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Wednesday 13 April 2016

It still hurt like hell when it ended eventhough He wasn't my Boyfriend

When my boyfriend broke up with me, he had a friend tell me he was leaving me. Then he told me himself. He asked me to return the necklace he had given as a gift a few months earlier. I shouted. I cried. I said I was going home to flush the necklace down the toilet.
We were 11.

I was upset and confused. But there had never been any confusion about what we were to each other. From the moment we decided we liked each other, I was his girlfriend. In the three years that we were “a couple” — yes, our romance began in third grade — we held hands a lot and I kissed his cheek twice. When we broke up, it was definitive: You were my significant other, and now you’re not.

Adults should not date like they’re 11. But sometimes I think back on that breakup and how everyone expected me to be devastated. (I remember feeling mostly relieved but sobbing like the jilted girl that I was.) The acceptance of how upset I was — which came simply because I had that official “girlfriend” title — made it easier for me to express and embrace it.

As I’ve grown older, I’ve had quite a few “all intents and purposes boyfriends” without the official title. I dated these men for significant amounts of time; they did boyfriend-like things and behaved in boyfriend-like ways. But we never made a genuine commitment or referred to each other with the label. And sometimes that was fine.

But other times there’s an implied casualness that has made me feel as if I’m not allowed to grieve the relationship, or feel broken, when it ends. After all, if he wasn’t my boyfriend, it didn’t make sense to be that upset, right? But even casual relationships, when they go on long enough, become more serious, regardless of the titles attached. Why was I letting a label — or lack thereof — make my feelings seem invalid?

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