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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Intense cinematic start, slow fade, sudden breakup — still strong attraction. Why is he letting me go?

161 replies

Abrokenheart · 04/03/2026 19:40

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?

OP posts:
Abrokenheart · 05/03/2026 02:29

Ratherubbish · 04/03/2026 21:13

Some people enjoy being romantic, to create an atmosphere that is almost like a movie. Maybe he is one of them. The whole episode must be super intense and dream like for you, but you must accept that even if he returns, that feeling will not come back again, and you will just be on edge the whole time fearing he will change his mind and leave again.
Not everyone has experienced something like that, and a lot of people will say it was a lie or a scam all along. I think there will never be a way to definitively find out. No matter what, for a few glorious months, you had a beautiful time and maybe just remember the good. Stop contacting him, cause he has moved on, and you need to protect yourself.

This is one of the most unbiased comments—thank you. Yes, the episode was too intense and dreamlike. I really don't believe it was a scam or could have been faked all the way. I believe it was just inconsistency. But there's no point in negating the past. What I need to do is focus on the fact that his actions now show he has moved on and move on myself

OP posts:
TheBeaTgoeson1 · 05/03/2026 03:57

Nah. This post is AI.

FloofBunny · 05/03/2026 05:06

He's an avoidant, OP. I was married to one. For fuck's sake, run for your life.

Intimacy avoidance is a core, deep character trait and it cannot be changed, for most people. The thing is - and this is the thing that has you scratching your head and the thing that will drive you crazy - it doesn't matter one jot if he really, really likes you or really, really loves you. He is an avoidant, and they do not process or experience attachment like regular people. For us, it's all straightforward. If you really like someone, you want to be with them. It's that simple. For them, they can like you and even love you more than anyone else in the world, but they are still an avoidant and they will still thrash around like a fish out of water when in a relationship. Or when "threatened" with one. It is not something that we can understand.

It's a DEEPLY fucked up way of relating to others in romantic relationships.

Just know that the good thing you had there was real, and it sounds as if what he felt was real. You'll just have to find some solace in that, because in true avoidant style, he fucked the entire thing up. When there's no longer any danger to his nervous system - i.e. when you are over him - he will come back. And if you don't see him as the threat to your mental and emotional well-being that he is, you will get sucked in again, and this is a pattern that could steal YEARS from your life, especially with the way things are between you when he's not being avoidant.

I STRONGLY advise you to detox from him and keep it that way.

He may not be a bad person, but he will probably never have a good relationship and is likely to divorce at least once. Feel sorry for him from a distance, because he will fuck up every good relationship that he ever has - like he just did with you - be grateful for the good times you had, and move forwards. Just imagine finding that chemistry with someone who DOESN'T have attachment issues.

I am experienced with break-ups, and believe me when I say that a zero-contact clean break is the fastest way to get over someone BY FAR.

janietreemore · 05/03/2026 05:47

Abrokenheart · 04/03/2026 20:01

Thank you! But those affectionate moments when he was with me in person, the way he looked at me, staring into my eyes and caressing my face in the darkness , felt so compelling that I wondered how someone could fake that.

He could be a narcissist. He sounds a nasty piece of work anyway. He will only try to get you back if you become genuinely unavailable. Best to block him.

Marwoodsbigbreak · 05/03/2026 06:07

Abrokenheart · 04/03/2026 20:21

I thought only a psychopath could manage to fake that, maybe I’m just naive

You sound incredibly naive.

Stop dwelling on this loser and do some serious work on yourself before dating again.

Thelankyone · 05/03/2026 06:30

Abrokenheart · 05/03/2026 02:29

This is one of the most unbiased comments—thank you. Yes, the episode was too intense and dreamlike. I really don't believe it was a scam or could have been faked all the way. I believe it was just inconsistency. But there's no point in negating the past. What I need to do is focus on the fact that his actions now show he has moved on and move on myself

You do need to move on. And you need to take some time to reflect. Read your posts again,

how he was mesmerised by you, how it was too good to be true,making long term plans with what was basically a stranger, how he held you, looked at you, how it was dream like for you, you even used the word cinematic.

it is all so over the top and like a pre teen girl with her first crush. You need to learn to calm down when you meet men, and behave maturely in relationships, and when you do, you will look back on this and see it was you feeling these things, not him.

Jlom · 05/03/2026 07:28

I don't think he is an avoidant or a narcissist or anything else. I reckon he is a bog standard man who wants sex.

Obviously, men sometimes want relationships, company and children but for a lot of them, for a lot of the time, they just want casual emotionless sex. Some have plenty of strategies for getting it and some just pay for it, hence our massive sex industry.

AutumnClouds · 05/03/2026 07:36

There are players who are hooked on intense intimacy and romance as well as sex, he sounds like that kind. So it may well have felt real and beautiful to him too, but he might do that three times a year with different women then disappear when the new romance high fades. But agree with pp who say cut him off to protect your self worth, don’t beg a man you have feelings for to be your fwb, that’s for mutually lukewarm situations only.

Thelankyone · 05/03/2026 09:18

Jlom · 05/03/2026 07:28

I don't think he is an avoidant or a narcissist or anything else. I reckon he is a bog standard man who wants sex.

Obviously, men sometimes want relationships, company and children but for a lot of them, for a lot of the time, they just want casual emotionless sex. Some have plenty of strategies for getting it and some just pay for it, hence our massive sex industry.

Me too, I think people are too keen to over analyse and label. The reality is most men, and women, are much simpler, it is not some pre planned or thought through process. Quite simply he could see how much the op liked him, was flattered, went with it, matched her energy and got sex.

HatStickBoots · 05/03/2026 09:27

Abrokenheart · 04/03/2026 20:51

Thank you. I still believe everything we had was real. There's no need to deny it or say all those actions were faked—I believe in what I felt. Plus, he literally got nothing out of being so affectionate with me while we were long distance. I just think it's as simple as: people change. He came on strong, but gradually lost the dopamine-fueled excitement. Still, there's affection and attraction left. Maybe not as intense as before—not like he said when he claimed the attraction "remains the same"—but it's still there. it’s just his current affection in me just isn't strong enough to make him choose commitment over freedom—because of his fuck boy nature.

I’m so sorry this has happened to you. You won’t be the first or the last woman to feel this way and unfortunately it takes age and experience to recognise the truth sometimes and men like this really do exploit women’s feelings. It’s a hateful thing he has done to you. He has mimicked the outward signs that you are conditioned to believe represent a loving heart. But he is anything but loving to you. It really hurts, I know! I see the way you have compromised all your integrity and given him everything he wants with him having to do the bare minimum. You are not satisfied with this really. You want the relationship that you thought you were getting which has turned out to be a facade. This man looks into your eyes and your loving expression is one that he feeds off. He’s a gigantic narcissistic baby! He’s ugly really but you can’t see it. Look at the behaviour towards you and that is the real him. An ugly, using, nasty pos.
Treat yourself to something nice and care for you. Scrape him off onto the doormat where he belongs and move on,

Catspace · 05/03/2026 09:31

He’s a chancer OP. Move on.

Tootingbec · 05/03/2026 09:34

Wishimaywishimight · 04/03/2026 19:57

You were love bombed. Now you're being breadcrumbed.

Also, he's still a fuck-boy.

Don't waste time trying to figure him out he's not that deep.

💯 what @Wishimaywishimight has just said

DuplicateUserName · 05/03/2026 09:36

You've posted about him before, haven't you OP?

You were told then by the majority on the thread that he's playing you.

He doesn't want a relationship with you and you'd be doing yourself a massive favour if you accepted that, and blocked him.

Sorry, I know it hurts but no matter how many threads you start, the situation will never change.

CharSiu · 05/03/2026 09:48

Of course people get something out of being long distance it’s they know your thinking about them and they are taking up your headspace.

The only time any man or woman can get away with being this naive is first love as a kid.

Catza · 05/03/2026 10:06

OP, you have to stop asking "why does he" and start asking "why do I"
Why do I want to be with someone who clearly doesn't want to be with me?
Why did I agree to no commitment option when it wasn't really what I wanted?
Etc. etc.

Trust me, when you start looking at your own psychology and your own drivers, the obsession with him and his motives will fade very quickly. I had a very similar experience with someone about a month ago. On Friday we were walking on the beach holding hands and he was kissing the back of my head, on Monday he rang me to break up with me because he was not "as emotionally available as he thought". Asking "why would he" was pointless. So I wished him well and made a date with someone else three days later and we are still dating now.
You have to build your emotional resilience to be able to say very quickly "this was nice but he is not choosing me so he has no more value for me" and move on.

Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 11:42

popcorn215 · 04/03/2026 19:44

The easiest thing to do is run for the hills, but if you want to see if he really does have ‘avoidant attachment’ .. step back, no pressure, don’t reach out first, go quiet, then see if he breadcrumbs.

But the reality is, why would you want someone like this? You’re already shrinking your own needs to suit his.

But the reality is, why would you want someone like this? You’re already shrinking your own needs to suit his. Yes, yes, and YES!

             he's a an 'everyday' psychopath..  A psychopath dealing in a low-key every day way.  A drama queen, a diva.  And he gets off on it.  Why, who knows?

There can be many, many reasons But the important thing is, run for the hills. Look after number one.

As another PP said, asking for exclusivity on a first date is a red flag. You don't know each other!

Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 11:58

Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 11:42

But the reality is, why would you want someone like this? You’re already shrinking your own needs to suit his. Yes, yes, and YES!

             he's a an 'everyday' psychopath..  A psychopath dealing in a low-key every day way.  A drama queen, a diva.  And he gets off on it.  Why, who knows?

There can be many, many reasons But the important thing is, run for the hills. Look after number one.

As another PP said, asking for exclusivity on a first date is a red flag. You don't know each other!

Sorry, don't know what that black segment is doing there, made a mistake.

HatStickBoots · 05/03/2026 12:10

Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 11:58

Sorry, don't know what that black segment is doing there, made a mistake.

It scrolls along… I thought it was really good, very apt. How did you get it there?

MargoLivebetter · 05/03/2026 12:17

@Abrokenheart you are asking the wrong question here. What you should be asking is: why am I invested in the motivation of someone who has broken up with me and why am I still having any contact with this person who as you say yourself makes zero effort?

You will never truly know why he did what he did. We cannot be in the minds of others ever and any reasons that any of us give on this thread are purely speculation.

The only person you have any agency over is yourself and whilst you need to grieve for the end of this very brief relationship, I think you are analysing the wrong person!

Abrokenheart · 05/03/2026 13:56

FloofBunny · 05/03/2026 05:06

He's an avoidant, OP. I was married to one. For fuck's sake, run for your life.

Intimacy avoidance is a core, deep character trait and it cannot be changed, for most people. The thing is - and this is the thing that has you scratching your head and the thing that will drive you crazy - it doesn't matter one jot if he really, really likes you or really, really loves you. He is an avoidant, and they do not process or experience attachment like regular people. For us, it's all straightforward. If you really like someone, you want to be with them. It's that simple. For them, they can like you and even love you more than anyone else in the world, but they are still an avoidant and they will still thrash around like a fish out of water when in a relationship. Or when "threatened" with one. It is not something that we can understand.

It's a DEEPLY fucked up way of relating to others in romantic relationships.

Just know that the good thing you had there was real, and it sounds as if what he felt was real. You'll just have to find some solace in that, because in true avoidant style, he fucked the entire thing up. When there's no longer any danger to his nervous system - i.e. when you are over him - he will come back. And if you don't see him as the threat to your mental and emotional well-being that he is, you will get sucked in again, and this is a pattern that could steal YEARS from your life, especially with the way things are between you when he's not being avoidant.

I STRONGLY advise you to detox from him and keep it that way.

He may not be a bad person, but he will probably never have a good relationship and is likely to divorce at least once. Feel sorry for him from a distance, because he will fuck up every good relationship that he ever has - like he just did with you - be grateful for the good times you had, and move forwards. Just imagine finding that chemistry with someone who DOESN'T have attachment issues.

I am experienced with break-ups, and believe me when I say that a zero-contact clean break is the fastest way to get over someone BY FAR.

Thank you. I really found solace in you saying it was real for him. I guess the simple truth—or what I want to believe in—is that it was real just for a moment. Not long enough to last, and not worthwhile to dwell on. I'll just have to move on and focus on what's more important

OP posts:
Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 14:04

Abrokenheart · 05/03/2026 13:56

Thank you. I really found solace in you saying it was real for him. I guess the simple truth—or what I want to believe in—is that it was real just for a moment. Not long enough to last, and not worthwhile to dwell on. I'll just have to move on and focus on what's more important

A year or so from now you will be able to look at it more objectively.

DuplicateUserName · 05/03/2026 14:23

I'd stay away from the AI if I were you OP as it mostly just tells you what you want to hear, rather than what you might need to hear.

LambriniBobInIsleworthISeesYa · 05/03/2026 15:50

This can’t be real! OP, you sound like me when I was 15!! I went to an all-girls school and read a lot of books…. Those were my excuses for being this naive (as well as, obviously, being 15). What are your excuses?!

ihatecatlitter · 05/03/2026 16:19

Op you are clinging onto the (very few) posts of people who have said it might have been real feelings, yet ignoring the tens of others who are telling you he just sounds like an arsehole. You need to LET GO. Listen to the majority, especially those of us who are old enough to have been through similar and with hindsight & decent relationships behind us can see him for what he is - a chancer who was never very keen. Sorry.
A good, proper relationship will NEVER BE THIS HARD.

Illegally18 · 05/03/2026 18:28

HatStickBoots · 05/03/2026 12:10

It scrolls along… I thought it was really good, very apt. How did you get it there?

Dunno! Just pressed the wrong thing!