I think we all have had, at least once in our lives, a case of unrequited love. It is an experience that most of us share. There is always someone, past and present, which we have thought about all the time. We have plotted for hours figuring out ways of seeing them or talking to them. We have made excuses to be around them as much as possible. I know many have also doodled on a notebook matching your names together. You don’t have to admit it but you know who you are. And for some, where are your nightvision goggles, camouflage, and diary? Are they in the trunk of the car? We probably even have a few restraining orders here don’t we. Oh yes, we do. I can sense it. Then there is the inevitable conclusion to this condition: We finally tell this person how much we love them, either out of desperation or intoxication. We also know how this usually ends… come on you, can say it… badly. The laws of averages give unrequited love a very small success rate. And like a burning rocket ship, our love and ourselves come screaming down into the ground leaving a smoldering pile of mental and emotional wreckage to sift through. How could something so innocent end so horribly?
But what about the people who have been on the other side of the coin? We never think about that, do we? Who here has had a person fall in madly in love with them and you didn’t or couldn’t return the favor? Raise your hands. I know we have people. You see we never think about what happens to them. We never see how difficult it is to crush someone and leave their dreams shattered and scattered across the surface of the earth. Once they dash your hopes you are so busy picking up the pieces you never really process what they are going through. It is understandable. You are busy treating emotional wounds. No one blames you.
So here is point of all this: This thread is not for the jilted. This thread is for the jilters. This thread is for the people who were forced to destroy someone who accidentally fell in love with you. So tell us, who were they, why they fell in love and why you had to emotionally beat them senseless over it. And here is the hardest question of all. Could you have, or did you, change your mind about that person over time?
And please remember, there is no blame here so the jilted need to be kind. We are just having a little confessional to cleanse the soul. (I also want to offer an olive branch to the jilted. You may post here but don’t bogart the thread.)
Oh and I intend to confess later. I just want to see where this goes first. Happy posting!
Yes, I have been the subject of unwanted advances, including "love", more than once or twice. And I can tell you that it's usually very goddamn unpleasant.
Once it was a guy who told me he was in love with me a week after we met, and after we had spent just 3-4 hours together (since he was out of town during that previous week).

Now excuse me, but I think that's just someone obsessed with the idea of love, who is looking to find an object for his crush. There's no way you can be madly and deeply in love with a person you've only just met and that you don't even know that well yet. Strongly attracted, yes. But love? The moment he told me that he loved me, what could have been pleasant moments getting to know each other became very uncomfortable and awkward. The more I looked at him, the less attractive I found him, with his sad mopey eyes that seemed to try to do their best to make me feel guilty for not squeeing and falling into his arms.* He wouldn't try to be just friends and see how things develop, since he insisted in the most theatrical way that he was totally in love with me, so that was it.
*It's the same thing as with anyone that comes off too strong too early - it usually works as a real turn off, since I am feeling I am being pressured and pushed into something against my will, which I hate... But guys who can't stop telling you they love you even after you tell them you're not interested are in a way even worse than those that keep trying to touch your thighs or who keep following your around with sexual proposals - because you don't even feel able to just tell the former to go to hell, like you would the latter; no, there is emotional manipulation involved, where you are made to feel like you are being a horrible person who is, ah, shattering his dreams, even though you haven't done anything wrong, and even though they have no claim over you just by virtue of what they feel for you. But there's the problem: our culture is full of pathetic love poems and songs and absurd romantic comedies that celebrate the behavior that can most properly be described as stalking. We are being taught that this is romantic, and that this is what men are supposed to behave - to pursue a woman relentlessly and swear to their undying love, no matter how much she rejects them; in romcoms, we are being taught that the object of such love (usually a woman) will, in the end, change her mind about her stalker, pardon, pursuer, usually a man, and fall in love with him. Well, that's crap. If you're not attracted to someone, you're not going to become attracted to them just because they have been stalking you and moping around you.
In fact, I am the subject of one such "love" right now. I haven't done anything to encourage the guy except talk to him and spend time with him, but for some guys this seems to mean that you have to be interested in them romantically. They don't seem to understand that someone might just be looking for friends, people to talk to. "No" means "maybe", and "maybe" means "yes"? Well, nope. In the beginning, our conversations were pleasant, we were just talking about Star Trek and other subjects. When he started sending me love poems in e-mails, calling me 'darling' etc. and acting like he was my boyfriend, and he seemed unable to catch any of the many signals I was sending that I wasn't interested in him that way, I had to tell him straightforwardly that I am not attracted to him. He said he didn't believe me

Then he asked me why I am not attracted to him, to tell him exactly what I dislike about him

Then he said I was 'toying with him' for my 'satisfaction', and nonsense like that. Some people seem incapable of understanding that you might just not be attracted to them - no, there has to be something wrong with you, and you can expect long tirades about how you need to change and become more open to people and more in touch in your emotions and less inhibited and so on... oh, and it's got to be that feminist course you attended, what did they teach you there?

You have to spell it out for them, and it still doesn't work. Well, I told him to go to hell, slammed the phone removed him from my Facebook friends, but then he later started begging me to forgive him and said he wanted to just be friends. It was OK for a while, he was again sending me messages every day, calling me several times a day, including once at night to ask me why I am not asleep (he noticed I was online on MSN messenger)

, now in the friendly way that makes it harder even just to tell him to leave you alone, until he goes too far as with that night call, when I asked him if he was crazy and shouted at him and told him to leave him alone. He occasionally even used terms of endearment, calling me honey and darling a couple of times, which really irritates me, and when I was on holidays in Italy he was still sending me messages every day and asked me to tell him when I'm coming back so he could meet me at the station, which I naturally declined.
I've called him a stalker, told him to leave me alone, that he should understand boundaries, and then he just looks at me with mopey eyes and acts like there is something wrong with me and why I am being like this. Today I really had enough and I hope this will be the end.
And the truth of the matter is, he is the one who gains by us spending time together, not me, because he obviously enjoys being close to me, talking to me on the phone or the messenger, etc., while I derive no enjoyment from it. When you're with someone you're not attracted to - and I don't find his personality nor his physique attractive at all, and the way he talks to me is something I just find annoying - and they can't stop pursuing you with their attention, it just becomes unbearable. Almost every moment spent with them is unpleasant and awkward, and you just find yourself wishing you could be on your own, or with your friends, or with a possibility of meeting someone you could actually be interested in. Maybe I have also been affected by the culture that teaches us that we're such horrible people if we don't allow ourselves to be forced against our will into relationships with people, only because they use corny words and sad glances instead of violence or power... because if I weren't, I wouldn't ever be uncomfortable about telling such people to just go away.
/rant