KenM wrote:
I would not be lonely anymore, I have everything else, good stable job, a good place to stay but i can't find a women that does not want to screw me over somehow. All I want is a heathly male/ female relationship but I guess thats too much to ask.
Well, let's look at the aspects of it here.
First and foremost, your arrangement with the girl who decided to break off her plans with you.
"Friends with Benefits" is one of the most slippery terms in relationship-land, because very few people can make it work in a way that satisfies both people involved.
Why? Well, think about it. Sex is more than a physical and chemical release. There is always an emotional component to it, no matter how detached you think you are. Your reaction to this latest situation is a perfect example of how hard it is to have sex just be sex. There are implicit trust levels involved and you can't always just turn your feelings off.
And you do have feelings, obviously. You have emotional needs that have to be met and perhaps this was helping you meet them in some way. So it still hurts when it goes away.
Beyond that, your dysfunctional dating history means you really don't even have a measurement standard for what a healthy relationship is. Sure, you've got ideas but you haven't really had a chance to hold those ideas up to the reality of the situation, and perhaps you've got some unrealistic expectations that you can't let go of.
"Friends with Benefits" is an arrangement that works best between two consenting and fairly emotionally mature adults. These are the sorts of people who have a big enough sample size on their relationship history to understand it and put it in its proper context.
Frankly, you're not emotionally mature. I don't mean that as an insult. Most people aren't. It doesn't even really have to do with Asperger's. People judge relationships in the context of their experiences, and while you have to go with what you know this doesn't always paint a complete picture.
So I'd have to say that while it might have seemed like a good idea at the time, this wasn't ever going to be a healthy situation for you. You took it a lot more seriously than she did, and that's the danger of that kind of arrangement.
Likewise in the aftermath here, you're making the problem bigger than it has to be. It's somewhat understandable, given how fresh the hurt feels. However, if you frame the problem as "I don't want to be alone for the rest of my life,"
of course it's going to seem big and scary and unsolvable.
That's what leads to this despair and depression. If you frame the problem in terms that place its solution beyond your reach, it's all too easy to feel like there's nothing you can do.
So for starters, take a deep breath, and don't make this about finding a lifemate. Don't make this a flaw in all of the female gender. Don't make this about a capricious God getting his jollies seeing you suffer. That's only going to put you in a worse mood.
You don't seem to have done much just plain
dating. Maybe you've convinced yourself you're not really cut out for it. I can't say for certain. However, this is how people get enough experience dealing with relationships that they can get to the point where not every breakup is the end of the world. This is where emotional maturity comes from. You're capable of it, but you have to believe you are and stop placing the solutions out of your own reach.