On the other hand, if he seems creepy or has crossed motives, these seem like things that you could say explicitly. In your situation I wouldn’t offer this information unprompted, but if he asked would you proffer it?
At the time I made it pretty clear that the thing he did was creepy.
Say your ex still had one of your old possessions, but something that you cared about having less than you cared about not seeing him. He offers to return it. What goes through your head as you formulate a reply?
Mu. This is actually the case; he sent me an e-mail about four months ago in which among other things he offered to return about $20 worth of my stuff. I ignored it, because it wasn’t worth going through the trouble of seeing him again.
I’m concerned that you think your case mirrors mine when it probably doesn’t.
I don’t think that my case mirrors yours, and I can think of at least three tangible differences between the most recent situations I’ve been in that are even close.
But people often use the same habits for wide classes of situations. And I still feel like your reactions to things differ slightly from my hypothetical reactions, which is really what I’m curious about.
Like, when you ignored the e-mail, did you think, “I don’t care that much about that stuff, and I’d really rather not deal with all that.” then close it and never open it again? (Underlying assumption: do you usually have verbal thought processes? Or even explicit thought processes about these things?)
I don’t think that my case mirrors yours, and I can think of at least three tangible differences between the most recent situations I’ve been in that are even close.
Good. I was worried by the “It saddens me to think...” sentence that you were taking it to heart.
Like, when you ignored the e-mail, did you think, “I don’t care that much about that stuff, and I’d really rather not deal with all that.” then close it and never open it again? (Underlying assumption: do you usually have verbal thought processes? Or even explicit thought processes about these things?)
Yes, I have an inner monologue, and yes, I did have more or less that reaction.
Mu. This is actually the case; he sent me an e-mail about four months ago in which among other things he offered to return about $20 worth of my stuff. I ignored it, because it wasn’t worth going through the trouble of seeing him again.
At the time I made it pretty clear that the thing he did was creepy.
Mu. This is actually the case; he sent me an e-mail about four months ago in which among other things he offered to return about $20 worth of my stuff. I ignored it, because it wasn’t worth going through the trouble of seeing him again.
I’m concerned that you think your case mirrors mine when it probably doesn’t.
I don’t think that my case mirrors yours, and I can think of at least three tangible differences between the most recent situations I’ve been in that are even close.
But people often use the same habits for wide classes of situations. And I still feel like your reactions to things differ slightly from my hypothetical reactions, which is really what I’m curious about.
Like, when you ignored the e-mail, did you think, “I don’t care that much about that stuff, and I’d really rather not deal with all that.” then close it and never open it again? (Underlying assumption: do you usually have verbal thought processes? Or even explicit thought processes about these things?)
By the way thank you for continuing to respond.
Good. I was worried by the “It saddens me to think...” sentence that you were taking it to heart.
Yes, I have an inner monologue, and yes, I did have more or less that reaction.
Ok, thanks!
I feel compelled to link to a song.
The Hardest Part Of Breaking Up (Is Getting Back Your Stuff)