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Dear Breakup Girl,
I try to be supportive, but a friend of mine is really beginning to tax my
patience. She has fallen hard for a long-time friend of several years. Spending
all their free time together, they are virtually inseparable. All their
co-workers and family and friends fully expect them to get married. My friend
thought that they would, too. So of course, something happens: he reveals to
her that he is, in fact, gay. He has not come out but lives a double life. So
now that he has entrusted her with his secret, he torments her constantly with
every detail about his latest love exploits, even though he knows how she feels
about him. What is worse is that he uses her as a cover--he has gone so far as
to tell people that she is his girlfriend in order to keep his sexuality a
secret. My friend goes along with it and rationalizes by telling herself, and
me, that she doesn't care what people think. If she doesn't mind participating
in this deception, it is not my place to say. But it does bother her, and she
is calling me all the time to complain about it. It is always the same story.
Of course she refuses to confront him, but continues to call me about it. She
might as well just periodically play a recording of herself to me at this
point. I have told her that she needs to decide what she wants and just stick
by it, but it has become evident that she would prefer to do nothing and
complain. I cannot tell her what to do with respect to him, but I appeal to
Breakup Girl to help me figure out what I can do--I can't stand to hear the
same story over and over anymore--and it't not like I have time to kill, but I
also don't want to abandon her--she has not discussed this with anyone else
with the exception of one individual, and those discussions just ended in
shouting matches.
Thank you in advance.
-- Losing Patience
Dear Losing,
See my response to Unsure and Worried, but with the
brightness turned all the way up, and without the jargon. Here, in fact, is the
good word from Breakup Psychotherapist Belleruth Naparstek: "Tell your pal
that you love her dearly, are worried about her, and think she's selling
herself down the river, but are now unwilling to immolate your eardrums on the
phone about this any longer. As a devoted friend, you will talk about anything
but this. This way, you're not helping your bud obsess about this
mishigas , which is dysfunctional -- and which needs the bold light of
psychotherapy to shine upon the motives therein -- and she's not wasting her
time and effort, which is also dysfunctional." Note: mishigas is
Yiddish for "being the front for a gay fiance."
Love,
Breakup Girl
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