I dated a guy (26, three years younger than me) for about 2.5 months. We only spent a few days together in person before going long-distance.
The spark was incredible from the beginning. He asked for exclusivity on the first date.
The first month long-distance felt almost cinematic. Things moved very fast. We talked about long-term plans — meeting families this summer, potentially moving together. He repeatedly told me how perfect I was, how lucky he felt, and how sure he was that I was the person he’d been looking for. It honestly felt too good to be true.
Then he gradually pulled back — but still tried to put in more efforts to help me feel connected.
First, he expressed concern about my separation situation. Then he said the pace felt too fast and he felt confused and want to slow down . A week before I returned to see him, he reassured me he only wanted to slow down, not split. Two days before I came back, he said he struggles to feel connected without proximity and didn’t want to end things before reassessing in person.
But the day after I arrived, he broke up with me over the phone. He said he wanted to explore options before settling down.
He initially avoided meeting in person one last time, saying he was still very attracted to me and if he saw me, he might question his decision. Eventually we did meet.
In person, the spark and chemistry was still intense. The way he looked at me, touched me, and interacted with me felt affectionate and connected — not just physical. He told me he’s not ready for a committed relationship because he wants to focus on his career and doesn’t want to invest time maintaining one.
But he also started going on dates literally one day after breaking up with me. For context, he used to be very much a “fuck boy” type in the past.
After we met, I told him I’d be okay casually seeing him — no pressure, no expectations. When we kissed goodbye, he said we’d meet soon.
Now the dynamic is: • If I message him, he replies — but delayed, short, neutral. • He’s polite and will agree to a call. • He never initiates or reciprocate questions. • When I leave the door open to do things together again, he doesn’t engage but speak in the past tense to appreciate what we had instead. • He maintains access, but puts in zero effort.
This is what I don’t understand:
If he isn’t ready for commitment, that’s fine. When he broke up with me, I even said I’d be okay with friends with benefits. He said his attraction never changed and that would give him freedom and he is ok with it.
In person, he clearly still has attraction and affection. It’s hard to believe there’s only physical desire left. So why is his behavior now so distant and passive?
Is this avoidant attachment? He admits he has avoidant tendencies and says he felt pressure in our relationship, especially because I was the one consistently carrying the emotional intensity and may have overinvested.
I can understand that he is emotionally immature and realized he promised things he wasn’t actually ready to deliver. I also understand choosing freedom over commitment if that’s what truly aligns with where he is in life.
I’m not asking how to win him back.
I genuinely want to understand this psychologically:
How can someone say and show they still like you a lot, feel connected and affectionate in person, and yet be completely okay not having you in their life anymore?
I even lowered my pride and said I would be okay with friends with benefits — no pressure, no expectations — and he still isn’t really stepping forward to accept that. If attraction is still there and he wants freedom, why wouldn’t he take that offer?