Worried for my boyfriend
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Worried for my boyfriend
This doesn't really have anything to do with sex or intimacy, it's kinda just about relationships and caring about someone. I hope it's still okay to ask this!
My boyfriend wants to be a police officer when he's older. I love supporting him in everything he does, since I feel support from someone you love is so important. I just can't seem to support this decision he wants to make. I'd be heartbroken if anything happened to him in his line of work. I'd stick with him through thick and thin if something did happen, and I know he's putting his life on the line to save others, but I don't know how I'd live knowing he could get hurt or die on the job. It discourages him that his family doesn't support his decision, so he looks to me for this. He has a few other jobs he wants to pursue, but this is his number one pic. I don't know how to open up my concern without making him feel bad. Call me selfish, but I wouldn't be able to cope with losing the one I truly love.
Any advice on how to tell him how I feel? I don't know whether I'm looking to change his mind or just open his eyes to the dangers he'd be put through each day. I want to be supportive of him, but it's hard when I'm worrying and being scared so much for his safety.
Thanks!
My boyfriend wants to be a police officer when he's older. I love supporting him in everything he does, since I feel support from someone you love is so important. I just can't seem to support this decision he wants to make. I'd be heartbroken if anything happened to him in his line of work. I'd stick with him through thick and thin if something did happen, and I know he's putting his life on the line to save others, but I don't know how I'd live knowing he could get hurt or die on the job. It discourages him that his family doesn't support his decision, so he looks to me for this. He has a few other jobs he wants to pursue, but this is his number one pic. I don't know how to open up my concern without making him feel bad. Call me selfish, but I wouldn't be able to cope with losing the one I truly love.
Any advice on how to tell him how I feel? I don't know whether I'm looking to change his mind or just open his eyes to the dangers he'd be put through each day. I want to be supportive of him, but it's hard when I'm worrying and being scared so much for his safety.
Thanks!
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Re: Worried for my boyfriend
You obviously care for your boyfriend very much, which is awesome! However, trying to discourage him from doing something he loves, especially if he already feels attacked by his family, might frustrate or alienate him. I think you should let him know how you feel by telling him exactly what you just posted (you could even show him this thread!). If he is an understanding guy, which I'll bet he is, he will be empathize with your concerns and most likely be touched that you care for him this much. He has to be free to make his own decisions, but you are free to voice your concerns and let him know how you feel!
"What happens when people open their hearts? They get better." — Haruki Murakami
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- not a newbie
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Thu Aug 07, 2014 10:18 am
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- Awesomeness Quotient: My sense of humour :)
- Primary language: English
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- Location: Canada
Re: Worried for my boyfriend
That's true, I would never want to discourage him, but you're right, it's his choice and if I just try to tell him how I feel, he'll totally understand. He's very stubborn though, so I don't think it'll make much of a difference, but as we get older, it may make him think more.
Thanks Emma!
Thanks Emma!
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Re: Worried for my boyfriend
Can I also ask how far he is from this goal?
If this is not likely something he will even start training for anytime soon, I would consider that when voicing your concerns. After all, if this is not something that literally concerns you anytime soon or could soon, voicing intense, immediate concerns - rather than a softer, more ownership-taking, "I support you, but some of the risks you would be taking do feel scary to me, so I will have to work through thise feelings," -- about how this impacts your life when...well, besides far-future fears, it doesn't, can be a bit iffy.
Supporting dreams is a big deal, but it is not the same as supporting a reality. So, I would just do what you can when you talk about this with him to try not to talk about it in a way that does not square with the present or near future, like the fact that you have no need to fear losing him while he is on a job he has not yet even done the training for (which by all means, will not only be as safe as any other job training, but likely give him excellent and comprehensive information about the risks so he is able to consider them soundly for himself.)
Who knows what will even be going in between the two of you by then (assuming this is at least a bit down the road), but you do know what is happening with you two right now, and that he is looking for some support with a dream and a person he thinks he may want to become. Know what I mean?
I would also add that while certainly, some things pose greater risks to our life or health than others, the tough fact is we could always lose someone we live, and in our lives, that will happen, most often more than once, no matter what someone does or does not do in their lives. Heck, more people are hurt or killed just driving in a car than by doing anything else, and almost everyone does that, some people do it every single day. It sucks to think about and know as a truth that we will lose people we love, it really does, and it may seem more real with something like this, but personally, I will always put in a vote for doing what we can to support the people we love in really being engaged in and passionate about their lives as best we can, since a life not lived in a way where we feel true to ourselves is, IMO, a lot more sad than a loss of life where someone was able to follow their dreams. You say he is stubborn, but honestly, we all should be stubborn in the pursuit of our dreams and goals.
And for sure, giving that kind of support with things that scare us can require we summon up more fearlessness or courage than we may feel at the time. One of the many, many ways love can be mighty challenging.
Know too, that if you are still together when he can pursue this and he choices to, you will get the chance to figure out how you feel about that, what you need to deal, and will, if course, also have the choice to be with someone this way or not who wants to make life choices for themselves you do not feel comfortable with or feel like you can live with.
If this is not likely something he will even start training for anytime soon, I would consider that when voicing your concerns. After all, if this is not something that literally concerns you anytime soon or could soon, voicing intense, immediate concerns - rather than a softer, more ownership-taking, "I support you, but some of the risks you would be taking do feel scary to me, so I will have to work through thise feelings," -- about how this impacts your life when...well, besides far-future fears, it doesn't, can be a bit iffy.
Supporting dreams is a big deal, but it is not the same as supporting a reality. So, I would just do what you can when you talk about this with him to try not to talk about it in a way that does not square with the present or near future, like the fact that you have no need to fear losing him while he is on a job he has not yet even done the training for (which by all means, will not only be as safe as any other job training, but likely give him excellent and comprehensive information about the risks so he is able to consider them soundly for himself.)
Who knows what will even be going in between the two of you by then (assuming this is at least a bit down the road), but you do know what is happening with you two right now, and that he is looking for some support with a dream and a person he thinks he may want to become. Know what I mean?
I would also add that while certainly, some things pose greater risks to our life or health than others, the tough fact is we could always lose someone we live, and in our lives, that will happen, most often more than once, no matter what someone does or does not do in their lives. Heck, more people are hurt or killed just driving in a car than by doing anything else, and almost everyone does that, some people do it every single day. It sucks to think about and know as a truth that we will lose people we love, it really does, and it may seem more real with something like this, but personally, I will always put in a vote for doing what we can to support the people we love in really being engaged in and passionate about their lives as best we can, since a life not lived in a way where we feel true to ourselves is, IMO, a lot more sad than a loss of life where someone was able to follow their dreams. You say he is stubborn, but honestly, we all should be stubborn in the pursuit of our dreams and goals.
And for sure, giving that kind of support with things that scare us can require we summon up more fearlessness or courage than we may feel at the time. One of the many, many ways love can be mighty challenging.
Know too, that if you are still together when he can pursue this and he choices to, you will get the chance to figure out how you feel about that, what you need to deal, and will, if course, also have the choice to be with someone this way or not who wants to make life choices for themselves you do not feel comfortable with or feel like you can live with.
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead
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Re: Worried for my boyfriend
(That sounds way more lecture-y than I intended, so sorry if it comes off that way!)
Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has. - Margaret Mead
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