I'm in the Mood said:
One way to think about a valentines day card being beta is that it's blatantly unoriginal. Also, giving her a card BECAUSE she gave you a card is beta. You can't appreciate the value she's trying to give to you without reciprocation. The Alpha way is to give her a card because YOU WANT to. What YOU want, I believe, is the root of all Alphaness. Taken to an extreme, this can lead to being a total jerk, but taken in light of how your actions may affect other people, in other words, being responsible, can make this really work.
First of all - here is the Valentine's Day Card thing. We went to Seattle for my birthday two weeks before Valentine's Day. We were at the downtown Seattle Library and they had these artsy fartsy cards, a step above what you would get at the local Hallmark shop. I had the sales clerk distract her while I bought one. Two weeks later on V Day I give her the card. Then she pulls out a card that she bought from the exact same place. We did it independently of each other. I know V Day is a commercial holiday meant to sell chocolates and greeting cards, but you damn well it's not going to go over well if you don't do anything for your girl at all. So to clear up any confusion on the V Day card, I did what I wanted to do without worrying about what she was going to do for me to mark the occasion.
A problem I see here is that people in general are very susceptible to outside ideas. For example, she mentions getting married, you haven't thought about this yet, the way she explains it to you convinces you, "why not get married?" and for the most part you are going along with it HER WAY.
Wrong - I was the first person to bring up marriage. After we had been dating for a while, I began to look at her as wife material, because things were going great, because I was at an age where I wanted to settle down and start a family, and because she was beginning to win me over and seemed to exhibit a lot of qualities you would want in a wife (stable in her job, didn't cause drama in the relationship, said she wanted the same things as me - children and settle down).
You pretty much went along for the ride and didn't take control of the marriage thing.
That's not really how it went down. After we had been together awhile, I mentioned marriage along the lines of "You know we've been seeing each other for a while, and I really think there is long-term potential here. I'm at a point in my life where I am looking to start a family with the right person. I'm not saying we should run out and elope tomorrow, but I want to make a life with you." And she said she felt the same way, and from then on it was a mutual understanding. You know how girls are, they have been planning this since they were kids, so we discussed different ideas about where we might get married and so forth and batted them around. I don't consider it her leading the way on that.
Really, all the wedding talk I put in the original post was just to illustrate how blindsided I was by the timeline - I mean, five days before you break up with me you're talking about engagement rings, so how could I have anticipated what was going to happen? There wasn't a lot of distancing or withdrawal in her behavior. I know what diminishing interest looks like and there really wasn't a lot of that there.
Another example: you kept going along with HER to weddings with HER family members. This is OK because who doesn't like going to weddings, but it seems like she was the one leading you around and bringing you into her life.
We ended up going to one wedding together before she dumped me. First wedding was for a work colleague, the second wedding would have been for a friend, and then the third and fourth weddings were for her close personal family members. These weddings would have been spread out over a period of four months. I honestly do not see anything wrong with telling her that I would accompany her to these weddings as her date. I was her boyfriend, I consider that as boyfriend duty. She did certain things for me when we were together that I'm sure she wasn't thrilled about but that falls under the category of girlfriend duty. There were some things she wanted me to go to from time to time (wedding shower for an acquaintance of hers that I barely knew) that I did not consider boyfriend duty and I told her I had other plans. I don't see wedding attendance as an issue at all. I don't think agreeing to go to them with her as her date caused her to lose respect for me. Nobody will convince me otherwise.
I don't fully understand the differences between Alphas and betas, but I would like to, and I suggest you figure this out for yourself too.
I had no dating life whatsoever until I was 25. I've come a long way in shedding AFC habits and behaviors. I've gotten way more action and had more relationships in the last 5 years than I ever did before that. No guy is an alpha 100 percent of the time, but I honestly don't think that is why this relationship failed.