It's that exact same feeling of exhasperation I felt when anami kept dragging me back into a pointless discussion. But, still, I keep responding. More fool me, I guess.
*sigh*
Here we go...
Originally posted by lighthouse
You contradict yourself. You say one thing, then another. GOing by what you originally said, the contradicition is a lie. Therefore, I don't believe it.
Please be specific. Where have I contradicted myself on that specific matter? Provide quotes.
When did I say it was a one-way street? Neither of you want to marry. We get that. But you say he loves you, but doesn't want to marry you. You probably say that you love him, but don't want to marry him either.
I don't want to marry him
yet. He doesn't want to marry me
yet. You seem to have some sort of hysterical illiteracy when it comes to that word. Dictionary.com provides three relevant definitions:
[1]At this time; for the present: isn't ready yet.
[2]Up to a specified time; thus far: The end had not yet come.
[3]At a future time; eventually: may yet change his mind.
Is it starting to sink it? Or not
yet?
No. I just prefer not to reduce relationships to science. They are personal, science isn't.:doh:
Everything can be reduced to science. You seem to find that threatening. To me, it's somewhat reassuring.
If you lie to yourself long enough, you might just believe it.
Lol!
I don't need to lie to myself about my sense of personal security. Unlike some, I don't need to cling to emotional crutches to make myself feel like a whole human being. I
know that I don't need a partner. That's why I appreciate the one I have... he's not there because I need him to be, he's there because I
want him to be.
Seriously, lighthouse, do I strike you as an insecure shrinking violet type? That's pretty amusing.
I'm hardly defined by my man. He's a complement, not a crutch.
:doh:
Your last marriage fell apart. He was abusive. Are you saying that didn't put you off the idea?
Nope. Put me off abusive and unfaithful prats... my anger was more directed at the fact that he sullied a marriage with his behaviour, rather than at the marriage itself. I would like to one day have a functional and happy marriage. Possibly with my current partner.
But I see no need to rush frantically towards that ideal. I... and perhaps we... will get there at my/our own pace.
And just because you've been married once, that doesn't mean you're not afraid of committment now.
True, one doesn't equal the other. But it's still not the case. And you insisting it, from your position of just above absolute zero knowledge of my situation, doesn't make it so.
Riiiight. Because it would inconvienience him, and he would despise you for it, right?
You really don't get it, do you?
If he loves you as much as you say he does, he's going to be there for you whether you're married or not. So why does the paper matter?
Because a driver's license doesn't have someone else in it. If he loves you, he's not going to care.
That's my point exactly. I'm not worried that he'll "despise" me for it. I
know that he won't care. I
know that he'd stick around and care for me, even if he lost everything else in the process. I know that
now, lighthouse. And I have enough respect and love for him that I will try my damndest to make sure he never has to be put in that situation before I will make him swear it on a legal document. He'll stay by me no matter what. He's proven that already.
The "illness" category on my list of "reasons I don't want to get married to my partner yet" has nothing to do with my fear of him running off if I get really ill again. It's about me wanting to be sure that, if I do marry him, the woman who says those vows will be giving him the healthiest and wholest self that she possibly can... not a legal commitment to servitude. He deserves that much.
See how much you
don't know about him and our relationship dynamic?
If he loves you, as you say he does, and you love him, then you're not going to break it off. So why not get married? It's because you're afraid that he might leave you if you get sick, and you don't want to go through a divorce.
Again, having been married before, I know that a divorce
really isn't too hard. It's the dissolution of a cherished relationship and bond that rips you apart. You insist that I don't really love my partner, so by your argument that problem wouldn't exist. There'd be no trauma of seperation. So, by lighthouse logic, I should be jumping to marry the man if I don't really care about him! But wait... then I'd be married, so that means I must love him at that point!
Jeebus. Trying to follow your logic is like trying to view a relationship through the eyes of a writer for the Bold and the Beatiful. Then, I guess TV is the closest you've come to experiencing these things you spout off about, isn't it?
You want to make it easy for you. But, like I said, if he loves you, he won't leave.
My point exactly. See above.
:blabla:
Sure it is.
Let me guess, if you break up, one of you has to move out?
Move out, divide everything we own, deal with long term financial commitments for the next ten years or so that are being met jointly, deal with the emotional backlash from our combined families (they seem to think that our relationship is for the long haul... and they, at least, have seen it), change practically every legal record in existence of either of us since we're registered as a legal de facto couple, have my government benefits reassessed, get our various insurance policies re-evaluated... the list goes on and on. Two lives that are very much enmeshed don't come apart too easily. I don't know how it is in the US, but in Australia legal de facto couples have almost the exact same legal rights and responsibilities as married couples.
You already said you didn't want to get married. Which is it?
Do I need to post the definition of the word "yet" again?
Why not? Because it would be easier to break up?
If you honestly think that something this complex can be summarised in a few lines of text, you've been spending too much time online.
We are, and I am, not ready yet.
So, I'm arrogant?
Prove it.
That's a pretty good example.
I'm not the one insisting a rhombus and a diamond are two different things.
And it's because I don't see the point in a relationship that doesn't want to go anywhere.
And, again, I hope that works out for you. I, however, view the situation differently.
Once again, you haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Then enlighten me, and point out where I've misinterpreted.
And you're an idiot. I didn't say anythign about them being married. I said they weren't even planning on it. They don't care that the relationship ended because they weren't planning on moving to the next level, anyway.:doh:
Do you even understand that "not planning to" is not the same as "planning not to"?
Because it distances you, right?
No. I've explained that the term "partner" is a significant one to me. Since my view on the terms I use to refer to my partner is one of only two that matter, I'm getting rather tired of trying repeatedly to explain it to you.
You know how people use different words to refer to their grandparents? For one person, "grandma" might be a term that refers to a very close and significant relative, whereas to another it's a distant person they see every third Christmas and when someone gets married. There's no universal implication as to what the label means outside of "person who is parent to one of your parents".
I took the time to do another dictionary.com search, this time for the word "partner". It gave me three relevant definitions:
[1]A spouse.
[2]A domestic partner.
[3]Either of two persons dancing together.
Most of the relevant entries were about "spouses" and "spousal equivelants". Nowhere did I see anything even vaguely indicative of "distance". Seems that that is a preconception that you're bringing to the table, not me.
Different word. And I never said anything about what you actually meant. I asked you what you meant.
Yep. You asked what I meant... and then proceeded to argue with me and accuse me alternately of lying, and of being wrong in my definition.
That's how I define that word. That's how I use it. Enough said. It's not a point of debate. It's personal syntax and idiom.
Apparently you can't see a future to the relationship, or you would move on. But you prefer to stay "partners" with no promise of spending the rest of your lives together.:nono:
I see a future.
It's there when I look at tomorrow, because I know he'll be there. Right now, I don't need anything more than that. I don't need to force a promise on paper when the unwritten promises he gives me are so much stronger. One day, we might make that other promise. But it will be because we feel that we want it, not because we need to validate our relationship in the eyes of people like you. In those terms, doll, people like you are the least significant in the picture.
Then it stands that you performed sexual acts for money.
*shrug* Define sexual acts.
I've never claimed that my work is non-sexual. Quite the contrary. What I denied was that I have had sex with people for money.
Agreed. So, like I said, I can hang out with a female friend, without it being a date. And I can get to know her. Which is what would lead me to wanting to marry her in the first place. Then I can pursue a relationship. Why pursue a relationship to find out if we'd make a good couple? If we don't know that we would, then our relationship coudl sour quickly, and go nowhere. It's better to find out if there's an interest, beyond initial impressions.
I say again: I hope that model works for you.
Now that's being stupid. I thought you said you were intelligent.
*grin* No, doll, I don't need to tell people.
You're missing the point. I'm emphasizing to get the point across to you and granite. I never said anything about emphasizing it to the girl. If we don't see it as a date, it isn't a date.:doh:
Emphasis on
we. If you think it's a date and she doesn't, what is it?
They don't have to be told. I know plenty of people who think granite is an idiot.
The question is why they think that. It takes all types.