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- #13
Sweetpea76
VIP Member
the more I disengage, the less emotionally involved I become, and the more I start thinking “why am I even going through all this? Why not just give up?”
I know this feeling, and I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing. You could give up, but you aren't giving up. There is a big difference.
I think that once you hit this point you lose that desperation that makes you want to be a martyr to your partner's mental illness. The "I'll do anything to save/keep them" issue that leads to codependency and toxic relationships stops.
Yes, you're not as emotionally involved, but in a good way. You're probably losing your shit a lot less, crying a lot less, and feeling a little more emotionally stable. You're probably also calling him on more of his issues that he needs to work on. It doesn't mean you've stopped loving him. It means that you love him enough not to be in a toxic relationship with him. I talk about hitting a "zen" point with my vet, and I think this feeling is the beginning of it. I love him madly. I will do anything to help him... being in a one sided relationship where he gets to be a ranting unstable emotional vampire while I sit there and take it is not doing him any favors. It sure as hell isnt doing anything for my emotional health either. I love him, but I had to put the breaks on the "ride or die".
How is allowing somebody to suck the life out of you for years and years love? That's not love. That's cruel to both of you.