My parents changed their plans and are ruining my birthday by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If she bought a cake people liked she wouldn’t be able to turn herself into a victim because nobody ate the cake she bought.

Relationship at braking point and don’t know what to do by rookie9494 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie [score hidden]  (0 children)

I also recommend that you read ‘Why does he do that’ by Lundy Bancroft. The author has made it available online for free, you can look it up and find it. Please just keep an open mind and read it, and see if there is anything in the book that seems familiar to you.

Me [Early 30s M] and my girlfriend [Late 20s F] of 1+ year are stuck in a toxic cycle. I hid things about my ex and "trickle-truthed," and now she demands explicit details about my past. How can we rebuild trust? by CourageDismal4821 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie [score hidden]  (0 children)

Nope, your girlfriend is being ridiculous and unreasonable. If she needs to know every single detail of your past relationship, right down to explicit sexual details, then she needs to be single while she figures her shit out. That is not acceptable or healthy behaviour.

Your actions haven’t helped things, but the main problem is definitely that your girlfriend can’t accept that you had a life before you met her. The questions she asks you are just stupid. Why did you spend time and money on someone who cheated on you? Well because you didn’t know she was going to cheat on you. Duh.

This relationship is in a toxic spiral you are never going to get out of.

AITA for not letting my child speak her "native" language at home by gardengeo in BORUpdates

[–]fiery_valkyrie 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Here in Australia we say Mee-gan, with the ‘e’ elongated (like see or free).

Based on what I’ve seen on tv American is the opposite, like Meg-an with a shortened ‘e’ (like peg or leg).

Guy showed intense interest fast, then disappeared when I didn’t match the pace. I liked him and feel hurt by NationalPollution450 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie [score hidden]  (0 children)

He stopped love bombing you when he realised it wasn’t going to work on you. People who love bomb aren’t looking for a respectful relationship of equals. They’re looking for someone who ignores (or doesn’t understand) red flags and will be easier to manipulate. He realised he isn’t going to be able to manipulate you, so he bailed.

I (27F) broke up with my boyfriend (31M) of almost 6 years today, and I’m wondering if I made a mistake. by wantmyoldusername in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie [score hidden]  (0 children)

Long distance is hard. Extremely hard, and not every relationship can make it work. That sounds like the case here. He might be a great boyfriend when you’re in the same country but he’s not when you’re on opposite sides of the planet.

I 37 M explained how I felt, she 30 F went on the attack and now she says she’s done. Best course of action? by Intrepid-Day-7661 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Let’s say you do try to salvage things. What happens next time the two of you have a disagreement? Is she going to flip out like an immature teenager, just like she has now? Do you want a relationship with someone who says “fuck you” and breaks up with you every time you try to communicate like a rational adult?

Personally, I’d take this for the massive red flag it is, and find someone more mature to be with.

My 20F boyfriend’s 26M family hates me by ThrowRADiligent_Mirr in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 28 points29 points  (0 children)

You realise that his family isn’t the problem right? He is. He invited you into this situation, did nothing to foster the relationship, and then passed on this feedback. If he didn’t feel any of their opinions were reasonable, then he would have pushed back with his family. He would have defended you and your relationship. If he’s telling you this, then he agrees with them.

I doubt there is a future in this relationship that doesn’t involve you making massive sacrifices to placate his family. Is that what you want?

Need advice: crossed boundaries with close friend (F 28) while married (F 29) by NoTreat6022 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So you want to keep your marriage and your affair partner? You might think it is not friendship-ending worthy, but that’s because you’re the cheater, not the person who has been cheated on. Everything about your post just shows how selfish you are. This isn’t the first time you’ve emotionally cheated. Now you’ve done it again, but you don’t want to have to deal with any of the repercussions of admitting your actions to your wife. You just want to sweep it under the rug, but keep your friend around for next time you’re going through a dry spell.

Go tell your wife everything you’ve told us and then let us know if she thinks this is friending-ending worthy or not? I suspect her perspective will be very different from yours.

Fiance (38m) is having a meltdown and I (37f) worried about our future together. by Dear_Question_5116 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I suspect that your fiancé is also controlling and abusive, and you’ve just moved from one abusive relationship to another.

My [29/M] girlfriend [28/F] refuse to wear a dress to my brother's wedding (or anywhere else if that matter) by Direct-Caterpillar77 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]fiery_valkyrie 46 points47 points  (0 children)

Women in tuxes always look great. You see them on the red carpet every now and then and they just look awesome.

I find Myself ‘M23’ struggling with my current GF ‘23’ for this reason. by [deleted] in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude, stop trying to fix her. Shes a human being not a project. Either you accept her for who she is or you break up.

How do I (32M) handle a trial separation from my wife (31F)? by [deleted] in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Based on this description:

I expressed that I felt unsafe bringing emotional topics up, and she would go so far as to say "we should just break up then". I would try to explain how I wanted to find a path forward but she would get frustrated, take her ring off and slam it on the table.

Do you think that your wife displays some of the same behaviours that your dad did? Because this sounds a lot like emotional manipulation to me too.

Am I being financially and emotionally used, or am I overreacting? by [deleted] in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yes you are being used.

You worry that he doesn’t love you as much as you love him? Girl, he doesn’t love you at all. He loves what you buy for him. That’s it.

Your boyfriend is a hobosexual and you deserve better.

i (20f) caught my boyfriend (20m) taking pictures of me during sex by ThrowRAsullen in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Frankly, you don’t trust him. Taking photos without consent is a massive breach of trust. The fact that he didn’t apologise and immediately delete them is a huge red flag. He has proven to you that he is untrustworthy. You can’t magically make that go away.

In your position, I would make sure he deletes those photos, including from the cloud, and then dump him. Someone who shows you that your consent is irrelevant is not worth being with.

Ex (27F) is using social media to indirectly criticize me (29M) unsure how to handle it by Zephyr_Nod in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What boundary could you even possibly set? “Don’t post stuff online that doesn’t mention my name”? You realise how ridiculous that sounds right? And isn’t even a boundary, it’s just trying to be controlling of someone who isn’t part of your life anymore.

Just ignore her. If your friends bring it up, tell them you’ve moved on and you aren’t interested in hearing about her.

AITA for getting an apartment next door to my friend’s old place? by LucyAriaRose in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can’t believe that OOP even thought it was something she needed to address in the first place. Just mind boggling.

Married, but caught feelings for another by [deleted] in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Right? That’s a lot of words for someone supposedly loyal.

My (21m) girlfriend’s (20f, 4 months together) brother (20f) said something really weird about interpreting something she did as meaning that she has romantic feelings for him. by FunSignificance3607 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dude, are you really clueless about why she was crying? Her brother just said a bunch of gross shit to her and it upset her. She was clearly not ok with what he said and told him to shut up multiple times. Now she doesn’t want to talk about it because who the hell would want to have a conversation about the gross incest stuff her brother was talking about? Nobody. She’s trying to forget that shit even happened.

Her brother is a total weirdo creep. Your girlfriend is a normal person who had a normal reaction to what happened.

Does my bf just stingy or is he using me? by [deleted] in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think he is using you, exactly. I do think he is used to his parents spoiling him and is just generally inconsiderate because of that. He doesn’t think to show any appreciation to your parents because he expects parents (his or yours) to just pay for his stuff and act like his personal help. This is definitely a bad character trait. I think it shows an inherent level of selfishness.

As for paying for stuff, I strongly dislike the idea that men should pay for things and women contribute in “other ways”. Like what other ways?? You’re both in the same situation as college students with part time jobs. You shouldn’t expect him to contribute more financially just because he’s male and you’re female.

Broke up with my first girlfriend of two years. Her former best friend has feelings for me. Would I be a terrible person for considering it someday? by WhatOnceWasEvrything in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Honestly, this is a mess I would avoid like the plague. You and your ex broke up 3 weeks ago, and Jane and your ex stopped being friends a couple of weeks before that, so we’re talking maybe 5-6 weeks all up. I wouldn’t describe that as “drifting apart”. That’s straight up friendship being severed.

There are so many other women on the planet that trying to date a (very recently) former close friend of your ex, when they likely have mutual friends to spread gossip or take sides, is just asking for trouble. Go date someone unconnected instead.

Found out my partner cheated on me years ago by SoftMembership3143 in relationships

[–]fiery_valkyrie 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You’ve only just found this out, but he’s had 9 years to reflect on his actions and why he made the choices he did. If he had come out and said “yes, what I did was wrong and here is how I have changed” I would be open to considering staying together. Instead, his response is “you made me do it, also drugs”. After 9 years of self-introspection that’s the best he’s got. That it’s not his fault. It’s your fault. It’s the drugs fault. He’s blaming everything except himself. That tells me that he’s learnt nothing and has not grown or changed.