The other day my friend "Jane"mentioned that a mutual friend "Don" (who she had been seeing) had broken off with her, via text, in favor of an old girlfriend.
My first thoughts contained words that are really not fit for print (in
this venue anyway) but honestly, this is not the first time I’ve heard of this,
nor I am sure, will it be the last. As
dismayed as I am by this heartless way of dismissing someone who has been at
least important enough to swap bodily fluids with, it did bring to my attention
the idea breaking ups and how the awkward (at best) situation has evolved in just
my lifetime.
My personal history of dating, the Age I refer to as YES
(young, experimental and single) lasted almost exactly twenty years. I had my fair share of breakup scenarios. Below are just a few examples that come to
mind:
1.
In person is probably the oldest form of
breaking up with someone (unless cave people used drawings to signify their
intent). In person, has always been the
classiest (in my opinion) way to breakup with someone but has recently become a
bit old fashioned what with all of the technology at our finger tips. Why suffer the mortification, risking tears
and a public scene when merely sitting at your computer and sending off a
message might achieve the same goal? How
someone might breakup in person varies, of course. There are several ways I can think of:
a)
The productive conversation. The most grown up and decent way to dump
someone. The productive conversation
involves being realistic, not unkind and not leaving the door open with “we
should get together sometime.” True
closure. This usually takes two mature
people. In my experience, this is a
fairly uncommon practice
b)
The sprawling conversation. You know the kind… a lot of rehashing history
and back peddling are involved… as are tears.
A common phrase used in this particular method is “its not you; It’s me.”
It is painful but closure can be
achieved.
c)
The screamfest which manifests when someone has done
something so egregious (i.e. catching the person cheating red handed) that
neither of the previously mentioned approaches are a consideration. I once threw a beer in the face of someone
(at a bar) who drunkenly admitted he cheated on me. At the time, the bonus of this was that it
was February in Boston and he didn’t have a coat with him. Now, of course, I know he probably deserved
it but wish I had just turned around and left, with him knowing I was the
classier of the two of us.
2.
The “Dear John/Jane” Letter. Before
the advent of electricity and all of the technology that now allows us to breakup
with someone via the click of a button, the Dear John/Jane letter was THE way
to dump someone – especially if your guy was unlucky enough to be at war. Nowadays I imagine that this mode of breakup
has essentially gone out of style. It
may be primarily used by kids still in grade school. My personal Dear Artemis letter was in the
form of a note being passed hand to hand by classmates in my senior English
class. You know that every kid along the
way read the note, adding humiliation to the mix.
3.
The disappearing act. This particular maneuver has been achieved in
a number of ways.
a)
The most common is when the guy never calls
again. You think he will call; you have
no indication that he won’t and then he just doesn’t. Back in the days before cell phones, it was
particularly difficult, because if you liked the guy, you were sort of made a
prisoner in your own home because God forbid you miss his call because you had
to run to the store for an emergency toilet paper run or something. These days, we have cell phones which make us
seem a little less desperate (if only to ourselves).
b)
I’ve also been stood up a few times… okay, maybe more than a few times. Most of us have experienced the humiliating
stand up. We agree to meet, spruce up
nicely, go to the predetermined location and then wait… and wait… and
wait. They never show up and you are
forced to make some completely lame excuse to the bartender or waiter about how
you must have got the date or time wrong.
I’ve actually received a few pity drinks that way (and actually a date
as well!).
c)
My favorite in the “disappearing act” category
is leaving the country without telling me.
Yes, it’s happened… at least twice (not at the same time!). Both men were foreign; so in fairness, they
were returning to their mother countries, however, neither of them gave me any
indication that they would be leaving anytime soon. This particular breakup stung a bit because
it seemed so premeditated. There are a
lot of logistics to moving, never mind moving out of the country, and yet
neither "man" ever let on that they were relocating.
Both just carried on as usual and then suddenly there were no calls and
some sorry roommate was answering their door telling me that Ian or Paddy had
moved “back home.”
4.
The telephone call. Using the telephone to breakup with someone,
rather than face-to-face has, I’m guessing, been used since about ten minutes
after Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone… maybe even by him. Personally, I’ve been dumped via telephone
more than any other way.
5.
The email.
I started using email regularly in 1994 while I worked at MIT. I remember shortly after learning how to use
it, I got my first breakup via email. I
was outraged! How dare the guy email me
instead of breakup with me in person or via telephone (the only two acceptable
forms of communicating such personal news as far as I was then concerned). Of course, two years later, it was me using
email to send the bad news to a guy I was seeing.
Now that I am married, the likelihood of me being broken
with via the disappearing act, the telephone call or the email, is highly
unlikely, although I suppose not impossible. Supposedly Britney Spears broke up with Kevin
Federline via a text. I’d like to give my husband Emmett more credit
than that though should we ever be unlucky enough to face a breakup. It’s more likely one of us would try the
“it’s not you, it me,” line in a productive conversation.
Since getting married, I’ve heard dating nightmare stories
from friends and family about people casually
breaking up in the most callous and removed ways possible. Two such ways are:
6.
The text.
I imagine those who breakup via
text normally conduct their relationship primarily over text (i.e.
sexting). I don’t know if that is true,
it just seems to make sense. Why else
would someone just text you a breakup message when you can email, write a
letter, disappear or call? This seems
like a very emotionally removed (and immature) way to breakup with someone…. Write
a text and send the breakup message out into the universe. Problem solved. No conversation necessary.
7.
The Facebook/Twitter. The meanest/most ruthless/most public way of
dumping someone. This way of breaking up
has been written about ad-nauseam recently (Wired magazine has even published a
“how to” article on it!). People are
posting breakup notices on Facebook or
alerting people to their intent by updating their profile to indicate that they
are no longer in a relationship with so and so.
Facebook may be slightly less offensive than Twitter… but that would
depend on how efficiently someone used their 140 character limit.
I have to wonder with Facebook and Twitter becoming a more
common way to dump people, what will be next?
Will there be (or maybe there is already?) a smart phone application where
you just hit a button and the dumpee is notified via a pop up that they are
officially single once again?
Everyone knows that breaking up is hard to do; it is
unbelievably awkward (but sometimes necessary) to have to tell someone that
they are not welcome in your life any longer.
I do believe how you decide to breakup with someone is a testament to
how mature and unselfish you are. If you
are able to put your own discomfort aside and productively discuss the
situation, it speaks volumes to the kind of person you
are. If you decide to Twitter
someone out of your life, well then that also speaks volumes (to everyone who
follows you!) about what kind of an insensitive jackass you are. The question is, when it comes to breakups
are you a talker or a Twitterer?
Postscript: Today that guy Don who broke up with my friend Jane told me that the relationship he had foresaken Jane for had fallen apart and he now felt bad about the way he had text-dumped her. Ironic, no?
Postscript: Today that guy Don who broke up with my friend Jane told me that the relationship he had foresaken Jane for had fallen apart and he now felt bad about the way he had text-dumped her. Ironic, no?
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