Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Their relationsh­ip rut is headed straight for the aisle

- CAROLYN HAX Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, DC 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com

DEAR CAROLYN: My boyfriend and I graduated from high school as the pandemic hit, and instead of going to university with all the uncertaint­y about classes, we moved in together and started working full time.

Everyone was working from home, and it felt like a dream job, but now that everyone’s back to their normal lives, I’ve been stuck at home, and I feel isolated and lonely.

We have drifted from our friend group and don’t see them on a regular basis. I feel out of touch and have started to feel depressed. I gained weight and became more solitary than I previously was.

Nowadays I work from home, watch TV, make dinner, wait for my boyfriend to come home, we watch TV together and I start the day over again. He works 10-hour days, after which he just wants to watch TV and rest. When we do go out, it’s for grocery shopping and other errands and we argue all the time. I’ve been feeling neglected, and it feels like I’m not a priority anymore despite multiple conversati­ons.

So finally, three weeks ago, he took me out to dinner at a nice place and we had a wonderful time! The weekend after that, he bought me flowers and scones from a local bakery, and I started to feel like he was making me a priority again. I was so happy and feeling better about myself and our relationsh­ip, I had almost pushed all my doubts out of my mind. Then last weekend he proposed, and I said yes.

Now I’m worried I just said yes because there wasn’t a reason to say no, the relationsh­ip is “good” and “safe,” and breaking up and moving out would be messy and hard.

I know he would be a great father and husband one day, and he’s a very sweet and a genuinely caring person. He is the type of guy you would want to marry.

Am I doing this for the wrong reasons?

— Worried

DEAR READER: I think you know you are without my having to say it. “Good” and “safe” are neither if you’re lonely, depressed, isolated, overeating, out of touch and deep in a repetitive domestic rut.

He may be as great a person as you say, and even as good a match for you as you’ve told yourself he is. You trust him, you respect him, and when you voiced your ongoing concerns about feeling neglected, he listened to you and made “genuinely caring” changes. I receive distress calls every day from marriages built on less.

But that doesn’t mean you have enough to build on, or are anywhere near ready to build.

That’s because you have not made yourself enough of a priority, lapsing into dependency on the quality of one person’s attention. No mate can be everything, for anyone.

Your soul is screaming out for more — more purpose, more meaning, more challenges, more friends, more connection­s, more interestin­g things to see, learn, do. The post-pandemic realities have changed, but your mid-pandemic choices have not. You’re a fly in 2020 amber.

Some of this you will need to say to your fiancé. That you appreciate how attentive he has been, for starters. That you realize now it wasn’t all on him that you felt so neglected. That losing touch with friends and working from home and cycling from job to TV to sleep is not healthy for people who’ve barely cracked open their 20s — or for anyone, really. That it hasn’t been healthy for you. That you would like to start a running conversati­on on ways to pull yourself, and each other, out of this rut.

But some of this you will have to reckon with fully on your own. A daily commitment to building a fuller life.

This will be hard and take time, but stay with it, and resist the lure of binary thinking. You’ve framed this as good/safe vs. messy/ hard without giving creative, scary, bold, new or different a chance. Call your old friends. Take a class or join a recreation league and make new friends. Dance. Sing. Make art. Volunteer. See a doctor about your depression. Look for an in-person job. Research and visit colleges.

Ask yourself what roads lead out of your comfort zone.

Ask yourself what you’d rather be doing tonight, tomorrow, next week.

Ask yourself whom you admire. How did they get there?

Think of when you last felt confident, happy and strong. Who was close to you then, and can you catch up with this person now?

If your response to all these prompts is to feel emotionall­y paralyzed, then cut your to-do list to these: 1. Primary care appointmen­t for the depression. 2. One baby step, one micro-change, in defiance of your rut. A walk outside after work? One call to one friend? This path makes you stronger, too.

Your relationsh­ip will either adapt and improve as you take better care of yourself, or you will grow strong enough to address the fact that it hasn’t kept up. Either one beats living your life by default.

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 ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is) ??
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)

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