the reason we broke up will still exist where it started, somewhere within her, because what happened was not worth breaking up over absent that pain she admits she harbors down deep in her soul
I respect and appreciate your honesty, Mud. Truly. I'll just carry on bluntly telling you a thought or two which, of course, you can evaluate on your own...all are discardable. And despite how firmly I express all this, I'm not thinking it matters. The big ole universe rolls us along with it and we have our age-old human arguments. I'd still want you in my lifeboat.
What I hear are two things:
#1 You declaring repeatedly that her personal choice to break up is invalid, or not justified. That's not respectful. (Prostrating yourself by calling yourself an "idiot" doesn't provide any insight into what you're actually doing--refusing to respect her autonomy.) Not just pretend respect, but the kind of respect for another you can feel all the way inside. You can dismiss another's experience, even with the most detailed explanations, but that has consequences. She sensed your desire to override her choice. Her No. To her, that WAS worth breaking up over. You can't decide that for her. You can judge it all you want to console yourself, but that doesn't make this thought pattern right or good for you. It won't help to decide she was just wrong because she's broken.
#2 You identifying that she has pain in her soul may be accurate. But who anointed you the Certified Healer of This Particular Soul? Maybe it's not your place. Ouch, I know. (I was Florence Nightingale on steroids in a couple romances so I'm being brutal hoping to spare you a repeat.)
Back to the pouting. Again, I truly respect that you're honest about what it really was. You wanted intimacy and she did not, hence you sulked and thus made her "pay for it" for hours.
Raht thar. That's entitlement. You acknowledge too that this happened more than once.
I can't identify with you this time, but with her (easy enough). If someone pressures me even for a kiss I'm not wanting, I'm soon outta there. It's the pressure. Cajoling, begging, remonstrating or retreating in a childish way are all pressure, but you've minimized those behaviors nonstop with cute euphemistic vocab like "pouting" or saying you were being "dumb." Double respect that you fessed up. When a man pressures a woman in that way...it is related to everything about women's experience in this real world that will cause many to retreat and lose trust. Even if you'd never force or rage, there's still an edge to it, of entitlement. And I know, without doubt, that you didn't WANT to convey this and ruin your hopes. You just...did.
If you ("you" hypothetical man,not Mud) are going to badger me and sulk when I refuse, I won't want to be with you any more. Period. My body belongs entirely and without exception to me. I do not owe any man anything physical, even a spouse. That shared gift has to be utterly voluntary and every time. (I'm preaching to myself because in some relationships including my last one...I forgot this truth about myself. When I remember it, I'm okay again. Not angry --I know what this culture teaches men, it's hardly their fault when they can't see it-- nor a victim, just clear. I value my inherent freedom and being pressured is bondage.) That clarity feels more beautiful than anything.
Yielding to pressure isn't freedom. It may be preached or dogma-ed that way as "submission", but it isn't good. It's not good for anyone in a relationship, when that is the ask and the way it's delivered. It doesn't look like, sound like, or feel like freedom. It feels like being trapped and suffocated under expectations, no matter how many rose petals initially get one there. You need to understand that spirit. Admire it. Yield to it. Respect it and not just in lip service. Not worship, respect.
I'm hammering away on this because I like you, Mud. I've benefited from your attitudes at times, and know your desire to be protective and a helper/healer is the flip side of your unrecognized male entitlement. Which is cultural, permeates our world, and not your fault. (Once you learned about it and owned it, then you have a whole bright amazing future that may involve no rose petals at all.)
This stuff is really hard. I guess I keep challenging you because you'd make a GREAT feminist if the light came on for you after reading deeply about it. You'd find your own liberation, too. That would be amazing, but I tend to go on hopeless crusades too. So I don't expect it!
Plus, I'm fired up about an incredible woman's funeral today. Aretha.
Likely, we'll never fully understand or agree with each other, Mud, and I'm not humble when I talk about feminism. What it truly is. But that's okay.
In the hope something good might grow for you, I offer this tiny seed anyway.
Hugs
Hops