Estimated reading time: 13 minutes
Hi Doc,
So the thing is, I (25/F) met this guy (28/M) about 3 months ago through a dating app, and I initially just wanted to hook up instead of being in a serious relationship. But on our first date (which I suggested in disguise as a hangout), he didn’t show me that he liked me. He agreed to split the bill when I offered (I know I sound like a B*tch here, but I believe that on the first few dates, the guy should show himself as a capable, gallant dude, plus the restaurant I picked was not expensive at all); he doesn’t know how much to tip and keep asking me (indecisive alert!!); and he doesn’t look at me or being flirty at all. So after the date, instead of hooking up, I ran away from him as fast as possible and ignored his texts for 3 days.
But the guy kept texting me, asking when he could see me again, so I told him straight-on that I’d love to be friends with him, but nothing more than that. And to my surprise, he asked me to run with him. And after the first run, we regularly watch movies, run, and do things together, like going to comedy shows, hiking, etc. He would text me every day. Later on, in one of our conversations, he told me that he found me attractive that is why he kept contact. But when I said, “but you don’t like me, right?”, he just change the subject.
These days, because I have to study for a big exam, we have not been meeting for the past 3 weeks, but he kept the contact consistent (just texting, no calling). And like they said, “distance makes the heart grow fonder” I realize that I really like him because I always think about him. From not wanting to hug him goodbye, I became the girl who wanted to be held by him every second that I’m not with him. So I planned to finish my exam and then confess to him. But for the last 2 weeks, he has been texting me less, and the time it took between texts has been longer, but I took it no mind until recently; he brags about having a one-night stand at a bar to me.
This shatters my heart, making me angry at him though I know I have no right to. But despite all that, half of me still wants to let him know of my feelings; half of me hates him so much, thinking that he must not have liked me to be intimate with a stranger so easily like that. Also, I don’t want to lose my friendship with him, but talking to him has become more painful than I expected. I don’t know what to do: confess or not? End our relationship or not? Am I justified in being angry at him? Should I keep on trying to make him like me? But how can a girl do that besides asking him to hang out and be kind, which is how I have been treating him all this time?
— Let’s NOT Be Friends
Well, LNBF, This can all be summed up as “Oh look, it’s the consequences of my own actions.”
Let’s start with this: you’re entitled to feel how you feel. There’s not really an answer to “is this the right way to feel” because it’s just how you feel. Feelings don’t care about right or wrong, appropriate or inappropriate. The same goes with having the “right” to feel a certain way. Rights have nothing to do with it, because feelings happen, regardless. The way you feel is the way you feel.
The fact that your friend had a one-night stand with another woman upsets you. That’s legitimate. Whether you have “authorization” to feel that way is irrelevant.
But what’s useful is to ask yourself what you’re actually feeling, why you feel the way you do and who you’re directing those feelings towards.
Let’s start with the first one. OK, you’re angry and feeling resentment towards him. But why, exactly? Well, the surface answer is fairly simple: because he slept with someone else. OK… but what about that makes you angry and why does it make you angry at him? After all, he’s a single man and you two don’t have a romantic or sexual relationship, nor do you have any expectation of commitment.
Well, the obvious answer is that you feel rejected, which hurts. Being hurt makes us upset for obvious reasons. You’re associating that hurt with him, and you’re directing those hurt feelings at him in part because it’s easy to blame him for “making” you feel this way.
But if we really stop and examine it… are you actually angry? Are you actually angry at him? Is it possible that you’re feeling embarrassed at having put yourself in a position to be rejected, which makes you angry at yourself because that embarrassment is deeply uncomfortable and you don’t like it? And if that’s the case, is it possible you’re blaming your friend – and thus getting angry at him – because it’s easier than really digging into the way that things got to this point?
The same sort of examination applies to the “why” of it – why his sleeping with someone else has hurt you this much. Some of it is obvious and simple: you like a dude, that dude hooked up with someone else. But having a strong reaction like this – even allowing for “hate” as hyperbole – seems a bit excessive for the circumstances. So what about this situation has evoked such intense feelings out of you?
I think the answer to some of it can be found in your letter. There’s the fact that you hard rejected him – “running away as fast as you can” and ignoring his texts for days, which gives us at least some idea of how you felt about the guy; he didn’t meet your standards. But then he keeps showing interest, texting and wanting to see you. When you finally say “let’s just be friends”, he says “bet” – showing that he wants to stay around you. Well, that’s got to be pretty gratifying to the ego. A dude – even though he’s presumably below your standards – is working this hard to get your attention and keep you in his life… that says a lot about you, yeah? That has to feel validating, makes you feel special… and it’s something you come back to with him. You even check in with him about how he’s feeling in a way that, let’s be honest, feels like you’re angling for a “yeah”. And you’ve been angling for that “yeah” from the get-go, when he didn’t show you that he liked you in the ways that you expected – picking up the check, asking you what you wanted, etc.
Now suddenly that validation that comes from knowing this guy likes you is jeopardized. His affection is now in question because he went and slept with someone else and it hurts – in your words: “thinking that he must not have liked me to be intimate with a stranger so easily like that”
That is kind of a tell. He didn’t have sex at you, after all. He didn’t have a one-night stand in order to spite you. And to be quite honest, how much he likes or doesn’t like you has nothing to do with his sleeping with someone else. You made it abundantly clear, over and over again, that you weren’t interested in a relationship with him. He had no reason to believe this had changed, and your question of “but you don’t like me” would sound to most like you’re reminding him that you’re not into him that way. So if he’s acting like a single guy with an attractive, platonic female friend and looking elsewhere for sex and physical intimacy, then it’s because you’ve given him every reason to think that your relationship is purely platonic and won’t be more. You’ve set his expectations at a particular level and he was acting in accordance with them.
But now those good feelings of validation are threatened by someone who you initially ruled out, and the fear of losing those feelings hurts. And if I’m being honest, I kinda suspect the hurt is amplified by feeling like you were the one who was dictating terms, the one who had the superior position in the relationship and suddenly he is the one changing the state of the relationship.
So you’re getting angry at him for… believing you when you said you weren’t interested in him and continuing to act in ways that confirmed that lack of interest. Even though he clearly was – and likely still is – attracted to you.
Now do I think this is the dominant reason you’re upset? No. Do I think you were consciously twirling your metaphorical mustache over being the one who had the upper hand by virtue of his being into you and you less into him? Also no. But I do think that there’s a strong likelihood that this dynamic was there and that you were at least somewhat aware of it, even if it wasn’t something you were actively engaging with.
This is why I think blame is certainly misplaced. And I think that a big part of you knows this. That’s part of why it hurts, part of why it’s embarrassing and part of why you’re projecting that anger at him. Directing that anger elsewhere is easier than accepting all this came about because of your choices and your actions, and that your assumptions about the nature of your relationship were wrong.
But there’s also a third thing to consider… something that brings us back to asking “what are you actually feeling?” And that’s whether you like him and his being less available made you confront those feelings… or if it’s that you’re feeling more drawn to him because he’s pulled back. Absence can make the heart grow fonder, but sometimes it’s less about growing fond and more about only wanting it now that you can’t have it.
I don’t know if that’s what’s happening here, but the timing and circumstances make it a distinct possibility. When paired with misplaced anger over his hook-up and the tangled web of emotions that this is all snarled up in, it becomes another sign that your first and best move would be to focus on processing and resolving your feelings. And I think you should do that on your own… that is, without also trying to spark a romantic relationship with him.
So, no, I don’t think confessing is the right move here. Certainly not until you take some time to unpack those feelings and resolve your anger. Blaming him for things that are not only not his fault, but are entirely reasonable behaviors for a single man with no commitments, is unfair at best. Being angry at him for choices that you made, or for him not being a mind-reader, is a sign that maybe you’re not in the right headspace for a relationship with him just now. And if that’s not resolved and addressed, this dynamic is going to continue to mess up what you have with your friend… and what you might have in the future.
So for now? Take the time and work on your feelings. Examine and understand just how much of how you’re feeling towards him is actually about how you feel about you. And while you’re at it, make sure that what you’re feeling for him is actually about him – wanting a relationship with him, specifically.
If, after you’ve had your time to untangle this knot, you are interested in him and want a relationship? Then you tell him “hey, I know that when we first started hanging out I said I only wanted to be friends. Since then I’ve gotten to really know you and my feelings have changed. If you’re still interested, I’d like to go on another date and see if we can give it another try.”
And then you step back and let him decide what he wants to do next. But you’re going to have to be prepared for the strong possibility he’s going to turn you down. You spent three months telling him that you’re just friends and that’s all you want to be. If he’s moved on because of that… well, that’s how it goes.
Good luck.
Hi Dr. NerdLove, I’ve been following you since I was in middle school and now I’m 20 and working. What I wanna ask is how do detect red flags in a friend who keeps doing you dirty consistently?
Friend In Need Has A Fiend Indeed
Screw red flags, FINHAFI, you need better friends.
If you’re dealing with someone who’s done you dirty, consistently and repeatedly, you’re well past the point of needing to detect red flags. That’s the point when the flags are already out, waving proudly like a military parade in Tiananmen Square.
So maybe the question you should be asking is “why do you consider this person a friend, and why haven’t you kicked them to the curb with rest of the trash?”
But let’s say, post giving this person the old heave-ho, you want to be alert to red flags in potential friends you meet in the future. There are a few things to do.
One is to pay attention to how they treat and talk about others, especially people who either have less power and privilege than them. Are they callous and dismissive? Are they rude and bullying? Aggressive and domineering? Do they behave one way to people’s faces and another entirely when they’re not around? That’s a warning sign.
Another flag to watch for is how they respond when you say “no” or present a boundary. If, for example, they have a ball-busting, roasting style of humor and you don’t, how do they respond if you tell them to knock it off or that you don’t appreciate that kind of interaction? Do they acknowledge your wishes and change how they behave with you? Do they push back and demand that you not have that boundary, insisting that “it’s just jokes” or telling you that you’re not being fun or that nobody else is bothered by it?
You should also pay attention to how trustworthy they are – the “would I trust them to watch my dog for a weekend” test. Are they someone who, through consistent behavior and actions, have shown that they’re someone you could reasonably trust with something important? Not just a secret or lending them money, but putting them in a position where they could cause harm, either through their actions or through inaction?
But let’s say that you’ve made a friend who didn’t raise any red flags, but then did something wrong towards you. How do they behave when called out on it? Do they recognize their actions, understand what the problem was, apologize and do their best to make things right? Do they adjust their behavior so that they don’t do it again? Is it something that could reasonably be a one-off or out-of-character moment, or is it that, in retrospect, you’re not that surprised they pulled some shit? And just as importantly, do they do similar shit more than once? A one-time mistake or fuck up is one thing; patterns of behavior are another entirely.
That’s also the point where you have to ask yourself just how many chances you’re going to give someone and why. I’m of the general belief that people deserve, if not second chances then at least the opportunity to earn them. But third chances are very, very hard to come by and fourths require significant evidence that another chance is at all warranted. If someone’s consistently fucking with you, there comes a point where you have to ask why you continue to allow them access to you and whether whatever value they bring to your life is even close to the cost of having them around.
Keep in mind: break ups aren’t just for romantic relationships. You can – and should – dump friends for toxic behavior. This isn’t the Defiant Ones, you aren’t locked together; their presence in your life is voluntary and you’re allowed to revoke their access for any reason if you so choose. If someone’s consistently “doing you dirty”, then it’s far past time to quit giving them the opportunity. Ditch the people who are making your life worse, especially if they show no interest or effort towards trying to change or improve.
Good luck.