I'm engaged to the love of my life, we've been together for three years. We've gone through a lot - we started off dating long distance and have both made many sacrifices to make our relationship work. We're now living together and will marry next year.
However, when we first met, he had a girlfriend. Their relationship ended soon after. I still feel guilt and overwhelming curiosity about his ex - what she's like, looks like, etc. I worry about how much she might hate us, or me.
I really want to just let it go; I know in my head it's silly to think about it so long after, yet I'm still thinking about it.
Mind-dweller
It's not the ex-girlfriend, it's your guy who's on your mind.... what did he see in her, does he think I'm prettier, does he really love me?
They're called self-doubts. And they're fairly natural. Now that the drama of his choosing you, dating long-distance, making sacrifices, etc. is over, you're down to everyday living together. It gives you time to think about how he dumped her, and to have anxieties about the future which looms near.
You can only let it go if you believe he's as committed as you are to being together.... and he likely is, since he's planning to marry you. So don't create new drama. Accept what's good between you, shake off your fears, and forget his ex. He did.
My boyfriend of three years has his own place; I still live with my parents while I'm finishing school.
Until recently, I got along very well with his family. But they believe he spends too much time with my family instead of his. True, but it's because he gets lectured or told what to do whenever he visits his parents (he's 29).
He got proactive and told them that he doesn't appreciate the lectures, and that they need to work on their relationship with him. This didn't go over well and has started World War Three.
His family expressed that I control him, and that he isn't allowed to do anything without asking me first. They think we spend too much time together, act "weird" together, and that we're attached at the hip.
We both don't know where to go from here. I want to have a great relationship with his mother, and I want my boyfriend to want to spend more time with his family. We especially want to figure this out, because we hope to marry and start a family in the near future.
I don't want to be another couple with in-law troubles; I actually want a relationship with them.
Standoff
They're worried about losing him, so put them at ease. An honest, non-blaming approach from both of you is better than a son saying his parents do things all wrong.
He should say that he loves them and always will, that they may not always agree with everything he does, but their values and teachings as he was growing up haven't been wasted (his unspoken point: no need for lectures).
Then, both of you visit and state that, as a couple, you want a great family relationship with them, especially as you hope to have children and will always want them to be part of your lives.
Afterwards, DO make a point of visiting with them sometimes instead of staying at your place, and of including them in things like a casual dinner out or bringing take-out to their place.
I thought my boyfriend was cheating on me with a boy. Then I found out it was a girl and he isn't with her any more.
Now he wants to sort stuff out with me and make sure we're okay in our relationship. But I've been cheating on him with his best friend while he was cheating on me. I don't know whether to tell him about this, because he'll beat up his friend, and I don't want him to.
What To Do?
Try to grow up in other ways besides having sex. You're treating relationships like a child's "dare" game... if something's not right, you seek revenge instead of finding out what's really going on. Then you go back to the guy who disrespected you. You don't value yourself, and trade your body too easily.
Until you have enough self-respect to NOT accept or give bad treatment, your relationships cannot stay "okay."
Tip of the day:
Be sure of what's shadowing you instead of just ignoring it.