View Full Version : Long Distance Relationships
danielofthesaints
02-16-2012, 07:37 PM
Zoners, have any of you been in one? No matter if it lasted or didn't, do you have any advice on them? I am in one (Dallas-Detroit), and it is going really well but I still could use any advice. Thanks
Meat-O-Rama
02-16-2012, 07:48 PM
I married my long distance girl friend. We both moved back home after college. Her to Los Angeles and me to Phoenix. We would drive or fly out to see each other once every few months. Other than that we talked by phone mostly.(pre cell phone and texting)
My advice? Talk to her every day. Real human to human conversation. Not text, not email. (though those are fine in addition) If you're not going to be available to talk, let her know in advance. Make your time with her as important as if she was in the same city with you. You've got great tools at your disposal like skype that will allow you to video chat for free, use them. Visit in person as much as possible. Meet in between if you have to. Those are the major points I'd emphasize.
CowboyMcCoy
02-16-2012, 07:50 PM
They don't work from my experience.
danielofthesaints
02-16-2012, 08:13 PM
I married my long distance girl friend. We both moved back home after college. Her to Los Angeles and me to Phoenix. We would drive or fly out to see each other once every few months. Other than that we talked by phone mostly.(pre cell phone and texting)
My advice? Talk to her every day. Real human to human conversation. Not text, not email. (though those are fine in addition) If you're not going to be available to talk, let her know in advance. Make your time with her as important as if she was in the same city with you. You've got great tools at your disposal like skype that will allow you to video chat for free, use them. Visit in person as much as possible. Meet in between if you have to. Those are the major points I'd emphasize.
Awesome. So was the relationship long distance throughout the 4 years of college? Thanks for the advice.
danielofthesaints
02-16-2012, 08:16 PM
They don't work from my experience.
From your experience, why didn't it work? I could use this as advice as well. Thanks
Cythim
02-16-2012, 08:55 PM
Zoners, have any of you been in one? No matter if it lasted or didn't, do you have any advice on them? I am in one (Dallas-Detroit), and it is going really well but I still could use any advice. Thanks
My wife and I did it for about 4 years (before we were married). We had rough patches but made it through. I would go visit her whenever I could and we talked daily as well. We usually talked just before bed and when she started getting sleepy I would just start rambling softly until she fell asleep. I would say some of the most cheesily romantic things because eventually I love you can become something you just say. We would send messages back and forth throughout the day but it can be hard to remember she is living her own life and might not be able to return a message right away. It is doable but both people must be committed to the relationship, I had another girlfriend who couldn't last three weeks away.
danielofthesaints
02-16-2012, 09:07 PM
My wife and I did it for about 4 years (before we were married). We had rough patches but made it through. I would go visit her whenever I could and we talked daily as well. We usually talked just before bed and when she started getting sleepy I would just start rambling softly until she fell asleep. I would say some of the most cheesily romantic things because eventually I love you can become something you just say. We would send messages back and forth throughout the day but it can be hard to remember she is living her own life and might not be able to return a message right away. It is doable but both people must be committed to the relationship, I had another girlfriend who couldn't last three weeks away.
How far were you two away from each other? How did you make it through the rough patches? I gain more respect everyday for those who have successfully made it through a LDR because it definitely isnt the easiest of all relationships. Thanks for the advice
Yakuza Rich
02-16-2012, 09:17 PM
From your experience, why didn't it work? I could use this as advice as well. Thanks
Alcohol doesn't help.
Plus you kinda get disillusioned by it.
YR
Meat-O-Rama
02-16-2012, 09:31 PM
No we met while we were in school, and were together for about a year. Then we did the long distance thing for a couple of years.
Cythim
02-16-2012, 09:37 PM
How far were you two away from each other? How did you make it through the rough patches? I gain more respect everyday for those who have successfully made it through a LDR because it definitely isnt the easiest of all relationships. Thanks for the advice
She was in Portland, OR the entire time and I bounced from Virginia to South Korea to Idaho. I was making good money so the plane tickets and phone charges were not a big deal for me. For the rough patches it was just keep talking and try to understand the situation from the other person's point of view. The best thing we did for our relationship was play World of Warcraft together. It was something we could do together and talk about when there was nothing else. It isn't for everyone, but finding something like that to do together over long distance would probably be good for the relationship.
VietCowboy
02-16-2012, 10:17 PM
I've been a several long distance, 2 ended in failure (duh!) and I'm currently in one but I see him most weekends (3 hours apart). We gchat/skype everyday, and some days it can be only 15 minutes if one of us has a lot to do, on other days, it can be 2 hours.
With my previous LD, I would say the one thing that made it fail was I started feeling resentful that it was one-sided. I was paying for the plane tickets to go see him, and always the one calling, not the other way around. The first one bought me a tiffany bracelet for an anniversary even though he knew that I did not care for jewelry and I never wore it. In my current relationship (2+ years, about 9 months LD right now), we take turns driving to see each other, and he makes a lot of effort to call me, cook for me, and we take turns paying for meals out, movies, etc. So, it's more equitable. I will be abroad for a year from summer 2013 - summer 2014, so that will definitely test our relationship.
realtick
02-16-2012, 10:21 PM
I once had a long distance relationship. Depending on the traffic, it took me about 25-30 minutes to get to her house.
Never again.
Cajuncowboy
02-16-2012, 10:25 PM
Long distance relationships?
Well, I HATE AT&T.
Cajuncowboy
02-16-2012, 10:28 PM
I will be abroad for a year from summer 2013 - summer 2014, so that will definitely test our relationship.
Just for a year? Brainpaint's been a broad for many years now. He got a job as the bearded lady in the circus. :eek: :D
Back atcha BP! ;)
Hoofbite
02-16-2012, 10:28 PM
Depends on length. Short term can work, longer likely not to. I went through it once, didn't work.
Honestly, there's no advice anyone can really give you to make it work.
Every relationship is different.
I would offer you this though. Expect the worst, hope for the best and thank your lucky stars if you get through it and make it work.
The30YardSlant
02-16-2012, 11:26 PM
I did it for four months during undergrad and that was only because she graduated a semester before me and went back home for a teaching job. I hated it, but we had already been together three years and were engaged so we made it work for the limited amount of time we knew it would be.
Personally, I feel like a relationship that isn't based around physically spending time with someone will ultimately fail. Short term is doable if you are already close, long term almost always ends poorly.
casmith07
02-16-2012, 11:28 PM
I was in one my first couple of years at the military academy. It ended, but it's definitely something that's possible if you have money to travel and are willing to put forth the effort.
Sam I Am
02-16-2012, 11:45 PM
I met my wife at a Dallas Mavericks game in 2003. (she has NBA connections, and my company sponsored the Mavericks) She is from NY and obviously at the time I lived in D/FW.
We kept in touch (almost daily) and I happen to be traveling to NY once a month on business. When I went to NY she would always come see me and we would hangout or whatever.
We got closer and closer and one month I had to work in Chicago instead of NY. She flew to Chicago and we hung out. (that's when I knew it was getting serious)
Anyhow. Around Oct 2004 she said I should move to NY. I laughed and we talked about it. On December 3rd 2004 I applied for a job in NY that I thought was interesting. I got it, resigned my position in Dallas and set my last day to be New Years Eve 2004 and started my new job Monday Jan. 10th, 2005 in New York.
I married my wife on a beach on August 19th 2007 in Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands.
Can it work out? Yes it can. Though that isn't always the case.
Sam I Am
02-16-2012, 11:46 PM
I was in one my first couple of years at the military academy. It ended, but it's definitely something that's possible if you have money to travel and are willing to put forth the effort.
This!
My company paid my travel and that is what made it possible.
Bigdog
02-17-2012, 12:20 AM
My wife and I did it for three years. We were on the opposite ends of the state at that time going to school. It was tough but also a blessing in that when we saw each other were not getting bored with each other if she was there every day. Some of my friends saw there girlfiends everyday and there relationships did not last. If was meant to be then it will work itself out.
theogt
02-17-2012, 12:23 AM
Once. Didn't work.
cowboyeric8
02-17-2012, 02:07 AM
I'm currently trying to get in one. Though it is only an hour (Huntsville to Houston). She is really hung up on the distance and it isn't a problem for me. We are very busy during the week and both free during the weekends so we could easily see each other. But she can't get over it. So oh well.
big dog cowboy
02-17-2012, 03:30 AM
I did a 800 mile one for about 6 months before she moved to my little slice of heaven. A little over a year later we got married. The only downside now is I have to make that trip annually so we can spend either Thanksgiving or Christmas with the In-Laws every year.
CowboyMike
02-17-2012, 06:23 AM
I've been in two long distance relationships. One worked. One didn't.
After high school my then girlfriend moved an hour away and we tried to keep it going. We grew apart, had trust issues, and eventually she cheated on me.
My current girlfriend and I are completely different stories. We first met down here, and were acquaintances/friends. She moved back home about 1000 miles away for family reasons, but we stayed in touch. Over text, IM, e-mail, and phone conversations, we learned a lot about each other and grew much closer. It got to the point where we decided to give a relationship a go, as we had both fallen for each other. Eventually she moved back down here and we've been happy ever since.
I honestly just think that if it is meant to be, it is meant to be. The biggest difference between the two with me was trust. If you can trust her and she trusts you, it shouldn't be a problem. Don't start thinking things up in your mind that she probably isn't doing. If you let each other live your own lives while keeping some sort of togetherness as well, it is good. Don't suffocate her with calls and texts and don't try to keep tabs on her all the time. But do talk at least once daily and try to meet up in person as often as you can.
CowboyMcCoy
02-17-2012, 02:48 PM
From your experience, why didn't it work? I could use this as advice as well. Thanks
OK... it's tough to be away from someone and communicate like in short-distance relationship. You can't be there for each other and it's only human nature to get "lonely". Once that happens, it's usually a game of hide and seek. But that's my experience. That, and no procreating.
BraveHeartFan
02-17-2012, 03:02 PM
It looks like, from what I've read here, that we've got some great examples of people who made it work and that's awesome.
I'll agree 100% that it's possible if the two people involved have the time and want to put forth the effort to put in the great deal of time and work it takes to make a relationship like this work. I do believe, without a doubt, it's a lot more work and effort than even a regular relationship, which are hard work to begin with.
From what I've seen personally they don't generally work out well. I've never personally been in one, and I know that I likely wouldn't even attempt one.
I'll be honest in that I'm very much into the physical part of a relationship. If I can't be around, touch, and all that stuff then my interest in the relationship, and the person, is going to fade very very quickly.
Now that's just me, that certainly doesn't apply to everyone. But from what I've seen from friends and family who've tried it the amount of work you have to put in, and the absolute 100% trust you just have to be willing to unconditionally give, is usually just far to much for most people.
It's tough to not have the person you're with around for long periods of time and then you've got friends and stuff going out and you either have to stay home alone or you go out and try to have fun but eventually you become very needy in those enviroments when everyone else is with someone.
It's a tough road my man. Best of luck to you.
CowboyMcCoy
02-17-2012, 03:04 PM
It looks like, from what I've read here, that we've got some great examples of people who made it work and that's awesome.
I'll agree 100% that it's possible if the two people involved have the time and want to put forth the effort to put in the great deal of time and work it takes to make a relationship like this work. I do believe, without a doubt, it's a lot more work and effort than even a regular relationship, which are hard work to begin with.
From what I've seen personally they don't generally work out well. I've never personally been in one, and I know that I likely wouldn't even attempt one.
I'll be honest in that I'm very much into the physical part of a relationship. If I can't be around, touch, and all that stuff then my interest in the relationship, and the person, is going to fade very very quickly.
Now that's just me, that certainly doesn't apply to everyone. But from what I've seen from friends and family who've tried it the amount of work you have to put in, and the absolute 100% trust you just have to be willing to unconditionally give, is usually just far to much for most people.
It's tough to not have the person you're with around for long periods of time and then you've got friends and stuff going out and you either have to stay home alone or you go out and try to have fun but eventually you become very needy in those enviroments when everyone else is with someone.
It's a tough road my man. Best of luck to you.
Good post.
dreghorn2
02-17-2012, 03:45 PM
I was in a relationship where i met a person online who lived 3600 miles from my home town -- and in a different country.
We communicated via e-mail and phone for almost a year before i met her physically for the first time -- we were married 27 days later.
That was 15 years ago, we are still married, and i have never been happier.
Life is a strange and wonderful thing.
CowboyMcCoy
02-17-2012, 07:59 PM
I was in a relationship where i met a person online who lived 3600 miles from my home town -- and in a different country.
We communicated via e-mail and phone for almost a year before i met her physically for the first time -- we were married 27 days later.
That was 15 years ago, we are still married, and i have never been happier.
Life is a strange and wonderful thing.
Wedding photos?
chip_gilkey
02-17-2012, 08:43 PM
I once had a long distance relationship. Depending on the traffic, it took me about 25-30 minutes to get to her house.
Never again.
:laugh2:
jnday
02-17-2012, 09:06 PM
Me and my wife are in a long distance relationship . She is back in the bedroom watching her tv . I am up front in the den watching mine . I wouldn't suggest it . Anything over 50 feet , is too much trouble . As you grow older , you will know know what I'm talking about .
casmith07
02-17-2012, 09:45 PM
I met my wife at a Dallas Mavericks game in 2003. (she has NBA connections, and my company sponsored the Mavericks) She is from NY and obviously at the time I lived in D/FW.
We kept in touch (almost daily) and I happen to be traveling to NY once a month on business. When I went to NY she would always come see me and we would hangout or whatever.
We got closer and closer and one month I had to work in Chicago instead of NY. She flew to Chicago and we hung out. (that's when I knew it was getting serious)
Anyhow. Around Oct 2004 she said I should move to NY. I laughed and we talked about it. On December 3rd 2004 I applied for a job in NY that I thought was interesting. I got it, resigned my position in Dallas and set my last day to be New Years Eve 2004 and started my new job Monday Jan. 10th, 2005 in New York.
I married my wife on a beach on August 19th 2007 in Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands.
Can it work out? Yes it can. Though that isn't always the case.
Interestingly, Sam, the Grand Cayman idea has been floated between me and mine.
CCBoy
02-18-2012, 01:48 AM
Interestingly, Sam, the Grand Cayman idea has been floated between me and mine.
Although I would not be able to attend, I hope that Ann and I will receive an invitation...
dreghorn2
02-18-2012, 10:20 AM
Wedding photos?
Married by the Clark County Marriage Commissioner of Las Vegas Nevada who, following a small gratuity, will be happy to snap photos of any newly married couple that graces his office.
LOL.. yes we have a few, not to be shared here of course, i can only imagine the ridicule and scorn that would follow that post -- :p: :eek:
CowboyMcCoy
02-18-2012, 03:08 PM
Married by the Clark County Marriage Commissioner of Las Vegas Nevada who, following a small gratuity, will be happy to snap photos of any newly married couple that graces his office.
LOL.. yes we have a few, not to be shared here of course, i can only imagine the ridicule and scorn that would follow that post -- :p: :eek:
Nah, not here bro. :)
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