It’s not that I can’t. The problem is that when I’m with someone, I deeply yearn to be alone. I’d love to have my life for myself, with no responsibility with no one else - just me.

But then, when I’m alone, I feel like a failure, like I need a relationship to feel complete, and I fucking hate that. So I end up in another relationship, and after two years I can’t stand it anymore, and the cycle repeats.

What the hell. Has anyone suffered from something like that? How can you be alone and not feel lonely? How to kill this need to be with someone?

EDIT: Thanks for all the answers, I’m taking every single one into consideration. Please, keep them coming.

  • Trollivier@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Gotta find someone with whom you can be alone with.

    Meaning you can be alone with this person. And that you can be alone with yourself in their presence as well. Someone who can respect your alone time, basically.

    Otherwise, when single, you gotta learn to take care of yourself as if yourself was someone else. That’s how I coped when I was single. Treating myself all the time to little gifts, taking care of myself, even going out with myself by myself like a date night.

    “6:30, dinner with myself. I can’t cancel that again!” -The Grinch

  • morphballganon@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Sounds like you do want to be with someone; you just have a habit of getting with people who aren’t a good match for you.

    I’ve had partners that made me feel like how you describe being with someone. My current partner does not make me feel like that.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I know several people like this, it’s normal IMO to need social connection, I don’t think you are broken or anything, modern life is hard in a way and if you are a man, it can be even harder because in general men don’t have as many other ways to connect with people so rely more on their romantic partners to provide it. It’s not natural , historically speaking, to be alone as much as we can today. But yes kind of shitty to use people because you can’t be alone so I understand wanting to change it.

    If I was being snarky, I’d say have kids because oh my God does that teach you to value solitude. We moved to a new house once and I was alone in the house one day and realized I’d not been alone in that house before, ever, and it had been over a year. The only time alone I’d had for a year was in the car or on a walk.

    Therapy is probably the best answer but mindfulness, meditation might help. Sit with your thoughts until you figure out what is happening. When it gets uncomfortable and boring, abide. Listen to the world, focus on your breath, let the thoughts come.

    And don’t discount the value of weak social connections, talking to people at work, going to the same place to get coffee or a drink every day, go physically to the library for books, go shopping at little places with real cashiers. All that casual interaction is really good for you, not just deep friendships and lovers but regular shallow contacts too. Oh, and you’ll never have no responsibility, I think you know that, but people do vary in how high maintenance they are, a good match should make you feel you have less responsibility because there are two of you to handle it.

    ETA: the “two years” thing made me laugh. That was my husband after he divorced and before we met - he had a string of two years relationships. I think that’s when infatuation fades and you see what is underneath it. So I told him no to living together until we’d been together two years, then he wanted to get married I told him two years before he could ask me that too.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Relationships are about giving. It’s a cliche, but the more you put into a relationship, the more you’re going to get out of it. And I don’t mean this in the transactional sense. I don’t mean you do something nice for your partner then they do something nice for you in return. It’s more like: the more you value the person, the more you will feel fulfilled when you do loving things for them. It’s easier to understand when you’re doing it. This didn’t mean you sacrifice all of your own wants and needs for the other person. However, a “me first” mindset is looking at a loving relationship backwards. You should want to make the other person happy, they should be a big priority in your life. A person is not a product that we buy and then hope we like owning it.

    I learned these things the hard way. 35 years later and I still have deep regrets.

    • Tiger Jerusalem@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 months ago

      I have trouble giving, specially after surviving a long abusive marriage. I divorced years ago but I guess some scars still remains.

      • RBWells@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Give yourself some grace - I noted in my reply that my husband, coming out of an abusive relationship had the string of two years relationships but we are solid, twelve years now and it doesn’t feel like a long time. I had a different experience, though also was coming out of a relationship that had become physically abusive. There are things I have had to unlearn.

        You say you are working with a therapist, that should help, but again, you aren’t broken. All of what you are feeling sounds normal.