I sent him a note this morning. If I were to speculate I would guess he's blaming himself for the end of the relationship, wondering what he did wrong, wondering how to revive things, and - failing that - certain he's never, ever going to find happiness with a partner. What do you say to staunch that kind of blood flow, that kind of self-inflicted misery?
I return over and over to the notion that pain and loss and death are facts of existence and that I do well if I learn how to sit with the feelings instead of fleeing from them or trying to change them or burying them with external substances. It's hard to be uncomfortable, damn hard, no one likes to be uncomfortable, and alcoholics absolutely abhor anything distasteful.
I'm reminded of a scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail where the knights storm a castle and come under withering fire and after a moment King Arthur starts yelling: "Run away! Run away!" all the knights join him in this chant and they all run away.
I always encourage people to sit with their feelings, take a good, hard look at them, and try to figure out what the lesson is, no matter how painful or objectionable those feelings are, how irritating it is when they say something you don't want to hear. Maybe his lesson is that this isn't a relationship with real potential. Maybe the lesson is he's not ready for any kind of serious relationship right now and - holy shit - maybe he's one of those guys who isn't wired in a way that he'll ever be happy with a long-term partner. Maybe the lesson is that the kind, loving action at this moment is to think of the well-being of another person and not spend so much time thinking of his own damn self, that the right course of action will open up sometime in the future.
Who knows? He doesn't know right now. I sure as shit don't know. All I can do is assure people that if they stay the course, live a kind, stable life, that they will reap untold benefits. I have literally never met a long-timer active in a recovery program who says it hasn't been worth it. Never, not once.
Here's the Toltecs: "When we try to hold on to beliefs that no longer serve us, the result is suffering. Trying to hold on to old beliefs just because they're familiar is easy to do; we prefer the known to the unknown; the status quo that's OK to the new adventure that might fail. But following your heart will never lead you astray."