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A lot of us have experienced this, but...

Has this happened to you?

You are in a relationship.
You are in love.
The other person breaks up with you, and you never saw it coming.
You feel devastated.

And so, you listen to music, and you drown your sorrows in sad love songs, with lyrics like "my heart is broken" or "how can I go on?"

I have. I bet many of us have.

But it never occurred to me, until recently, to think about those songs and imagine someone listening to them in response to the hurt that I caused her!

I posted here a while ago about an old high school girlfriend finding me on social media, after a 50 year period in which we had not heard from each other. We had started dating toward the end of my senior year of high school. She was a sophomore. But when I came home from college for a break during the fall semester, I broke up with her, as I felt I had outgrown her.

Our recent interactions have been friendly, and we have had some very good conversations and exchanges of email. It has been a good experience for both of us. (No, she has not been carrying a torch for me all these years, and no she certainly is not holding a grudge! She has a full life, with a happy marriage, a wonderful daughter, and a fulfilling career. )

But one thing she told me, that I could not have known at the time, is that while I was dating her, she was being physically and emotionally abused at home. At the age of 16, she had been counting on me, her first boyfriend, to marry her and rescue her from all that.

I had no idea.

Of course, many 16-year-olds naively expect their first boyfriend to be "the one", but in her case the stakes were a lot higher than for many other girls her age.

While I do not feel "guilty" for what I did, learning what her reality was like at the time has gotten me to think more about what effect my actions had had on her. And I thought about the popular songs on the radio at the time (the year was 1970) which were of the type I mentioned at the beginning of this post. She must have listened to them.

They sound different to me now.
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Well put.
I sometimes reflect back on my first relationships and realise how few questions I asked and how little I really knew about my partners and friends. I had no idea, back then, how much the basic facts can influence who someone is and what they will become.

As for the break ups, I was the one who'd end it, and always gave my reasons.
Long before that moment, each fellow knew that I'd become profoundly unhappy and why.
If I'd had sufficient ability to observe and recognise warning signs, I would never have got involved with them. But of course, lack of knowledge of people is one of the attributes of youth, so I forgive myself and am grateful for the learning.

There was an exception.
I'd broken up because the relationship didn't seem to be developing or showing any signs of having a future.
He looked me up with questions years later.
When we met over lunch, he asked, if he'd told me he loved me, might I have seen a future between us.
I replied, "yes, without question".
By that time he'd become a well known psychiatrist, had adults kids, was unhappy in his marriage and deeply depressed.
Not long after, I saw his obituary in the paper.

These things are terribly sad.
They show how vital deeper communication really is.

These days, I'm grateful for my husband. We have weathered the storms, learned how to relate and are best friends.
DrWatson · 70-79, M
@hartfire Thank you for such a thoughtful reply.

In the three years since I posted this, that woman and I have become good friends, and that friendship has included my wife.

Last summer, my wife and I traveled to visit her and her husband. We spent four days there and we all had a great time.