Dumped! What Happened?

How could something so promising for you become so passe for your partner? Here are 6 scenarios that can provide some insight into what happened.


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Finding out that your relationship has ended from your partner can seem like one of the most convoluted mysteries of life. How could something so promising for you become so passe for your partner? No matter how the news was delivered, the process of healing from an unrequited breakup nearly always passes through the "I just need to know what he (or she) is thinking and feeling," and yet, any amount of in-person conversations, phone calls, e-mails or text messages ever provides the closure desired—the sting of finality is a burn only time and self-discovery can heal.

Here is a breakdown of six types of relationship fallouts that may provide some insight in to what happens when relationships go wrong, much to the dismay of the partner who still wants to work things out.

The 180

You had no clue. Everything was going so well (or so you thought!). Even the past weekend was spent in romantic bliss, and for the first time you felt as thought things were really going to work out. Then come Monday, you get the phone call that starts with a reluctant tone and somewhat hesitant, "Hey, got a few minutes?" that only ends with a welling of emotion and a box of Kleenex.

Most likely cause: Your partner likes you and enjoys your company, but got cold feet when the relationship started to feel committed and more serious. Usually this point is breached within three to six months from the start of the relationship. The notion of long-term relationship may be the furthest from this type of partner’s mind, and so when faced with the prospect of commitment, he or she must bow out of the relationship.

Take comfort in... the fact that your partner told you sooner rather than later. It may seem like it came out of the blue, and it may have, but your partner was never ready for the kind of commitment you would like, and once he or she realized it, they let you go. While it hurts now, in the long run you will move on to relationships that are more in line with what you are looking for—on all levels. In order to be ultimately rewarding for both parties, interest in and dedication to the relationship must be relatively equal. Having stronger feelings toward someone than he or she can reciprocate is a recipe for heartbreak, no matter whether your relationship has been going on for three weeks or three months. The one thing your partner has not realized yet is that by spending his or her life with a series of Mr. or Ms. Right Nows, knowing full well they aren’t Mr. or Ms. Rights is a recipe for chronic dissatisfaction not only for your partner, but also for each person he or she becomes involved with.

The Slow Burn

This relationship should have ended a long time ago, but has persisted into a slow and agonizing confirmation of one’s worst suspicions that the relationship is just not working out. In these situations, both partners have their own individual degrees of unhappiness, but the more dissatisfied person stays because it feels "easier" and "less messy" than having the courage to confront the truth and move on. There may have been recurrent communication problems that have never been resolved or are avoided if they do arise, and other potential mates outside the relationship are beginning to look like attractive alternatives.

Despite the relationship’s seriously degenerated quality, it never quite ends fully, leaving at least one partner in a hurtful no-man’s land of ambiguity, and this person responds typically by trying harder to win affections or by becoming passive-aggressive, sometimes to the extreme. Jealousies of outside parties are common, and often the relationship will dissolve only because of developed interests in other potential mates outside of the primary relationship.

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jayjay Spending weekend with dad for his birthday

State College, PA

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emote wrote:

This article should be passed out to all 7th graders, made to be read every year until they graduate high school, then pasted on their bathroom mirror.

Parents have been warning their children for centuries about users & abusers....and the young people keep not listening. Surprised

- July 24, 2008 05:10 PM

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yeah, i recently experienced the case where the guy just stopped texting (should of been a red flag right there that he wasnt wiling to call). It was all the sudden and he still to this day has never told me what happened. He is the non-confrontational type and as mentioned above, it is very high school-ish to do that. He would just make jerk comments when I would try to find out what was going on. But again, he was never one to ever say what he actually felt, about anything. Lesson learned though. I'm not sure how guys get away with just being jerks all the time. I guess it's not all of them, but seriously? At 28 you should be able to tell the person you are spending time with that it's just not going to work out, instead of just ignoring them.

Oh, and the kicker is...he's my brother in law's brother..who I used to run into almost weekly since they are close and we all live in the same area. Thankfully I've moved on from when all this happened last fall and can see him now and not want to punch him. haha. But, I would think that him knowing he has to see me the rest of his life, that he would of approached the situation differently. He said some very jerky things to me and never apologized.

But, hey, I do deserve better and now I know much more than I did before about what I want and how I should be treated!

I've also experienced the "nostaligia" deal with a guy I met seven years ago, who, after knowing three months moved overseas for four years. He wrote me letters, we went out once we was in between trips. Then last year once he moved back to the states, he called me once. I returned the call and got nothing back. Then every so often he would text me all flirty. Earlier this year on Facebook he told me how he's been throwing himself at me for years. Yeah, and this guy is 36!! Talk about the mature ones I keep meeting!

He called me a few months and we talked for two hours. It's hard though cuz he is a great guy, but I can see now that he was just probably reaching out to me for nostalgia reasons and being lonely. I know to steer clear of him now and make room for the right one.

- July 24, 2008 04:43 PM

Blountsville, Alabama

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Well, I personally was dumped last night because I told my boyfriend of one year that I was in love with him and I loved him deeply. All the signs were there that he felt the same, but I was wrong. He told me by telephone that he could not see me anymore because he only felt a deep like for me, not love and being around me would be too comfortable for him now that he knows how I feel....

I do not regret sharing how I feel...I just regret that I chose the wrong man to say it too. BTW, I'm 40 and he is 45, neither one of us ever married. Should have been red flag - 45 year old man never, married - COMMITMENT PHOBE...it took him 8 mos to date me exclusively.

- July 24, 2008 05:31 AM

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