Colossus
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2005
- Messages
- 3,505
- Reaction score
- 547
I feel ya man. I'm going through something similar myself. It's really hard to accept that a girl who used to be madly in love with you, maybe just a month ago, is ostensibly over you and moved on without complication.ayava said:Ran into her last night at my friends bar, first time seeing each other in 5 weeks, she was with her girlfriends and seemed to be just fine.
We didn't talk, I didn't approach, or acknowledge her. Just kept chatting up the woman next to me.
I thought I was going to be ok and earlier in the day I got a girls number and was feeling pretty good.
Now I feel like total **** this morning and like a forgotten person.
Not to trash anyone's viewpoint here, but I think the "hypergamy" concept gets treated here like it's the overarching LAW of male-female relationships. It isn't. It's certainly a factor, but human relationships are far more complex than a simple truism like "women date up" or Briffault's Law. Beware of extremes when you are looking for answers to these types of questions.
That said, I think women rebound from relationships FAR quicker then men, even if we were the ones doing the dumping. I'm not really sure why this is. I found out my LTR that ended over the summer had a rebound relationship almost immediately after I broke up with her...like within a week. I was floored.....I mean she was a wreck when I dropped the bomb. It's not like I felt great about it either, but at the time she was clearly the more emotionally traumatized.
But you know what, I realized that I cant take her jumping on to another c0ck as an affront to myself. It doesn't negate her feelings during the relationship and it doesn't negate me as a man. This is how women tend to cope. They seek out the nearest available male suitor and cover up their hurt and rejection with the warm fuzzies of being desired by someone else. Men, we tend to self medicate or wallow around in the how's and why's for long periods of time. I've seen it in my own relationships and countless others.
So take that nugget to heart. Her bouncing back---at least on the surface---isn't an insult to you. Hard as it may be, accept it as the way most women deal with breakups. They accept other attention. They just want to feel good again. Her letter to you was really, as Howie said, a longer "it's not you, it's me". She was patronizing you and trying to make you feel better, almost like telling a little boy who has a crush on her she cant date him. Understand, she was really trying to make HERSELF feel better with that email, for dumping an otherwise great guy. She knew things weren't broken, so she had to reconcile this with herself. I'm sure there was some truth to her wanting some alone time, but like the others said, count this as a blessing. All breakups are in some way or another.