Why I’d Rather Be Dumped

Jun. 17, 2011
Kelli is a writer living in Toronto.

Nothing milks the pathos like telling people you’ve never been dumped. This piece of information provokes a whole spectrum of Strong Feelings, from the relatively benign “lucky bitch” to the more pointed “fucking sociopath” (a gem from a former university TA I’d run into on my 24th birthday, when excess beers turned both our nights into one big, sloppy confessional booth).

When my friend recently wrote about the pains of being dumped, I made it my mission to counter her argument with my own: that, if you have any self-respect, being the dumper can be infinitely worse. I speak as an expert. An expert in dumping.

I haven’t been in a whole lot of relationships in my life, but I’ve been in enough to know how they work. And here’s the thing: when a relationship comes to an end, it generally means it wasn’t working. There may have been deceit. There may have been denial. I could speculate all day, but the point is, needs weren’t being met for both parties (and, for the sake of simplicity, we’ll pretend that all relationships involve only two people).

I know some people who have been dumped in cruel, unforgivable ways. I know someone who got married, paid off their spouse’s credit card debt instead of their own student loans, and dutifully served as the household breadwinner before being swapped after 9 months for the town exterminator. In that case, I side with the dumped—even though one might argue that this person had their own poor judgement to blame for the situation—because, in that particular instance, the dumped had been completely disrespected, used, and discarded. It was about more than romantic rejection.

But when referring to garden-variety 20-something relationships (the ones that don’t involve life savings and/or offspring, say), being dumped doesn’t automatically equate being wronged. Often it’s a preventative measure, keeping situations like the one I just described from ruining people’s lives. Some might argue that it’s even (!) a mutually beneficial act. But it’s painful. And only the dumped gets the right to complain about it.

People love to ruminate over heartbreak. Ask someone about their favourite album or book, and you’ll inevitably be treated to some gorgeously turgid tale of lovers lost. Being dumped gives a person license to act like an art school teenager, no questions asked, for weeks and even months at a time. Years later, experiences gathered during these post-dump periods are recalled with a certain dramatic gravitas. It seems that, for some people, being dumped is almost a gift—an opportunity to superimpose oneself into a Smiths song or any episode of The OC. Being dumped makes stuff feel really significant.

While the dumped gets free reign to go all Angela Chase, dumpers aren’t allowed to wallow, even though dumping someone you genuinely care about is THE WORST. After I broke up with my high school boyfriend, with whom I feebly attempted to maintain a long-distance relationship for a few months into university, I couldn’t sleep for a week. I wrote him letters at 4am and ripped them apart. I collapsed into shriek-sobs when I ran into him the following summer at a hometown ice cream shop. Over six years later, it’s still one of the hardest things I have ever had to do. But, it had to be done. Because we were too young and too different. Because I owed it to myself, and to him.

And, here’s where the self-respect I mentioned earlier comes in: a person who cares about their personal integrity isn’t dumping someone they hate. They’re cutting things off before an ill fit leads to resentment. They’re signing themselves off to be villainized in the sake of their own mental health and personal growth, and ideally, that of their partner as well. They’re knowingly positioning themselves as the Bad Guy, because it’s what needs to be done. It’s a huge, unwieldy, unsympathetic burden.

Wouldn’t you rather be dumped, too? TC mark

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image – Jason Woodhead

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  • Charles Reinhardt

    Nice post, Kelli!

  • Abby

    I like this! So true, too-dumping is way harder. I always take the emotional cop-out and wait for the other person to dump me. It took six months last time.

  • http://profiles.google.com/rosebudmeza Rose Meza

    Wow, just wow.  I can relate.. what a great piece.  

  • http://brianmcelmurry.blogspot.com/ Brian McElmurry

    Wow! Well done.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=539592740 Viktoriya Gaponski

    It takes guts to dump someone or tell someone you’re not into them from the beginning. Cowards are those who keep others hanging in hopes.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1363230138 Michael Koh

    CUTE~

  • Random

    I enjoyed the article, but thought it would’ve been better if you had at least touched on the opposite arguement that people who are always the dumper have commitmentphobia and leave too soon/don’t give things a chance.

  • http://twitter.com/BarbotRobot Matt Barbot

    “They’re knowingly positioning themselves as the Bad Guy, because it’s what needs to be done. It’s a huge, unwieldy, unsympathetic burden.”

    Oh man. Kelli Korducki is Batman.

  • rose

    i don’t know, i’m not sure you can really argue this until you’ve experienced both sides. it feels horrible to be dumped, you’re left with feelings you have no idea what to do with. that said, one of the hardest things i have ever had to do is break up with a boyfriend not because i didn’t love him, but because he had done something that i knew i would never be able to forgive him for. i was furious with him, and in a way it felt more like being dumped than dumping. in any case, he got over it a lot quicker than i did.

  • anon

    this is stupid, you’re obviously not gonna have a full perspective on this issue. which leaves this article looking like a bizarre sex market value display of some kind

  • http://maxwellchance.wordpress.com Duke Holland of Gishmale

    I just recently broke up with someone I loved. I would have rather been broken up with. That way I would have been able to justify my feelings with “whatever, she was a bitch anyway” or something angry and along those lines. Instead, I only have myself to blame and can’t turn my sadness into anger.

  • Ms C

    It does and that’s why it drags on sometimes. It’s not done on purpose…the last thing you want is to CONTINUE the relationship.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=707272007 Alex Thayer

    slowly self-destructing, really-no-one’s-fault kinda things are more my style.  i’ve never been smart enough to dump someone, and no one has ever been smart enough to dump me.

    but at least i’m ahead of the jaded/time curve for my age.

  • ariel

    I’ve been able to gain perspective as to why my relationships have ended, and have been on the dumped side. I can understand why dumping is hard, but it’s also hard when someone starts to withdraw from you and treat you differently because they think if they do that then you’ll dump them first instead of communicating with you about why the relationship isn’t working is pretty fucking awful as well. 

  • Caitlin

    This is totally what I needed right now!

  • Bunniesarelove

    Thanks for this. Might I add that there aren’t a great many songs that adequately express how much it sucks to break someone else’s heart- the guilt, shame, sadness, but also the courage it takes to walk away from something that isn’t working anymore. Everyone needs music to wallow to, even the villains…

  • scotty

    This is exactly what I’m going through now and it honestly is the worse. You care about the person still but can’t be in their lives like you would like. So hard

  • Jacob

    That’s the goddamn truth. I’m there right now unfortunately.  Sing it sister

  • dumbledorris

    This is exactly what happened to me! I ended a long distance relationship(uni) because I knew it was just going to go down hill, and to be honest it is probably one of the hardest things I have ever had to do. he knows that there is nothing that he can do, whereas I live with the guilt as to whether or not I made the right choice! And I know that I am going to live with it for a very long time.. I really did care about him and there is an empty feeling in the Pitt of my stomach which wont go away! But I know that one of us had to do it. Sooner rather than later… And I am willing to be the bad guy! Even though it pains me.

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