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I realized it's not about "me losing her"... it's more about "me losing". My ego did not like that. The fact that she dumped me (especially with an email) tricks my mind into thinking she is high-value.
This is good. So if you've figured this out, let's stop being a loser to her and let's stop being a loser from now on.
You lingering around is a continuation of what you don't like. It's no different from angry drivers who honk endlessly and drive faster to catch up with you simply to show you a middle finger. This is nothing but a bad habit.
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I don't want to be in a serious relationship with her since I'm afraid to hurt her when I'll leave.
If you're sure about this and this is your 'final answer', then relax. She knows you're leaving soon. Sure, you're both going to feel a little sting when you leave. . . but you'll both feel that low level of disappointment for the rest of the time you're there if you withhold your instinctive feelings to be together. You're going to have similar feelings with EVERY GIRL you close. There is no right or wrong but there is also nothing particularly special about this situation. Make the decision you want to make now or you'll never make that decision with any other girl in the future. Make the right decision with your old ex girlfriend now or you'll never make the right decision with your future ex's. It's all nothing but a decision. . . and decisions become habits.
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Although my goal is not to fuck or date 30 women concurrently, I would like to keep on approaching.
So if your goal isn't to F 30 women concurrently, what is it? 10? 2? 1? You want to continue to approach to prove to yourself you can? You want to make more 'friends'? Be more specific and just do it.
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I've been thinking about it for a long time but I'm struggling to find a right structure for my reflections and plan to make sense. It's not coming together at all and I'm having some hard times trying to be specific (yet it's a key to my success).
This is one of those few times you can and should be completely selfish. This is about what YOU WANT. Your dreams/goals need only to make sense to you. At least allow your uninhibited self to write your dreams down first. Then if your plans look as if it could hurt others or go against your values, you can revise. Trying to formulate your dreams while mentally revising them is a tough task.
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On another note, I've been thinking about the whole self-sabotage thing. How come I'm able to show an insane motivation one day, and totally lose my aggressiveness (positively speaking) the next day? I'd like to know what truly motivates me before opening a new "chapter" and coming up with a new plan.
Because self sabotage is also a habit. Specific plans supported by specific goals will often allow you to make a sense of it all and push through even during times you instinctively pull yourself back. A marathoner who 'feels' he needs to train one way or another could easily pull himself back on a training day and run 5 miles instead of 8. Without a plan, one distance seems just as good as another and there are plenty of excuses that can be applied. On the other hand, if a planned schedule is formed out of KNOWLEDGE (reading books, speaking with nutritionists, trainers, coaches, etc . . .) the marathoner will know that even on days he doesn't 'feel like it', he needs to follow the schedule that he KNOWS IS CORRECT.