ebracer05
Senior Don Juan
What's the proper role for a man to fill when he is in a relationship and the girl is distressed? I read a post yesterday that I thought made a lot of sense:
http://www.sosuave.net/forum/showthread.php?t=196235
I've divided this post up in to 4 sections... Background/context, the problem, my response, and my questions:
Basically, women have an invisible cup that fills with the emotions they accumulate during a given time. If they get too much emotion, it overflows and they start to cry.
I know that not every time a woman gets upset it's something worth investigating and trying to help with as a man. L But I also feel like that if you are actually invested in to your relationship there are going to be times where that is necessary. So how do you make that determination and what is the best way to manage the woman's emotional state when she gets upset?
My GF took some vacation time this week and went down to a cabin in the woods with her old mother for a few days. Yesterday was her last day. She called me up last night very upset because her manager at work texted her and told her that one of the full time employees put in their 2 weeks. This is an issue because she works at a pharmacy and the lady who quit is the only other person on staff who knows how to work the computer to do the insurance billing. The company is not managed very well because IMO, the manager should know how to do that kind of stuff, but she doesn't and this is just the way things are.
[The following is contextual information is slightly f*cked up, especially to people who do not have any fondness for religion.]
She has been stressed lately because her and her mother don't get along. She still lives at home at 25 and her mother is an old Mennonite woman. She doesn't have a TV in the house because she doesn't believe in it. They don't even have a radio. My GF has a laptop and cell phone, but that's about the extent of the technology they have. Her and her mom get in daily battles because her mom wants her to never wear pants and just wear long skirts and dresses. So she wears dresses and skirts around the house but keeps some shorts in her car or wears them under her dresses. But her mom caught on to this and get's upset about that.
She goes to the park to go running, she gets home and her mom starts asking her if she ran in running shorts.
Or she goes to pool and her mom asks her if she "wore all of her clothes" (ie, not a bikini) while she was there.
Her mom is a very kind, hospitable, and even in a convoluted way is loving (what's really f*cked up is how much leeway she gives me and her son compared to her daughters... she treats me very well and has never called me out on anything... not that it would be her place, but many people like her would). However, it's an obviously extremely restrictive place to live. Her mom got mad because my GF turned on the TV while they were in the cabin.
She doesn't b*tch about this stuff to me normally unless it gets really out of hand, which isn't too often. But this sets up the emotional context for last night.
In addition to that, her father passed away, her 4 other siblings had either already or summarily moved out of the home, and she's basically stuck with her mom to deal with the farm they live on. Her autistic uncle (her mom's brother) lives next door who is a bonafide sexual predator (he molested one of her nieces ) and she buys him groceries every week and has to help take care of him. They have since sold most of their live stock, but they still have 3 horses, a few barn cats, and a dog. There are a lot of responsibilities living there.
Furthermore, I think she is expecting that we're going to get married before I move away next year (and I have not given her any reason to think this, despite the foolish things I may write here from time to time) so she has reduced her work hours so that she can take more classes at school... she also goes to school... so she can finish her degree before I leave.
Her work has given her a pretty raw deal over the 7 years she's been there. They are highering in new employees with the same job classification she has at a pay rate just a little lower than hers after 7 years. She is very submissive, they know this, and so they have progressively overloaded her with more responsibility without a corresponding increase in pay. That's her fault for not being more assertive and letting it happen, but I do like how submissive she is.
[/End context]
So she was all freaked out last night, on the verge of tears a few times, because she's afraid her job is going to expect her to work more hours than she allocated when she changed her schedule for school now that this lady quit. And as I talked to her, I also got her to identify that she becomes very envious whenever people leave because she feels stuck in her life right now and wants to "move on with it"... and she wishes it was her turn rather than someone else's.
So, guys, how do you manage this stuff? She doesn't give me sh*t like this to muddle through too often, but when she does, I always feel like the "right" things to say and do are very AFC/beta things to say. Like, I do believe in her capacity to weather the storm but it just sounds beta to me to say "Honey, I know this has to be a really hard time for you, but trust me, I have absolute confidence in your ability to succeed her. And you know what, when this is all over, you aren't going to believe how much you grew as a result of all of this".
I also feel like that as a man, it is my natural instinct to want to fix the problem. But as a woman, she isn't looking for a solution. She's just got an overflowing cup and wants to let the emotions out. Even supposing it were possible to arrive at a solution to her problem last night, I don't think it would help because that's not going to facilitate the emptying of her cup. If anything, it might just create a dam that bottlenecks the flow of the water and makes her even more upset.
So given the context of an LTR, what is the best way to go when a woman is upset about something? If one of the suppositions on this website is that women generally respond to the same attraction/mating cues, it would make sense that they would also generally respond to the same... I don't know, comforting cues? What is the man supposed to do here?
[How I responded]
Whatever I did last night, I don't feel like I did a good job. She called me after a really sh*tty day of having one obstacle after another from my family keep me from studying. I got so p*ssed in the middle of the day I thought my head was going to explode. I didn't get much done because I just needed to decompress. By the time I was just starting to feel like I was starting to relax and crawl in to bed for the night, I'm responding to a text from her from a while ago I didn't see and as I hit send, it just so happens it coincided with a phone call from her. So I accidentally answered it.
She starts unloading on to me, which is really unusual for her... I don't ever think she's just started a conversation off with a problem. She sounds like she's about ready to cry. And I can hardly think. I felt like my responses were borderline patronizing, "yea, I know that really sucks doesn't it?" or "I bet that's going to cause a lot of problems at work". I sounded like I was half dead and somewhere in the middle of everything I got this unexpected boost of energy and started telling her what to do, basically. I think I just cut her off because I was getting tired.
I told her that this is her life and not the company's, this was never meant to be a permanent job, and they already agreed to a schedule with you that you made other commitments around. It is not your fault the employee left and it isn't your fault the management doesn't have any idea how to run their store. If anything, it makes you a valuable employee and gives you a lot of leveraging power. Stop worrying about this. It was inconsiderate of your manager to give you this information on your vacation, especially when she knows how stressed you've been and especially via text, but you got it and you can't change it or deal with it. You're going to have wasted an awful lot of good things if you let this ruin your time.
And then I started complaining about my p*ssy day for a few minutes.
She didn't sound like I had uplifted her very much when I hung up. If anything, she went from sounded frantic/tearful to tired/negative.
I really don't have time to analyze this anymore. These things don't come up between the two of us very often, this might be the 3rd time at max after 8 months or so. So I figured since it happened, now would be the time to write about it.
[My Questions]
For the brave souls who read everything,
1 - What is the man's role in addressing a woman's problem
2 - What is the best way for a man to manage a woman's negative emotions re: a legitimate problem
3 - Did I handle the situation appropriately and if not, what could I have done differently.
http://www.sosuave.net/forum/showthread.php?t=196235
I've divided this post up in to 4 sections... Background/context, the problem, my response, and my questions:
Basically, women have an invisible cup that fills with the emotions they accumulate during a given time. If they get too much emotion, it overflows and they start to cry.
I know that not every time a woman gets upset it's something worth investigating and trying to help with as a man. L But I also feel like that if you are actually invested in to your relationship there are going to be times where that is necessary. So how do you make that determination and what is the best way to manage the woman's emotional state when she gets upset?
My GF took some vacation time this week and went down to a cabin in the woods with her old mother for a few days. Yesterday was her last day. She called me up last night very upset because her manager at work texted her and told her that one of the full time employees put in their 2 weeks. This is an issue because she works at a pharmacy and the lady who quit is the only other person on staff who knows how to work the computer to do the insurance billing. The company is not managed very well because IMO, the manager should know how to do that kind of stuff, but she doesn't and this is just the way things are.
[The following is contextual information is slightly f*cked up, especially to people who do not have any fondness for religion.]
She has been stressed lately because her and her mother don't get along. She still lives at home at 25 and her mother is an old Mennonite woman. She doesn't have a TV in the house because she doesn't believe in it. They don't even have a radio. My GF has a laptop and cell phone, but that's about the extent of the technology they have. Her and her mom get in daily battles because her mom wants her to never wear pants and just wear long skirts and dresses. So she wears dresses and skirts around the house but keeps some shorts in her car or wears them under her dresses. But her mom caught on to this and get's upset about that.
She goes to the park to go running, she gets home and her mom starts asking her if she ran in running shorts.
Or she goes to pool and her mom asks her if she "wore all of her clothes" (ie, not a bikini) while she was there.
Her mom is a very kind, hospitable, and even in a convoluted way is loving (what's really f*cked up is how much leeway she gives me and her son compared to her daughters... she treats me very well and has never called me out on anything... not that it would be her place, but many people like her would). However, it's an obviously extremely restrictive place to live. Her mom got mad because my GF turned on the TV while they were in the cabin.
She doesn't b*tch about this stuff to me normally unless it gets really out of hand, which isn't too often. But this sets up the emotional context for last night.
In addition to that, her father passed away, her 4 other siblings had either already or summarily moved out of the home, and she's basically stuck with her mom to deal with the farm they live on. Her autistic uncle (her mom's brother) lives next door who is a bonafide sexual predator (he molested one of her nieces ) and she buys him groceries every week and has to help take care of him. They have since sold most of their live stock, but they still have 3 horses, a few barn cats, and a dog. There are a lot of responsibilities living there.
Furthermore, I think she is expecting that we're going to get married before I move away next year (and I have not given her any reason to think this, despite the foolish things I may write here from time to time) so she has reduced her work hours so that she can take more classes at school... she also goes to school... so she can finish her degree before I leave.
Her work has given her a pretty raw deal over the 7 years she's been there. They are highering in new employees with the same job classification she has at a pay rate just a little lower than hers after 7 years. She is very submissive, they know this, and so they have progressively overloaded her with more responsibility without a corresponding increase in pay. That's her fault for not being more assertive and letting it happen, but I do like how submissive she is.
[/End context]
So she was all freaked out last night, on the verge of tears a few times, because she's afraid her job is going to expect her to work more hours than she allocated when she changed her schedule for school now that this lady quit. And as I talked to her, I also got her to identify that she becomes very envious whenever people leave because she feels stuck in her life right now and wants to "move on with it"... and she wishes it was her turn rather than someone else's.
So, guys, how do you manage this stuff? She doesn't give me sh*t like this to muddle through too often, but when she does, I always feel like the "right" things to say and do are very AFC/beta things to say. Like, I do believe in her capacity to weather the storm but it just sounds beta to me to say "Honey, I know this has to be a really hard time for you, but trust me, I have absolute confidence in your ability to succeed her. And you know what, when this is all over, you aren't going to believe how much you grew as a result of all of this".
I also feel like that as a man, it is my natural instinct to want to fix the problem. But as a woman, she isn't looking for a solution. She's just got an overflowing cup and wants to let the emotions out. Even supposing it were possible to arrive at a solution to her problem last night, I don't think it would help because that's not going to facilitate the emptying of her cup. If anything, it might just create a dam that bottlenecks the flow of the water and makes her even more upset.
So given the context of an LTR, what is the best way to go when a woman is upset about something? If one of the suppositions on this website is that women generally respond to the same attraction/mating cues, it would make sense that they would also generally respond to the same... I don't know, comforting cues? What is the man supposed to do here?
[How I responded]
Whatever I did last night, I don't feel like I did a good job. She called me after a really sh*tty day of having one obstacle after another from my family keep me from studying. I got so p*ssed in the middle of the day I thought my head was going to explode. I didn't get much done because I just needed to decompress. By the time I was just starting to feel like I was starting to relax and crawl in to bed for the night, I'm responding to a text from her from a while ago I didn't see and as I hit send, it just so happens it coincided with a phone call from her. So I accidentally answered it.
She starts unloading on to me, which is really unusual for her... I don't ever think she's just started a conversation off with a problem. She sounds like she's about ready to cry. And I can hardly think. I felt like my responses were borderline patronizing, "yea, I know that really sucks doesn't it?" or "I bet that's going to cause a lot of problems at work". I sounded like I was half dead and somewhere in the middle of everything I got this unexpected boost of energy and started telling her what to do, basically. I think I just cut her off because I was getting tired.
I told her that this is her life and not the company's, this was never meant to be a permanent job, and they already agreed to a schedule with you that you made other commitments around. It is not your fault the employee left and it isn't your fault the management doesn't have any idea how to run their store. If anything, it makes you a valuable employee and gives you a lot of leveraging power. Stop worrying about this. It was inconsiderate of your manager to give you this information on your vacation, especially when she knows how stressed you've been and especially via text, but you got it and you can't change it or deal with it. You're going to have wasted an awful lot of good things if you let this ruin your time.
And then I started complaining about my p*ssy day for a few minutes.
She didn't sound like I had uplifted her very much when I hung up. If anything, she went from sounded frantic/tearful to tired/negative.
I really don't have time to analyze this anymore. These things don't come up between the two of us very often, this might be the 3rd time at max after 8 months or so. So I figured since it happened, now would be the time to write about it.
[My Questions]
For the brave souls who read everything,
1 - What is the man's role in addressing a woman's problem
2 - What is the best way for a man to manage a woman's negative emotions re: a legitimate problem
3 - Did I handle the situation appropriately and if not, what could I have done differently.