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Posts: 113
01/23/12 9:14 AM
dapurplengold213 wrote: Regal Black wrote: so she hadn't hanged out with this guy in years but she still likes him and trust him? lol, something don't sound right therewell she claims they were good friends back then in high school. but yea i brought this up to her also. and she used the same "he's a friend to me , I've known him for years" shady and i don't buy it. I told her for you it may be a friendship but for him he's thinking other things. She again said "for me he's just a friend." And she said she'd cut all ties with dude to get things back on track with us .... not having that though. just too much for me to let go
Regal Black wrote: so she hadn't hanged out with this guy in years but she still likes him and trust him? lol, something don't sound right there
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01/23/12 10:44 AM
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01/23/12 11:30 AM
dapurplengold213 wrote:they went to school together. they've never dated but they have been friends and just recently started talking with each other. She started crying last night when I confronted her about it and she was saying "she loves me" and all that. But I don't know what to believe now. This guys Facebook status that night was "having the time of my life with (my gfs name)." I don't think i can still be with her. I just don't see how i can trust her. She claims that the reason she didn't tell me is because i don't take news about her going out with her friends right.
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Posts: 30
01/23/12 11:36 AM
Mark Antony wrote:I think we can be friends, just have to stop judging it on same sex friendships. I don't see any reason to cut a chick that legitimately holds you down as a friend would because she's sexy as *@%! , got a man and is a bit friendly/flirty. Honesty is most important part of the friendship, and as long as that's there i don't see why not. It gets better as you get older, i think when you're young you both wanna pretend it's not there causing the issue in the first place, but as adults you're both aware, it's just that you're competent, confident adults. Like she holds me down, buuuut she's taken, it is what it is. There's no waiting around for anything, you live your lives. I've told my female friends countless times i'd beat it up, and they know it too.
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01/23/12 11:42 AM
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01/23/12 11:53 AM
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01/23/12 11:57 AM
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01/23/12 1:04 PM
dapurplengold213 wrote:Article that i read.... Couples I counsel are absolutely outraged when I tell them that they could well be committing emotional infidelity when they flirt with co-workers, send around funny e-mails to colleagues, or hang out with members of the opposite sex at gatherings. But they are, and so, probably, are you. You’re not going to want to hear this, but stopping this kind of behavior is the single most important thing you can do for your relationship. It’s not about where it may lead. It’s about where it has already gone — far from your focus on your relationship. Remember what it is you’ve always wanted from your committed relationship, and start considering the large, determined commitment that is absolutely necessary to creating a happy coupling. What’s the harm in a man having a casual friendship with a woman when either has a partner? Or a married woman having a casual friendship with another man? Surely, every friendship doesn’t lead to an affair. Yet we forget the emotional harm of relating to someone outside the relationship when that same energy can be used to relate to our own spouse. A committed relationship is about relating to another person with an intimacy felt with no one else. How do you know if your being emotionally unfaithful? 1)Discuss your partner and relationships with your “friend.” You share your fears, hopes, and dreams (this is emotional intimacy). 2)Meet your “friend” for dinner or lunch without telling your partner. 3)Hide or are secretive about your life, relationships, and activities. 4)Keep your partner waiting while you spend time with your “friend.” 5)Do you ride in a car sharing with someone else pleasant, personal conversations on the way to meetings or other work-related events? If you’re doing any of these things, you’re being emotionally unfaithful to your partner. You have only so much energy. If you’re spending it with co-workers or outside the home and then getting home and feeling too tired to spend anymore on your partner, that’s emotional infidelity. You’re effectively relocating vital relationship energy into the hands of others. Forget about where it might end up. Even if you never touch this other person, you have still used that person to relate to, and in doing so, you relate away from your partner. You may be shaking your head and disagreeing. But I’ve spent years helping couples pool their energies toward each other, and it has changed their relationship immediately. Stop all of these outside relationships and bring all your emotional and sexual energy home to your partner, and you, too, will change your relationship immediately.
Posts: 1494
cap1229 wrote:Mark Antony wrote:I think we can be friends, just have to stop judging it on same sex friendships. I don't see any reason to cut a chick that legitimately holds you down as a friend would because she's sexy as *@%! , got a man and is a bit friendly/flirty. Honesty is most important part of the friendship, and as long as that's there i don't see why not. It gets better as you get older, i think when you're young you both wanna pretend it's not there causing the issue in the first place, but as adults you're both aware, it's just that you're competent, confident adults. Like she holds me down, buuuut she's taken, it is what it is. There's no waiting around for anything, you live your lives. I've told my female friends countless times i'd beat it up, and they know it too. All I was saying. If she olds you down as a friend and got your back why not be friends?
Posts: 2690
01/23/12 1:05 PM
dapurplengold213 wrote: Article that i read....Couples I counsel are absolutely outraged when I tell them that they could well be committing emotional infidelity when they flirt with co-workers, send around funny e-mails to colleagues, or hang out with members of the opposite sex at gatherings. But they are, and so, probably, are you.You’re not going to want to hear this, but stopping this kind of behavior is the single most important thing you can do for your relationship. It’s not about where it may lead. It’s about where it has already gone — far from your focus on your relationship. Remember what it is you’ve always wanted from your committed relationship, and start considering the large, determined commitment that is absolutely necessary to creating a happy coupling.What’s the harm in a man having a casual friendship with a woman when either has a partner? Or a married woman having a casual friendship with another man? Surely, every friendship doesn’t lead to an affair. Yet we forget the emotional harm of relating to someone outside the relationship when that same energy can be used to relate to our own spouse. A committed relationship is about relating to another person with an intimacy felt with no one else.How do you know if your being emotionally unfaithful?1)Discuss your partner and relationships with your “friend.” You share your fears, hopes, and dreams (this is emotional intimacy).2)Meet your “friend” for dinner or lunch without telling your partner.3)Hide or are secretive about your life, relationships, and activities.4)Keep your partner waiting while you spend time with your “friend.”5)Do you ride in a car sharing with someone else pleasant, personal conversations on the way to meetings or other work-related events?If you’re doing any of these things, you’re being emotionally unfaithful to your partner. You have only so much energy. If you’re spending it with co-workers or outside the home and then getting home and feeling too tired to spend anymore on your partner, that’s emotional infidelity. You’re effectively relocating vital relationship energy into the hands of others. Forget about where it might end up. Even if you never touch this other person, you have still used that person to relate to, and in doing so, you relate away from your partner.You may be shaking your head and disagreeing. But I’ve spent years helping couples pool their energies toward each other, and it has changed their relationship immediately. Stop all of these outside relationships and bring all your emotional and sexual energy home to your partner, and you, too, will change your relationship immediately.
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01/23/12 1:27 PM
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01/23/12 4:19 PM
mytmouse76 wrote:scshift wrote: mytmouse76 wrote: they could easily just stop being her friend...i dont understand how guys get so mad about the FZ when they play apart in it too...just stop being her friend Cause some people aren't good at reading hints/signs, and you can't blame them.Saying it's partially the guy's fault is just brushing the blame off one's shoulders. It's like me ripping my friend off completely and justifying it by saying "well my friend was dumb enough to get ripped off by me, so it's also his fault". Sure, if you want to look at it that way.no its not the same...if you're goal is to have sex w/her and thats not what youre getting then leave...no one makes you stay in a friendship...we're grown now...i could understand back in MS/HS but now if youre not getting what you want from shorty nothing is making you stay
scshift wrote: mytmouse76 wrote: they could easily just stop being her friend...i dont understand how guys get so mad about the FZ when they play apart in it too...just stop being her friend Cause some people aren't good at reading hints/signs, and you can't blame them.Saying it's partially the guy's fault is just brushing the blame off one's shoulders. It's like me ripping my friend off completely and justifying it by saying "well my friend was dumb enough to get ripped off by me, so it's also his fault". Sure, if you want to look at it that way.
mytmouse76 wrote: they could easily just stop being her friend...i dont understand how guys get so mad about the FZ when they play apart in it too...just stop being her friend
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01/23/12 4:27 PM
TEAMPACQUIAO
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01/23/12 4:44 PM
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01/23/12 4:50 PM
I write this alone in Vegas...
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01/23/12 4:52 PM
CaBron James 23 wrote:son left your girl Canada Dry
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01/23/12 5:19 PM
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01/23/12 5:31 PM
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01/23/12 5:42 PM
Ruxxx wrote: DCAllAmerican wrote: solefood229 wrote: To any female nter that's moderately attractive and claim they have a male best friend who they met later in life, text him and tell him you wanna smash I guarantee his answer will be when & whereThe fact that females are so clueless to this really frustrates me at times. Either they don't know, don't show, or act like they don't know. A+ post.
DCAllAmerican wrote: solefood229 wrote: To any female nter that's moderately attractive and claim they have a male best friend who they met later in life, text him and tell him you wanna smash I guarantee his answer will be when & whereThe fact that females are so clueless to this really frustrates me at times. Either they don't know, don't show, or act like they don't know.
solefood229 wrote: To any female nter that's moderately attractive and claim they have a male best friend who they met later in life, text him and tell him you wanna smash I guarantee his answer will be when & where
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