There are many ways to test a relationship, and I had no interest in any of them. But life happens. You find yourself in situations you never expected.
He didn’t walk out, get thrown out or wander off to ‘find himself’. My other half just chose to live halfway around the world (yes, I have measured it) for a once-in-a-lifetime job.
A few years ago, a magazine article put it bluntly: “With our global culture, expanding professional opportunities, and technological advances…long-distance relationships are here to stay.”
My long-distance living arrangement was unexpected and I wasn’t exactly happy about it. My husband and I have lived apart before, but never for this long and this far away. And not since we’d had children.
So I dug back into Google archives to find that magazine article and remind myself why the author said this could work. One of the reasons hit home: it helps you define and redefine your core ‘values and personal sense of self’.
Now you’re talking my language. I’m all about teaching others how to define who they are and how to express it. I never imagined a year and a half away from my husband would help me do that for myself.
He went alone because I chose to stay behind to let my eldest son finish secondary school. While it made sense on paper, I admit to having a sinking feeling when he said “yes” to the offer.
However, just a few months into the new arrangement when people started asking me, with caring and sometimes worried expressions, “how are you holding up?”, I surprised myself with my reaction. I realised I was happy.
Top Comments
My partner just got back after spending just under 2 years overseas. I missed him heaps, but I also didn't find it hard. Like you, people would ask me if I was ok, and I wasn't sure what to say because people seem to think there's something wrong if you are fine.
I actually think it's the opposite - if you have a stable, strong, trusting relationship, time away will be easy, it's when jealousy or other issues are present that it will be hard.