. People still don’t understand just how these people operate, and what they really thrive upon. I want to get as far away as possible.