In other words, when you're being condescending. That's not respect, and it isn't love either because you're not empathic enough to understand why the other person is doing what he or she is doing.
Love means different things to different people. I think that love in general, no matter what the relationship is like, involves
wanting the best for the other person. How that manifests depends on the relationship, whether parent/child, friend/friend, husband/wife, whatever.
But a
healthy relationship involves a lot of empathy, yes.
Hmm. I have to take that chance. As long as she still cares I have to take that chance. "Relationships aren't meant to be easy." I remember Erz telling me that a good few threads back.
Well, relationships are never smooth sailing because you have this other person with their own needs and wants.

But why make it harder than you have to?
Chances are I'll be leaving Bangladesh after a year and she'll be staying for a few before joining me abroad. Whatever the case is, I think it's very early to be talking about marriage and all that. No one seems to agree with that. We've only just began going out and figuring ourselves out. Why jump into those kind of conclusions right away? Do I want this to be serious? Yes. Does she? Even more so. But is it serious yet? That needs time to be decided.
What is so wrong with that??
If you want it to be serious, then it IS serious. I don't think you need to be shacking up or planning marriage to be a serious couple. Being a serious couple means that you want to stick it out together long-term.
It's sad that most of this seems so much like your experiences with your ex.

maybe we could learn from it and make sure the same mistakes aren't repeated?
Tell me more about what you mean by "self-assured" ? Assured in terms of what exactly?
We were mostly figuring out our social tendencies - I needed to accept I was an introvert, and he needed to accept he was an extrovert with social anxiety. That's what I mean about self-assured. You just need to accept who you are and believe that's A-OK. That if I want to go out by myself because I know he won't enjoy the experience, it doesn't make him a bad partner.
Even when you're together and "serious", when you're insecure you can still worry about the other person wanting to leave you or thinking they'll find someone "better." This is the part I'm most concerned about for you, because of your educational inferiority complex. What if she meets someone at work who's an Ivy League grad and makes a lot of money? What if he's Mr. Perfect on paper and you know her parents would love him? Do you KNOW that she'd stick by you? You can't "think" or "hope" or "believe." You have to
know that she'd reject any possible advances by him and choose you instead.
I worried about that a lot in my first relationship, because it was my first relationship and I knew I wasn't his "first choice" or even "his type." Oh yeah, I worried about that once!

When you see his now-wife, it's obvious...I'm still befuddled how he found me attractive at all in the first place! She is physically the very opposite of me.

I think part of my insecurity was fixed by finding someone who likes me for my own assets, as it were.
We also just weren't that compatible in terms of lifestyle. Status was really important to him and he liked showing off and have a jet-set lifestyle (although I think that was also part of him overcompensating for his insecurity then), whereas I don't like calling attention to myself. He also spent a few years after college living out of a suitcase, flying all over the place for his job. That would not work for me at all. I'm a homebody. I'm sure a very understanding couple could make it work, but it would be
extremely difficult.
And you wouldn't really know if you'd be compatible without getting to know her better and spending much more time with her.
Perhaps so. But I'm just sick and tired of hearing people pull the "oh don't judge me coz you don't know me. I may be doing something wrong and unethical according to you but
I have a valid reason for it." No son, you don't. You're a messed up wreck who's hiding behind your own ego. Grow up. It's not everyone else's fault -- it's yours. ... is what I'd say to them. But of course, by making an informed judgement. The word itself is harsh. Perhaps "understanding" if it had a condescending connotation
Huh, nobody's ever said that to me. I listen to people's troubles and then offer options and pep talks. Making people feel empowered makes them a lot more agreeable than making them feel judged.
As I so awkwardly stated in the Singles Valentines thread, my wife recently made the last step to leaving me. A week ago, she told me she had started to see someone else. Just about two months ago, she kicked me out of the house (we lived with her parents). I thought that we going to try and start over, mostly because that's what I remember her telling me. We would date like a fresh couple. We would rediscover the passion. Well she'd been difficult to meet with. She is busy. Training to be an EMT. I wanted to give her space. Then I find out she somehow managed to find the time to meet someone else, go to the movies, and make it "a thing" before breaking the news to me. She told me they hadn't had sex yet, but her telling me she was seeing someone else, in my mind, was code for "now that I've told you, we're going to **** each other's brains out." I think of that line from High Fidelity. Allow me to paraphrase: "No one is having better sex than they are having in my head."
She left me because I'm depressed and she thinks she doesn't make me happy. I think that's generous of her. She really means "you're too depressed to support me the way I need you too." And it's true I've been depressed (undiagnosed) for at least a couple of years now. She's wrong if she thinks she doesn't think she makes me happy. She was the last grip I'd been holding on to after all the disappointments we've both been thru.
But it's true. I thought I'd been doing my best but I think it is reality: I've been so wrapped up in my own misery for so long that she couldn't stand me bringing her down anymore. Of course now that I have the thought of her not being an integral part of my life until the day I die, and, now that I have the thought of her being with another man, my depression has hit an all time low. I have never in my entire life felt so low. I think I've damaged things too much to ever repair them with her, and how the **** am I supposed to compete with the chemical rush of a new lover? But I just want her back. I'm made an appointment with my psychiatrist, whom I've been seeing for my ADD for nearly 20 years, and I'm hoping I can get on some depression medications. The ex wants to see me get better, but I think I'm hopeless without meds. I've gone as far as I can go on my own. My brain doesn't work right. It just ****ing kills me that I'm only addressing my mental health after I ruined the best thing that's ever happened to me.
I don't know what kind of advice I'm seeking here. Honestly, I think I might have just needed to type that out. Believe me, it kills me to be typing out a sob story into a relationship thread on a superhero message board, but I just had to do it.
Depression can be extremely self-centered, but it's not your fault. You don't mean to. It's just the way the disease works.
At the same time, I don't think you can blame your relationship troubles just on your depression. It's hard being with someone with depression, yes, but if they've already checked out, it's just another reason. If she wanted to stick it out with you, she would have. But she chose not to. It's unfortunate, and the way she went about it is dishonest, but it is what it is.
I hope you get the help you need and that things start looking up. Relying on meds is not a bad thing. If you need it, you need it. You have to take care of yourself first.