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Yes
Created on: April 30, 2009 Last Updated: May 01, 2009
Should ex lovers be friends? What differentiates the couples who remain friends from those who don't? When children are involved, they must co-parent friendly ... but can divorced parents really be friends? Should a new relationship tolerate an ex when children are not involved? Are there things to consider that are particular to friendship between ex lovers?
Deciding to be friends with an ex lover is a choice that should be made by people who are able to honesty connect with true feelings about current intentions and future desires, without using denial as a tool to sell current status to others.
Your current relationship is sensitive to the silent hints and nonverbal clues that let people know someone may have feelings for an ex. Immature lovers will argue that they should be allowed to be friends with an ex, exhibiting defensiveness in response to not being trusted. Those accused act outraged at not being believed capable of keeping things platonic with an ex.
But if you secretly have longing for your ex, it will show. Whether or not it becomes a self fulfilling prophesy that follows accusations... and brings you into the passionate arms of your ex lover... that is the game you choose to play when you enjoy temptation under the guise of casual friendship. Are you fundamentally capable of being honest and mature? Or are you just enjoying a naive thrill to feel important, or resolve past issues, at the expense of another?
If you question having feelings for your ex, then you most likely do have feelings for your ex lover. Mature women who have experienced friendship without those secret feelings of longing can tell you that it is possible. Saying you did not have feelings for your ex, after the line has been crossed, is about as statistically possible as a woman saying she did not know she was pregnant until her denial finally gives birth. People who try fooling themselves, seldom fool others who detect motives of denied reality.
So what makes some ex lovers different? Why are some able to be friends?
1) Believe it or not, sometimes it is easiest to become friends with an ex-lover who was once your enemy. Two people who come to mutual understanding that they are a volatile mix are often able to enjoy interpersonal relationships, and to co-parent in ways that they had failed to do when together. At the risk of spoiling objective observation with personal experience, this author can share that, after two marriages ended with two restraining orders and one vacation at a battered women's shelter, co-parenting today is the polar opposite of the verbal and emotional abuse that we exposed our children to when together.
It is something hard to believe, when both are sitting across from a court mediator, that the two will actually one day put hate aside and actually laugh together, but it happens. In the personal case just referred to, friendly co-parenting began with using mother rights to be as liberal as possible with the visitation. It naturally evened itself out, after months of fear and rage on both ends. Four years after the end of the eight year marriage, an eight year old son does not remember a time his parents did not get along. The child does not remember when the police kept father from coming home for six months, or the threats of getting even that surrounded that life chapter.
2) Other friends are born from time. When a couple splits, it takes about half the number of years they were together for both to completely get over the breakup. Ending a relationship hurts. Both hurt when couples split, no matter who ends it. If you do not grieve, you were never really in love. When a marriage of ten years ends, it will take about five years for the past to lose its sting.
3) When an ex becomes part of the family, his role may continue. As family dynamics evolve, some ex lovers become permanent in the extended family. The fact that "Uncle Joe" was Aunt Susy's ex is not something the younger generation is even conscious of; and the fact that each is remarried and the number of cousins has doubled does not cause either of the pairs' new spouses to worry or be suspicious of some old chemistry during holiday gatherings.
Asking if a current love interest should tolerate friendship with an ex lover returns those seeking valid answers back to the introductory question of inner honesty. Current partners will sense the dreams of lovers resting on the pillow next to theirs. They will recognize voice inflections and delays' of eye contact that are just some of the tell tale signs hard to isolate when detecting deception, but that are deception detected none the less.
Error is made by those asked to tolerate their partner being friends with an ex, when suspicion is dismissed as past injury causing current paranoia. Guilty indulgence of the heart is easily visible under the light of gut intuition. Don't let your suspicious heart deny the reality of a friendship that compromises peace of mind.
Instinct should be trusted when questioning to accept the proximity of an ex lover.
When the goal is to sustain friendship positively for everyone involved, there are details that ex lovers must consider:
1. No flirting, no pet names, no sexual suggestion.
2. Ex enemies who manage to become friends never bring up the past. Period. They live each day actively living amends. The only way to erase the injustice of the past without mentioning it is to have an unspoken commitment to only just exchanges going forward. All those buttons that were once pushed to drive an ex crazy, become the buttons you know best how to avoid.
3. True friends that were once ex lovers spend little time talking about the ex not in the room. Individuals who are friends with an ex lover will not be heard talking about the friendly ex in between visits. Not if the visits are casually platonic as claimed. Even when trust is definite, disrespect is the result when names from the past are brought up more than rarely.
In conclusion, none of these observations sought is capable of answering the personal question of friendship. Observations sought to validate the appropriateness of friendship cannot replace the reality of feelings hard to admit, but even harder to hide.
Learn more about this author, Corinna Craddock.
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No
Created on: November 02, 2008 Last Updated: February 19, 2011
Should ex-lovers be friends?
Well should a worker return back to a job they quit or got fired from?
Personally I believe it's the same concept. I understand that some people are better of as friends than lovers but then again shouldn't your lover be your friend also? When you end a relationship you are ending all aspects of what you developed while together. For instance if you buy a car and decide it isn't working right for you, you wouldn't return the car but keep two of the wheels would you?
I am not trying to compare a human being to a car, although I do believe the concept relates to the ending of a relationship....in one sense. I believe in the saying 'all or nothing' the past is the past so why bring it into your future...?
Although, some people do decide to break up and remain friends but I guess that depends on the way the relationships ended and why it ended.
For example: If he/she cheated would you really want to be friends with someone who cheated on you? Regardless of any situation a true friend wouldn't cheat on a friend so why would you want to be friends with a cheater?
Relationships end for all different reasons and they start for all different reasons too. No situation is exactly the same to anyone else's so I am not in the position to say ALL ex-lovers shouldn't be friends. Although, I do believe it should be deeply thought about because it could make it harder for you to move on. But then again I guess that will all depend on the intensity of the relationship you had together.
I would say, choose your friends wisely not based on what you have been through together but also where you are going. Some people are only mean't to be in our lives for a season and a reason. Once a particular season is over we sometimes need new prospectives on what's ahead rather than look back on what's behind us.
If you only loved your lover because they were your lover there is no real need for you to be friends in my opinion. But if you loved your lover because they were your friends and you truly believe they are someone you 'can't' live without then by all means see how a friendship without the loving goes. But I always wonder how do you separate love from friendship? because you usually love your friends so to an extent you will be re living your relationship from a different angle....
And if you meet someone else and they become your best friend and lover where does your ex-lover stand? you may call them a friend but your new lover may not appreciate you being close with your ex. BUT then again that all depends on how close friends you are...and if you're not that close then why would you class them as a friend? It really interests me how people have different definitions for the term friendship. But over all I would say just be wise in making those decisions and always keep your future in mind and where you want to be. Its your choice and YOUR situation. So there is no right or wrong answer. But I personally don't see the need with being friends with a past that will never make your future.
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