I honestly do not know how cops accept or tolerate gay domestic violence nowadays, back in my twenties they all but egged it on and did little to nothing, thinking that those 'homos' deserved what they got.
I think now days there are laws on the books to force tolerance, but if you feel the detective or officers in charge of your case are 'reluctant' due to your sexuality, you may need to pursue a higher up.
Also, I fear laws are such that the restraining order really doesn't do much. They still wait until you are physically maimed or something before they actually throw him behind bars and throw away the key.
No not all relationships end this way. Many end downright friendly.
The real underlying issue here is that yours is an abusive relationship, with an abuser you are trying to get far from. Those types of deals rarely go smoothly.
With my second partner it took a few months, and that was serious stalking, him assaulting me, him getting me to lose one job, him calling the cops on me insisting I broke into his place and stole stuff from him. It ended with me 'setting him up' putting drugs in a place he would never stash them himself (he sold drugs so this really wasn't all that shameful of me).
It was ugly. There was a lot of 'tit for tat' as I tried to get the message through to him 'its over'. I tried the legal route, back then gays didn't have rights of any real sort.
Understand he is going to be mean about it, he is going to blame you (he sees no fault in his own actions). He is incapable of real remorse, he is incapable of real sorrow for his actions. He may be sorry if he gets caught, but that is a lot more to do with selfishness than real sorrow.
http://www.maryparrish.org/being_abused.html may be of interest/help to you.
Yeah I know the suggestions pretty much mean you rely 99% on yourself with really no one else to turn to.
As for missing him... This is very typical of the situation. Its not that you miss the abuse, you miss the 'could have been' the 'promises' that he incorporated day to day, the charming person who you first met and thought was really there and just needed time, space, understanding, patience to reemerge.
If it helps, you are 'normal' in this, in fact in the face of all the abnormal stuff going on you are reacting perfectly 'normal', your behaviors, feelings, actions and reactions fall well within nominal parameters against that which you face.
I think the reality is you are doing better than most who end up in this sort of situation. You have the strength and the will to leave. You are also trying to do the right things to break it off.
Grey Wrote:I won't say it hasn't been an ordeal. Why o why are breakups so messy?! I had him arrested, he got bailed out. Ended up having to change my phone number and go into hiding completely after all the threats that ranged from "don't make me come find you" to "You try and walk away from me and I'll break your goddamn legs". Only three or four people knew where I was hiding, but after he was served with the temporary restraining order he sent people looking for me...and they found me. More calls to cops...they go see him again...it makes him madder. The cycle goes on. I'm living in total fear now, which sucks beyond anything I've ever experienced, I've even taken a week off work because I'm afraid he'll show up there. I owe every good thing that has happened to one friend, who convinced me to leave and has been my rock through this whole thing. But this is still hard, and when you've been with someone for nine years guess what...you miss the son of a bitch even though you shouldn't. I haven't been single since I was 15 and I'm finding I don't like it at all. But still, I know I'm doing the right thing.