I know you mentioned sleeping with some long standing friends just seeking a night of comfort if memory serves.
But did these guys ever start liking you? Did you ever have relationship thoughts about anyone of them? Was it a one time thing or was it on a consistent basis?
I know it's possible to sleep with friends. I've done it. But if it becomes a pattern especially with one of them over an amount of time. Feelings almost always gets in the way.
I've have various different versions of FB's.
I've had a fling with a guy who was only around for a few months and I knew it. I've hooked up with a guy I used to be completely mad about and just kind of didn't feel it anymore but had fun while I could. I've been in 'relationships' that just weren't called relationships, where we didn't sleep with other people and we spent all our time together, but we didn't commit... and when it ended he started sleeping with someone else who he liked and that was fine, because I knew we both didn't want each other for the long term. I've had so many guys come in and out of my life as sexual partners, and every single one of them I am still friends with now. There is no weirdness, my feelings were never hurt and I had a lot of great experiences out of it.
And I could easily go the rest of my life doing that. Having 'flings' with people I meet, but never defining it, and always getting out before it gets too serious.
Maybe that'd just be better.
I've got two things to say about this pattern of thinking;
One, emotions are funny, you can get totally caught up in them real easily. Sure, you're saying I'll never let myself fall in love, but nobody ever let's themselves fall in love, it just happens. You find that person you just can't wait to see and have such great times together and can't imagine yourself without them. Sure, you didn't mean for it to happen, but it did nonetheless.
Two, here's an analogy for you about broken relationships. You wouldn't turn down a night of drinking because it'll eventually lead to a hangover the next day would you? Of course you wouldn't cause I've read your stories. A relationship is like that, you're having a great time while you're in it, however, the more of it you "drink in", the more it'll hurt when you "wake up" the next day. Hopefully you never have to wake up though. You're mom will bounce back, it'll just take time. I really think she wasn't ready to break up with him, that's why he was still living with her, but he was ready and moved on, she basically got dumped and that's really tough. Just help her out with the healing process.
I like your analogy
The trouble is, I honestly don't know WHY the thought of a hangover DOESN'T stop me drinking. I wonder about it all the damn time. Because if I had any will power when it comes to nights out, I seriously wouldn't drink. It's never worth the pain.
I hope she bounces back though, but she's 60, and she can't see herself trying for a relationship again.
I really don't think that all relationships should be looked at as "Well, we didn't end up together forever, so it's a complete failure".
If you grew in some way, learned something about yourself, or about the other person, or about life, in my mind, then much of the time a relationship has been a success.
I think that's a lot easier to say when you're younger than it is when your a woman whose never committed properly in her whole life, and finally did at the age of 50... and now at 60 has found it failed.
She did choose the wrong guy, but the wrong guy for her. It's as you said - he's not a "bad person." But like Erz said, he's an a-hole for not being honest with what he was doing.
Communication issues never mean one person is bad. It just means communication failed. That's all. When communication breaks down, the relationship is over. There's nothing you can do about it, and the only really bad thing about this situation is that your mom thought everything was okay when it wasn't.
You're right. Everyone makes mistakes. People can be stressed for reasons that is not their partner's fault and it trickles home.
The important thing is to talk to each other about it. If you felt you've been a *****e, own up to it. Apologize and promise to be better. And then do it. That's the mark of a person truly ready to be in a relationship.
Sadly, I've seen multiple relationships fall apart because they weren't adult enough to own up to their faults and blame it all on their partner instead. Talk about immature.
She tried talking so much. I mean, this has been going on for a year or more, with her saying she is going to leave him and then he'd do something nice and she'd doubt herself. She tried every which way to get him to see that their relationship needed to change because she wasn't happy, but he just wouldn't step up.
And if it has STAYED her choice, if she'd continued feeling this was the right way to go and not seeing the relationship as a failure because it was ending on good terms, it would have been okay.
He's just really sent her into a state of shock with what he's done, and now it doesn't feel like it's her choice she's actually started acting love sick... she was telling me today she is worried she made the wrong choice. And I have to remind her constantly of all the reasons why she did.
But you're playing the victim there. You're saying you see relationships as someone coming to find you, who will have you for life. You're implying they'd be able to leave you whenever they like.
It's not just about giving your heart to someone. It's also having someone in your corner that you know will be rooting you on no matter what. It's about family. I don't think that fades away as quickly as you think it does.
And I think that's what hurts so much about your almost-stepdad leaving. He was family, and he easily threw that away. But family is as much about attitude as it is about time together.
Family means nothing to me other than my mother. So it's really hard for me to understand all of that.
She's the only person in the whole world who wouldn't leave me. My Dad never bothered. My grandparents never bothered. My Aunt doesn't bother with me any more. Even my god parents don't bother with me any more... In my experience family means absolutely nothing to people, and fades away the minute your out of sight out of mind. Amd i'm not trying to sound sorry for myself I genuinely just think it's just how people are, and i'm fine with it.
But yeah, I do think it'd be a struggle to find someone who wanted me for my whole life... who'd commit to me in that way. And I don't wanna fret over it. I don't wanna spend my whole life constantly dissapointed. I'd rather just accept that this is the way people are, certain people never get the 'forever' kind of love and i'm one of them.
I'm really sorry to hear that.

Love can be a dangerous thing. It can eat you inside. You just feel so depressed; don't want to eat anything; can't concentrate; and it overwhelms you.
Thanks
Yeah that's how she feels at the moment. I just gotta be strong and get her through this.
The hardest thing right now is that she doesn't work. She's managed to sell the house super fast, and is now staring at blank bookshelves all day, or talking and talking and talking about what's happened... no wonder it's making her sick.
But how can I take her mind of it? What can we do that'll get her head to stop swimming in circles?