George I think that you are protecting her, and that is the effect of that love-con.
Well, maybe. This is a person I like, or at least - I liked who I
thought she was. I suppose if I was 100 percent convinced that this was all a heartless scam, I would act differently. Or even if it
is a heartless scam, she presumably is doing these things for a need of money; maybe there is even pressure from the studio (as others said). I also think that at least some of what she told me about her background is true, and if it is true, she dealt with a lot of things in life. And maybe life in Russia is hard too, for someone from her background. I don't have the answers. I wish I hadn't let myself get immersed in the situation; that's my fault.
But I still don't know her model name
Is stating her model name here allowed? Or even appropriate?
my opinion in the middle remains both guilty.
I certainly feel guilty of a lapse in judgement, being unrealistic, letting myself get drawn into something that I wanted to believe (even in spite of doubts coming into my mind early on). As I said, I began expressing doubts to her, too - this usually led to big quarrels and even more reassuring letters proclaiming a desire to meet, have a future together, and so on. But as I said, there were also many things that even at the time, I felt like were inconsistencies and red flags. The whole idea she pushes that it is "real" and she is looking forward...it's like a trail of bread crumbs. And it remained very important for her to continue to get money from me, which she attributed to the notion that "support" - emotional and financial - is part of the deal. Of course, I used to say that in real life, you normally develop the relationship first in person, before obligating oneself to financially assisting or supporting a partner! I could have done things differently early on, and it probably would have revealed the truth much sooner. But...that's on me. Maybe I enjoyed temporary insanity.