I’m a 23-year-old guy and I have been dating my 21-year-old
girlfriend for about two years. We did the long-distance thing for
a year, and after she graduated she moved from the East Coast to
the Midwest to be with me while I finish my degree. Everything was
great until she moved in with me. She has a 9-to-5 job and pays
her bills. After work, though, all she wants to do is get high,
drink, and watch TV. I want to study, talk, or go do things. I find
myself cooking every meal, cleaning up after her, and doing all
the laundry. On top of this, a very mean side of her has emerged.
I love this girl, or at least I loved her before we moved in together.
I know that we all have our shitty qualities and that I am
a complete shitbag for thinking this stuff, let alone writing to
you about it, but what should I do? If I stay with her, then I’m
neglecting my own future happiness. But if I dump her, then I break
her heart, which is something I don’t want to do. Plus, she moved
halfway across the country for me.
Shitty Boyfriend In The Midwest
This is inelegantly put, I realize, but it came to mind when I
read your letter and my particular blend of dyslexia and Tourette’s
requires me to put it in print: If not break her heart now, SBITM,
then when? And if not you, SBITM, then who? Some guy she isn’t treating
like shit?
Look, darlin’, people get dumped all the time. With the exception
of the 12-year-old “brides” of creepy “fundamentalist” Mormon fucksticks,
a little getting dumped into each life must fall. And you know what?
Most of us require dumping in our 20s; getting dumped is good for
us. Yeah, yeah: hearts break. But very few run-of-the-mill dumps
at 21 cause hearts to break irreparably. She will get over it. Which
is another way of saying that one day, believe it or not, she will
get over you.
Now, here’s why being dumped is often good for us: After a person
is done wallowing in a pain that no one else has ever experienced
or can possibly comprehend—although others’ inability to comprehend
never seems to stop a dumped person from yammering on and on—the
person begins to examine the failed relationship for clues. Why
did it end? Whose fault was it? If the dumped person determines
that fault lies with the asshole ex, the dumped person resolves
to be on the lookout for telltale signs of assholery in the future.
Thus does being dumped inspire a person to date smarter and more
defensively.
But often a little voice in the back of the dumped person’s head
tells the dumped person that the fault is theirs—that she, in this
instance, was a stoned, drunk, inconsiderate, mean-spirited sack
of shit—and the dumped person resolves to change or date only people
attracted to stoners and drunks and slobs.
So dump her, SBITM, and tell her why. Then, while she packs and
verbally lashes out and fucks your friends, remind yourself that
dumping her was the right thing to do for her and for you. There
is no other option—unless, of course, you’re willing to spend the
next seven decades cleaning up after this inconsiderate piece of
shit because she moved to the Midwest.
I’m writing to you not for advice, but to open up a discussion.
For five years I had a famous partner and eventually lost him to
groupies. I was aware that he might one day be tempted to explore
this side effect of his career, to get it out of his system (for
good I hope), so I wasn’t too surprised when he finally made the
decision to “go there.” However, I am left with some unsettling
thoughts, apart from the heartache.
To him, this is a harmless and fun chapter in his life, but
I see a darker side. I find it hard to come to terms with seeing
the man I loved and who respected me as an equal engaging in sexual
relations with girls who, by looking up to him, place themselves
beneath him. His relationships now feature a misbalance of power.
I feel a healthy adult seeks sex with equals. To me, groupies act
like unpaid prostitutes, and my ex has decided it’s okay to use
girls who adore him without giving much in return. I can’t see how
this can be of benefit to either the girls or to him. He’s learning
that it’s okay to receive without having to give, and they learn
that it’s okay to be used. I worry that these experiences help form
permanent negative patterns. Harmless fun? I don’t think so. Any
thoughts?
Worried Ex
Just one, WE: How is this any of your business?
Yes, groupies are like unpaid prostitutes—but they are compensated,
WE, with refracted fame, the dubious perks of being “with the band,”
and the human papapapineapple virus (or whatever it’s called). So
I hardly see these assignations as necessarily one-way exchanges.
The use is mutual. Your ex may be permanently damaged by this kind
of attention or he may tire of cheap, meaningless sex and come crawling
back to you one day. Or, hell, he may one day star in a squalid
and depressing reality show in which he deludes himself into believing
that the women who surround him desire his paunchy old body and
his surgeon-battered face and not a shot at reality-show fame, such
as it is.
But, again, what business is it of yours? He’s your ex and the
women he’s sleeping with are, ostensibly, consenting adults. We
can tut-tut and conclude that your ex is using these women and that
these women are no better than hookers… and so what? You’ll still
be his ex, he’ll still be banging groupies, and groupies will go
on chasing rock stars long after your ex is playing the casino circuit.
In your last column, you said Bi Bi Bridie’s fiancé issued
an “irrational ultimatum” because he didn’t want his partner to
sleep with another female. He made it clear before they were together
that that was his preference. She agreed to those terms.
Yet in a column three weeks ago, you told Confused In Canada,
a guy in a long-distance relationship whose woman wanted an open
relationship, that his reluctance to open up their relationship
didn’t mean he was jealous, just monogamous.
Maybe I’m missing something, but it sounds like both of these
guys know what they want and stated their intentions clearly. Why
is the first guy irrational for stating his intentions and the second
guy “just monogamous”?
A Bit Confused
Because I said so, ABC. Because, unlike CIC’s girlfriend, BBB is
bi and, yes, that detail makes a difference. And, most importantly,
because I said so.
BBB shouldn’t make a commitment that she’s already proven herself
to be incapable of honoring; that’s just setting her marriage up
for failure. But BBB’s fiancé shouldn’t extract a commitment from
his girlfriend that he knows she will either be incapable of honoring
or will quickly come to resent him greatly for having to honor.
He can say, “You can have me or you can have this very important
part of your sexuality,” to his fiancé, but by doing so he’s setting
his marriage up for failure. That makes his ultimatum irrational.