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The Real Reason We Can’t Let Go Of People Who Are Bad For Us



The Real Reason We Can’t Let Go Of People Who Are Bad For Us

Old 12-15-2016, 11:29 AM
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The Real Reason We Can’t Let Go Of People Who Are Bad For Us

Paul Hudson on LOVE HURTS

There are two ways we begin to understand that we’re developing feelings for another person: We feel nothing or something.

This sounds too simple to be true, but it is. Our primary method of understanding what a person means to us is by how we feel. And when someone manages to make us feel something, that feeling can either be pleasant or unpleasant.

Many people think love should only be associated with pleasant emotions. But I don't want to argue over “shoulds.” I'd rather accept things as they are. Love comes with pleasant and unpleasant emotions — with both the positive and the negative.

You know that you love someone when the thought of that person brings a smile to your face — just as you know you love someone when you miss that person, even if it's only been a few days since you've seen each other. And you understand the presence of this need by how unpleasant it feels.

When you're in love, your emotions become more powerful. This happens simply because you care about your partner’s opinions, wishes and concerns. The thought of losing this person hurts you. And all of these emotions we experience in a relationship become building blocks for love.

Our love is what it is because it has history. We love a person not just for how he or she makes us feel in the moment, but for what he or she made us feel over the years. Love has memories. Love gives space to a variety of feelings and emotions. Love is quite literally the result of both pleasant and unpleasant emotional experiences.

Of course, there is more to love than emotions. But the emotions that our loved one make us feel are what hold the love together. If we stop exciting each other, we’ll feel like we’ve fallen out of love.

The problem, however, is that it's incredibly easy — and common, for that matter — for our emotions to become unpleasant. It's happened to all of us before, and it will likely happen to us again.

The relationship begins to get wobbly. The only reminder we have of our love for our partner is how horrible losing that person makes us feel. Instead of making us smile, this person now makes us cry. Instead of wanting to hold on as tightly as we can, we feel trapped and unable to breathe.

We question our love, and that only makes things hurt even worse. When your relationship reaches a point where the only emotions you're experiencing are ones of sadness, hurt and an unexplainable need to hold on and never let go, it's time to let go.

It's time to move on and stop wasting what precious little time you have. If you feel that you need to hold on tighter, it's only because you know this person is slipping away. You know he or she isn't doing much to hang on to what you have. And — as much as you hate to admit it — things will not get better for the two of you.

But you don't want to let go because you never want to let go of the people that are bad for you. How could we when the pain we feel reminds us of the love we have for our partner? How could we just want to walk away when it's clear that this person affects us so profoundly? We don't want to let go of people who are bad for us because our incompatibility is exactly what makes it clear to us how much we love them.

It's never easy to let go of someone who has such a power over us, but it must be done. And the sooner the better because the longer you allow your love to stay alive and be defined by all these negative emotions you're experiencing, the more toxic that love will become. The longer you hold on, the more miserable you will grow.

It's not that you can't let go — you just don't want to. You refuse to. Nevertheless, that doesn't change the fact that you must move on and find yourself a new love story. This one may not yet be over, but it's been ruined. No matter what you try, it will never regain its purity. And while no love between human beings is entirely pure, a certain level of purity is necessary for it to be worth the trouble.

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Old 12-15-2016, 11:48 AM
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Originally Posted by AnvilheadII View Post
And while no love between human beings is entirely pure, a certain level of purity is necessary for it to be worth the trouble.

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...looks around....uhhhh...feels the heat...is this for ME to read perhaps? lol. jk. I know many can relate to this....it speaks to me. Thank you for posting. Needed to read this today (everyday really)

Especially that last line. boom.
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Old 12-15-2016, 12:15 PM
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I learned this in Alanon: what I called love was really need coupled with fear of leaving, i.e., the unknown future. And that when I don't trust and respect someone it can't be love.
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Old 12-15-2016, 12:58 PM
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i wish they woulda taught us this stuff in school!

at least on an annual basis i think EVERYONE should review their relationship, just like a check up at the doc's office.

and i also fervently wish we'd all give ourselves permission to bail SOONER rather than LATER, while there's still a decent chance to swim to shore.....................
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Old 12-15-2016, 04:56 PM
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Thanks A

Xo
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Old 12-15-2016, 05:20 PM
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Wow. This really hit home for me. I stayed with my STBXAH too long. I felt exactly as the essay described--trapped and unable to breath. Yet, for years, I couldn't bring myself to leave. Now that I've finally filed for divorce and he moved out, I feel so light and happy. A giant, dead weight is off my back and I'm ready to be happy and loved again. I am rekindling relationships with friends and family and could just kick myself for not doing it sooner. Oh well, I've learned a lot through the process and this post put my feelings into words better than I could have. Thank you!
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Old 12-16-2016, 04:11 AM
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Sheesh. That article missed by a mile. The reason you can't break away is love is a commitment and people have a hard time breaking commitments. Combine that with we are pack animals that need socialization and companionship and it's a damn tough thing to walk away from.
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Old 12-16-2016, 04:46 AM
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In the simplest of explanations, we addicts are having an affair. Whether her name is vodka, beer, wine, drugs is irrelevant. In some cases our affair is out there for all to see. In other cases it is hidden away like a dark secret. Like most affairs, the mistress doesn't care who she hurts and the lying involved can be epic on both sides creating deceit and isolation. It's insidious to the core and destroys the loving commitment we made to our partners. For the non-user it is heartbreaking to see our loved one choose the other woman and it creates a huge amount of doubt in that person regarding their self worth. I know this is sophomoric but when I break it down to having an affair it helps me understand and empathize with what I created that hurt my wife so much and gives me the patience to let her work through on her own terms and timeframe how to possibly get passed my other life with another woman. I did this. I own this. The best apology I can issue is my understanding and my continued commitment to my sobriety. Sorry for the sidebar.
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