DarkWalker
Member
No, really. This is one of those threads.
My last relationship ended in August 2006. It was the third one I'd ever had, and the longest (six months). Since then, I either haven't been interested or been in a position to have any kind of a relationship. My problem (thank you bipolar) is I often want to move too fast and be too open. It's not that I meet a girl and instantly want to marry her, but I yearn to share my life with someone who can relate to me. For some odd reason, I have always found I relate better to the emotions of women than I do men (mostly because men don't talk about their emotions well).
At any rate, I met a woman at the place where I meet for a writer's group every week. She is a barista there, young, beautiful (oh Lord!), intelligent, and she has bipolar disorder. That leads me to caution, because of the penchant for bipolar people (such as myself) to act irrationally. This woman has gone out of her way on her break to be friendly toward me, which is like a drink of cold, fresh water in the desert. No one but no one has gone out of their way like that in years.
Of course, that would make a guy feel special, but like I said, I'm not in a hurry to hear wedding bells. All I want to be is her friend. Unfortunately, I fear I will share too much too quickly, she will get the wrong impression, and history will repeat itself when she turns away from me. I can tell my perspective toward her is not quite right, but I'm not certain how to correct my thinking. I don't want to lose this friend, and though I would like to see if our friendship leads to a romantic relationship, I prefer to be her friend first.
How do I slow down and hold back? I've never been good with emotional regulation.
My last relationship ended in August 2006. It was the third one I'd ever had, and the longest (six months). Since then, I either haven't been interested or been in a position to have any kind of a relationship. My problem (thank you bipolar) is I often want to move too fast and be too open. It's not that I meet a girl and instantly want to marry her, but I yearn to share my life with someone who can relate to me. For some odd reason, I have always found I relate better to the emotions of women than I do men (mostly because men don't talk about their emotions well).
At any rate, I met a woman at the place where I meet for a writer's group every week. She is a barista there, young, beautiful (oh Lord!), intelligent, and she has bipolar disorder. That leads me to caution, because of the penchant for bipolar people (such as myself) to act irrationally. This woman has gone out of her way on her break to be friendly toward me, which is like a drink of cold, fresh water in the desert. No one but no one has gone out of their way like that in years.
Of course, that would make a guy feel special, but like I said, I'm not in a hurry to hear wedding bells. All I want to be is her friend. Unfortunately, I fear I will share too much too quickly, she will get the wrong impression, and history will repeat itself when she turns away from me. I can tell my perspective toward her is not quite right, but I'm not certain how to correct my thinking. I don't want to lose this friend, and though I would like to see if our friendship leads to a romantic relationship, I prefer to be her friend first.
How do I slow down and hold back? I've never been good with emotional regulation.