Dear Sugar,
I have been with my current boyfriend for about four years. We have lived together for three, and until recently things have been great. He works full time and goes to school full time. He has always had about a month-long period before Summer break where he is completely stressed out. In the past, he would tell me he needs his space during that time because he is grouchy and irritable. Over the last few months, he has been this way again, but he won't discuss it with me — he has basically shut me out. I have made multiple attempts to tell him I don't feel loved or "in love" anymore but nothing changes.
I have basically moved on and started to do my own thing. I am going out with friends and having a great time. Now that he is out of school for the Summer, he wants things to be back to normal. He realizes that he may be losing me, and he's scared. He has done a complete turnaround and it bothers me. I'm not holding a grudge, but I can't let his behavior go. I feel like something is missing from our relationship, and I have been meeting new people and seeing a lot of other possibilities out there. Should I stick it out and try to "fall in love" with him again or just move on? I want to remain his best friend as he's mine but I'm not happy.
— Sparkless Skylar
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Dear Sparkless Skylar,
I hate to say it, but it's not uncommon for relationships to go through difficult months — some marriages go through difficult years! While treating someone badly under any circumstances isn't right, you admit that your boyfriend doesn't deal with stress well, and yet, it's only this most recent term when you've found yourself moving on emotionally. Perhaps this isn't a problem in your relationship — that he's unavailable for a month — but rather you're just realizing that your time together has run its course. And that's OK.
As hard as it may be to walk away from a four-year relationship, you shouldn't feel that you have to force yourself to try to fall in love with someone again. As long as you're truly ready to put your relationship aside then it's perfectly healthy to explore other possibilities. But now that he's communicating again, you owe it to yourself and your boyfriend to explain to him (again) what you're going through — be kind, but stay honest. Truthfully, it's unlikely that your friendship will be able to remain as it is now once you're no longer together, but it's more important that you be fair to yourself and him than stay just because you don't want to lose his friendship. Good luck.
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fall back in love with someone?
and how do you exactly plan on making yourself do that?
I think that if you feel that on the inside you can't let go of the way he treated you, then you must follow your gut feeling.
If something is telling you that you can't feel comfortable with him anymore, or you want to find someone else (you said it yourself, there's plenty of fish in the sea), then respect that.
Maybe you could both be happy with other people.
Good luck!