Teabagger: " In your post you mention nothing about your own happiness." I was pretty sad the first week or two, but the more I thought about it, the more I thought it was for the best. I don't need to date her to be happy. I am already fairly happy now, and when I say 'happy for her' I mean should I
be happy that she is feeling better without me. Sort of like if you love someone let them free. " It seems obvious it doesn't. It also seems pretty obvious to me that you are being the "nice guy"."
I do get some amount of joy from the fact that she is happier. I have to be as ethical as I can, and by that I mean am I ethically required to agree and support her and say that it is good that she is now without me and happier because of it?
She is not demanding my support, in fact she thinks I am perfectly justified to never speak to her again, although she doesn't want that, and nor do I. She has taught me so much, and improved my life in many ways, [quit smoking, stopped eating frozen crap, started eating fresh veggies and balanced diet, tried to offer help more often] in addition to my already constant honesty and other ethical dedications.
Wesley:
I am sorry I angered you, I'm just trying to be honest. 1. She has very low income but doesn't qualify for government sponsored offerings.
2. By that definition, I can't recall any harm that occurred. I am admittingly an extremely laid back guy that is hard to offend. She admitted to me that I treated her perfectly. The things that were particularly annoying to her, but not obviously unethical is what I mean by 'unintentional harm', which I tried to avoid after she told me about them and convinced they are indeed things that were bad remnants of my upbringing.
3. Perhaps you are right about that, but I don't have any reason to think she is lying. Or maybe she thought it would go away with time, but that's just speculation.
4. You are right, she doesn't want a relationship because she can't feel love.
5. I can see that being the case. Is it unhealthy to be a nymphomaniac?
6.
7. I just know that chocolate makes her feel better, that might not be healthy either, but then again, I know very little about cognitive disabilities. I don't think I would call her 'horribly depressed'. It's not as if she can't get out of bed and is watching TV all day. She reads, works and stays active, but sometimes she feels a little down. Again I'm not an expert, but to me it seems mild. It's something that I wanted to hep her get over, and I wish I would have tried harder to learn about coping methods at the time.
8. Read it again can't determine.