Urban Dictionary defines a friend with benefits
as “Two friends who have a sexual relationship without being emotionally
involved.”
It is someone you can get away with drunk texting on Friday
night from a bar after your fifth cocktail. It can be someone who you would
never date for various reasons (he rides a motorcycle, he eats crackers in
bed, he’s a Republican, etc., etc.), but whom you nonetheless love getting
naked with on occasion.
There are a lot of advantages to maintaining a friend
with benefits — also known as a fuck buddy or FB, for those who
prefer not to use the “F” word in polite company. They provide company,
they’re pleasant to look at (at least according to you, but probably not
your friends), and they’re good for your mental health. Most importantly, their
very existence in your life all but guarantees you’ll get laid.
But the definition of FB also connotes impermanence. That’s what
makes it so darn exciting, getting the most out of him while he lasts. So what
happens when your interest in you FB finally goes limp?
Getting laid on a regular basis is a good thing. So before you
break it off, take a moment to ask yourself why you’re dumping him. We’ve seen
too many perfectly good FB lost for no good reason.
Is the guy you are dating insisting you get rid of him?
Do you fear growing emotionally involved?
Or have you simply lost interest? Generally speaking, FBs have a
famously short life expectancy before you are onto the next one. (With no hard
feelings, of course.)
Once you’ve determined why you’re dropping your FB, and you are
doing it for the right reasons, you’ll need to come up plan for doing it as
gracefully as possible. Here are four tried and true breakup techniques:
1. The clean break
This usually happens when you’ve entered into a romantic
relationship with another person and the two of you have decided to become
exclusive. Time to dump the FB.
In this situation, it’s polite to let your boy toy know of your
recent change in relationship status. A quick, friendly email will suffice. It
can say something simple like: “Hey, remember that guy I told you about? Well,
we’ve decided to take our relationship to the next level. I just wanted to let
you know.”
Easy, breezy, and polite. And it has the advantage of being
somewhat true. And your FB will understand.
2. The long, mutual goodbye
This is when you just sorta naturally stop seeing one another over
a period of time. Instead of once a month, your liaisons dwindle down to once
every two or three months. Then once every six months. Then once a year. Until
one day it dawns on you that you haven’t spoken to him since last February. And
you haven’t missed him, either.
3. The passive aggressive blow off
This is when the goodbye isn’t mutual. You’re no longer interested
in continuing, but he is. And so he persists in sending you increasingly urgent
texts asking to get together. Rather than simply telling him the truth, you
take the easy way out, responding with vague, non-committal responses. “How’s
it going, sexy?,” he writes.
“Fine” is your unenthusiastic response.
“I’m in your ‘hood” he writes the next day, suggestively.
“That’s cool.”
“Want to get together?” he finally suggests
“Busy. Maybe this weekend. I’ll call you.” And then, of course, you
never do.
This back-and-forth carries on for a few weeks before eventually he
gets the hint and stops messaging you.
4. The straight up break up
Every now and then you may find yourself confronted with a FB who
just won’t leave you alone. You haven’t responded to any of his e-mails in
weeks. You’ve ignored every single phone call, text message, and voicemail for
the past month. Yet he persists.
What’s a boy to do?
Well, you could continue ignoring him until even he eventually
gives up. (Though from our experience this could take weeks, even months.) Or
you could lie and tell him you have a boyfriend. (Though this might simply lead
to another proposition.)
So your best bet is to do the grown-up thing and formally break up.
This means calling him, telling him you’re no longer interested in hooking up,
that his behavior borders on stalking, and that he needs to stop contacting
you. Yes, it will be awkward. Yes, you’ll probably feel like an asshole
afterwards. But sometimes it just needs to be done.
Unlike when you accidentally hook up your ex-BF in a moment of
weakness, getting together with your ex-FB after you’ve broken up is totally
fine. (Assuming he’s not a stalker.)
You may not have spoken to one another in a year or two or even
ten, then one day you run into each other at the grocery store. He’s looking
mighty fine these days. You exchange numbers again. And, come Saturday, the two
of you are rolling around in the sheets for “old time’s sake.”
Perhaps the best part about having an FB (aside from the obvious)
is that you get to call the shots as you see fit. You can break up, get back
together, break up, and get back together again as often as you want, and it’s
no big deal. The real rule is that there are no real rules. So long as you are
both getting what you want, anything goes.
But that goes without saying, right?
Relapses are very common. :)
ReplyDeletethe stories I could tell
DeleteOh really? Well, do tell... :)
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