Moderator: The Moderator Team

Aish wrote:Hey Moddie
Sorry my comp is acting cranky thats why three similar posts and lot of grammatical errors (which arent made out of ignorance.)...
Can mod make the changes so that I dont look that dumb!
Thanks
Aishwarya
fullhyd.com wrote:Aish wrote:Hey Moddie
Sorry my comp is acting cranky thats why three similar posts and lot of grammatical errors (which arent made out of ignorance.)...
Can mod make the changes so that I dont look that dumb!
Thanks
Aishwarya
Done. And please don't call us "Moddie". We have something against it, though we aren't able to currently put a finger on exactly what. We are open to help on this.
Regards,
fullhyd.com
pingu wrote:i'd have to say that LDRs are quite difficult and painful, even more so than non-L DRs.
[2 paise]
you have to let the little things slide but talk clearly about the big things
[/2 paise]
the rub , clearly , lies in deciding whether an issue is little or not.
and thats what decides whether the relationship will last or not.
if to one person an issue is a big deal and its trivial to the other person , then your headed for big trouble ...
for example ,at the start , i used to be a stuck-up dcikwad who'd make a big deal about calling on time ... she'd say she'd call at a certain time and never would.this would cause massive fights and heartburn. she'd accuse me of making a big deal about trivial stuff.i would huff and puff.but as time passed , i figured that she is a scatterbrain and thats just her.so now its not that big a deal.
but another issue is trust ... i have a problem with her having too many close guyfriends. and she recognises that and we talk whenever anything crops up.and we're pretty honest and realistic about stuff ...
yeah , i could fill pages about being in an LDR ...
lead to boredom and indifference(whihc happened in your case).
something that is genuinely worth making (this on time on your GF's part about not talking about her guy friends and sticking to the word)
This is a tough call one has to make.
1. Either you dont have any friends of opposite sex. That avoids all the complications. But how natural is that and how practical is it?
2. You dont talk about everything to your partner.
3. You have friends and your share everything but at the risk of further complications... That depends on the maturity of the other person.
What do you think about that?
pingu wrote:for us its #3 ..
its caused a shitload of problems and heartache ... but we like to think it'l work in the long run.
It wrote:This thread has taken a detour. Back to the topic, pls.
In this scenario, my position would start in 1, and generally move towards 3. It would not be a case of being tired with LDRs, but it is a question of how long a person can wait.Aishwarya wrote:Anyways.. So back to LDRs. So lets say you have been away from each other for a while now and you know it will be couple of years before you can be together again. You are depseratly in love but unable to meet for some reason. It is hard enuf alredy that you cant get to meet as often as other couples do, but the fact that you cannot meet for years at strech is quite difficult.
Do you then,
1. Well, stick by your decision and let the things go the way they were going.
2. Start fooling around? Remember you cant meet for months of not years at a stretch.
3. Call it quits coz you are not the two timing kind, but at the same are tired of LDR!!

Aishwarya wrote:It wrote:This thread has taken a detour. Back to the topic, pls.
Yeah you are right, but thats how human mind works, always wandering.
Anyways.. So back to LDRs. So lets say you have been away from each other for a while now and you know it will be couple of years before you can be together again. You are depseratly in love but unable to meet for some reason. It is hard enuf alredy that you cant get to meet as often as other couples do, but the fact that you cannot meet for years at strech is quite difficult.
Do you then,
1. Well, stick by your decision and let the things go the way they were going.
2. Start fooling around? Remember you cant meet for months of not years at a stretch.
3. Call it quits coz you are not the two timing kind, but at the same are tired of LDR!!
Hello! wrote:That was beautifully put by ukeridge. First timer and what a start!
Why did you outrightly reject the idea of fooling around. See, physical needs are much more mundane and easy to satisfy than emotional needs, which are far complicated. Also, I always think I can forgive a person who has cheated on me by sleeping with a certain someone but cannot forgive someone who has emotionally let me down. So, I guess I would understand of my partner was fooling around (I dont have any right now, and may be thats why I am so idealistic about it. But going by my past experiances related to situation totally different from relationships etc, I guess I can extrapolate it to LDR). Lack of fullfilement of physical needs can further add to the frustration of being in LDR and make it even more complicated. So there is nothing particularly wrong in fooling around
Hello! wrote:Also, I always think I can forgive a person who has cheated on me by sleeping with a certain someone but cannot forgive someone who has emotionally let me down.
Zephyr wrote:There are a lot of LDRs that work. Its just that the people who are in happy LDRs do not login online and share their happiness. The only time people share LDR stuff is when everything is horribly wrong and need support.. brought to attention only when they dont work out. Sad thing is that people(read women) are sometimes too influenced by these failures and let their judgement about their relationships be clouded by others failures.Now we know that women can be fickle sometimes,Especially the modern woman, the woman that is easily brainwashed by movies,books,oprah,sex and the city,relationship books,magazines and fellow LDR failures.
(wears suit to protect himself)
Aishwarya wrote:Zephyr wrote:There are a lot of LDRs that work. Its just that the people who are in happy LDRs do not login online and share their happiness. The only time people share LDR stuff is when everything is horribly wrong and need support.. brought to attention only when they dont work out. Sad thing is that people(read women) are sometimes too influenced by these failures and let their judgement about their relationships be clouded by others failures.Now we know that women can be fickle sometimes,Especially the modern woman, the woman that is easily brainwashed by movies,books,oprah,sex and the city,relationship books,magazines and fellow LDR failures.
(wears suit to protect himself)
Looks like you were left heartbroken in an LDR... I am really sorry if I am right.
Actually, women are more stable in LDR than men. Men have these strong sexual urges and they have little restraint over them, women on the other hand dont. Ficklemindedness is not typical of women, I know so many men who are fickle...And what has being modern to do with being fickle. Why are you misunderstanding being independant to being fickleminded. Infact, these days although women have more options, as they are more out going and get to interact with lot of men both in their workplace and otehr social gatherings, they are still very loyal and tolerant towards their male counterparts...
I had to say all that because you attributed failure of LDR to women being more independant and everything. Failure is because of lack of trust, insecurity, boredom and various otherr reasons. It can be from both the man or the women in the relationship.
Portuguese Man-Of-War wrote:Nice thread.
IMHO, LDRs can break down either due to the partners
1. straying, or
2. tiring / losing interest.
Let's look at straying first:
If ethics is defined as placing duty and promise above temptation, then you're lucky in a LDR if both you and your partner are ethical. You've committed to someone that you are with him/her, and will not let the weaknesses of your flesh make you break your promise first.
If you are not ethical - either because you are inherently crooked or because your will is too weak - then it's harsh on your partner. But in the long run, he/she has been saved from someone who's unworthy.
As for the tiring / losing interest part:
A genuine problem. The best ways are:
1. Continuous interactions
2. Frequent physical meetings
3. Understanding what your partner is doing for you without him/her having to spell it out, and constantly appreciating that
4. Doing something special for your partner every so often
5. Telling the other person continuously how much you love him/her
The best thing always, of course, is to work towards being together as early as possible.
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