Keeping boyfriend as consolation prize | The Salt Lake Tribune
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Keeping boyfriend as consolation prize
First Published Feb 17 2012 01:01 am • Last Updated Feb 17 2012 01:01 am

Dear Carolyn • I have a long-standing crush on a co-worker. He would even say I had an emotional affair of sorts with him. Eventually I broke up with Boyfriend, thinking this would allow me to pursue a real, honest relationship with Crush (nothing physical ever happened, but I wanted it to). Bad timing: My crush had just met someone new. Eventually Boyfriend and I got back together, but now Crush is single again. I still think I could have something with my crush, but I don’t want to take the chance of losing my boyfriend if it turns out my crush doesn’t share my feelings. Am I a terrible person for, essentially, keeping my boyfriend as the consolation prize?

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Dear Boyfriend or crush? • You aren’t the first person, not even close, who has stuck with a snug old relationship while waiting to see if a better offer comes through. So I’ve had many chances to wonder whether people who do what you’re doing ever flip the roles in their minds. Have you asked yourself how you’d like to be, unbeknownst to you, your boyfriend’s "consolation prize"? Break up, grow up, clean up.

Dear Carolyn • I was taught that it was a bad idea to date a man who was going through a divorce, especially if he was newly separated. He’s on the rebound, you’ll get your heart broken, etc. I’ve always considered it sound advice. Now it seems every newly single man I know has jumped right into a new relationship. As a divorced 40-something, are my options: (a) be forever alone, or (b) snatch up some lonely, recently separated man who loves me not for me but because I was there when he needed someone?

Dear D. • I was taught that it’s a bad idea to make decisions about individuals based on generalizations. Some people do look for new relationships to ease the pain of old ones, yes, and you’re wise to keep an eye out for those. If you believe it’s morally wrong to date someone who is separated, then I won’t try to talk you out of it. But if your only concern is the volatility of people on the rebound, then I suggest the person, not the person’s status, is the more reliable source on that.

Carolyn Hax’s column runs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.



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