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The thing is, I have generally been great to her, and she knows it. This girl literally cannot believe her luck, and she persistently says just as much to me. I know I'm blowing my own horn, but she often states how the way I make her feel, and the things I do to her, are completely new to her. She always claims how she cannot believe or understand why she feels the way she does around me, almost like I've put her under a magic spell. I've got her to do things she has never done before. The thing is, she was independent, and was a classic outgoing party girl. A feisty tigress on top of that(who struggles to get along perfectly with many people), but I've tamed her, and she's now smitten. So much so, that she never wants to leave my side. She fights for every minute to be with me. Furthermore, she lost her room and her job, and I'm the reason she has now found a new home and job, so she wants to be all over me.
Wow. That's actually fairly scary. Are you one of the first "real" loves she's ever had? This sounds a lot like first true love syndrome, where the girl over-idealizes the relationship which puts tremendous pressure on you.
Read through your last post about her and look at the things she's saying. It's like you are the source of all of her happiness. The God's spoke, and there you were, custom crafted to solve all of her problems and bring her to the life she always wanted.
Combine that with the obsessive need to spend any time she can with you, at the sacrifice of any other social activities, and it starts looking like you are the one and only true source of happiness she has. This means any time you spend not with her is robbing her of her only true happiness time.
If it were me, which it's not, so TAKE THIS WITH A GRAIN OF SALT PLEASE, I would exit stage left. I have ended relationships like this before, and it always results in tears, proclamations about how her life is ruined if you leave her, etc.. etc...
It's a hard call to make, I know. Being idolized is a hard train to get off of. But in the end, I prefer more realistic balanced relationships.
In fact, I have a three part rule for getting into any long term relationship:
1) A girl must have had, and been crushed by, her first over-idealized "true love"
2) A girl must have moved out and lived for a time on her own.
3) A girl must have lived with other non-family people for a while (like college dorm, etc)
If those things haven't happened, then parts of her personal growth haven't occurred.
IMHO
--Aeron