Hey—you. Yes, you. Stop scrolling. We need to have a talk. We need to address that sensation you’ve been carrying. That tight knot in your stomach, that small voice you keep quieting, that gut feeling that something isn’t right. You’re with someone, yet you feel alone. You’re supposed to be a pair, but have never been this bewildered in your life. Often, it begins subtly, doesn’t it? You meet someone who seems wonderful. Calm, composed, in control. They have their own life, hobbies, friends. They don’t seem dependent on you. And you think, “Finally—an adult who’s stable and independent. This isn’t clinginess; it’s healthy.” For a while, it feels true. The chemistry is there. It’s real. Then—click—the light flips. The person who used to text all day and say the sweetest things suddenly needs space. The one who was reliably present becomes “busy.” That word—busy—becomes a shield. Their attention fragments. Sometimes the affection is radiant, warm as sunlight. Then, just as quickly, it vanishes. They’re gone and you can’t place why. And the phone—oh, the phone. It’s always face down or in Do Not Disturb while you’re together. They mention friends you’ve never met. Plans stay vague: “I’ll let you know,” “We’ll see,” “Not sure about this week.” You sense a widening distance, practically a wall—solid as brick and mortar. You are intelligent, empathetic, a fixer. So you try to talk. You bring it up gently: “Hey, I just want to know where we stand,” or “I’m feeling disconnected.” Suddenly, you’re the problem. “You overthink,” they say. “You’re too sensitive,” or “You’re dramatic and insecure. You rush things.” Or, “I’m not ready for a relationship,” or my favorite, “I don’t like labels—why ruin something by naming it?” Then they pull back, apologize, and you begin to doubt your own alarm. Stop. Look me in the eye for a moment. You are not losing your mind. Say it with me: you are not crazy. You are not asking for too much. That unease in your belly is not mere insecurity—it’s information. It’s your nervous system, your intuition, your whole being registering truth. It’s an alarm. A warning signal. It is shouting, pay attention. That confusion you feel is not your fault. It’s manufactured. It’s smoke and mirrors. It’s engineered to keep you close enough to be an option and far enough away to be harmless. You are not paranoid for sensing it—you are awake. Deep down you suspect you’re not the only one, that you’re not the sole recipient of their attention, not the only person propping up their ego or offering comfort. Your first instinct might be to chalk it up to cheating—someone playing the field, selfishness, arrogance, sex, ego. But pause—before jumping to that conclusion, understand this “aha” moment: this behavior is rarely born of malice. It stems from fear. It’s not about hurting you so much as preserving themselves. The person across from you is not an assured player; they are a frightened child inside an adult body. Their distance, the other people, the secrecy—this isn’t a power play to win; it’s a survival tactic. It’s not a trust issue so much as trauma. These are the patterns of the dismissive-avoidant. To truly grasp why they act this way, you must look past what you see and into the emotional wiring they hide. In the next installment, we’ll peel back the curtain and explore the root causes. Why do they do this? How does childhood programming push them to keep multiple people on standby? Once you understand the why, you’ll stop taking it personally—and that’s where you reclaim your power.

Want to know why? Why they behave like this, why commitment feels impossible, why they maintain a roster of backup people? Do you think this was a conscious choice, like waking up one day and deciding, “I’ll be heartless and break hearts”? Not at all. To understand the adult you’re dating, you must trace back to their childhood. The dismissive-avoidant didn’t arrive fully formed; they were shaped. They grew up in an environment where emotional needs were unmet or even punished. Picture a baby crying, frightened, reaching out for comfort—and instead of being soothed they were told, “You’re fine,” “Stop crying,” “You’re too sensitive,” “You’re dramatic,” or they were met with silence and neglect. Their needs were inconvenient; their vulnerability was a burden. The child learned a survival lesson that imprinted on their nervous system: needing someone equals pain; showing weakness equals danger; relying on someone equals disappointment, judgment, or shame. The deepest lesson: intimacy is a trap. So what did that small child do? They adapted. They learned to self-soothe. They stopped relying on others. They overdeveloped independence and became their own caretaker. They built a fortress around their heart, brick by brick, with a banner that reads, “I’m fine. I don’t need anyone.” Fast-forward twenty or thirty years: here you are—warm, empathetic, consistent, wanting real connection—and when you move closer, when you show need, what happens inside them? Alarm bells, sirens, childhood wiring ignites: danger, entrapment, loss of control—pull back. What you call love registers in their nervous system as pressure. What you call closeness registers as suffocation. What looks to you like safe, secure connection looks to them like closing bars. They dread your neediness even as they fear being needed. So how does a person who craves connection but is paralyzed by fear meet their needs? How do they spread the risk? Here’s your second “aha”: they keep multiple partners not to celebrate abundance but to hedge against fear. It’s not arrogance; it’s psychological insurance. Think of it—if they have you, an ex texting for comfort, a friend for dinners, maybe someone new online—what have they done unconsciously? They’ve ensured no single person holds all the cards. No one can get close enough to truly cause harm. It’s not about hoarding options for pleasure; it’s about protection. When you get too close, when you ask for more, when things start to feel real, what do they do? They pull away and redirect attention to someone easier—less demanding, still in the fun and safety zone. It’s an emotional regulation tool, the way they control their anxiety. They aren’t playing people to assert dominance; they’re patching themselves with people to avoid relying on just one. That brings us to the how. How do they live with this? How can someone be tender one minute and distant the next without feeling like a fraud? They have methods. In the next section we’ll examine the tactics—the playbook. For now, you should know this: it isn’t about malice; it’s about fear. It’s an inner scared child trying to connect while avoiding being trapped. That’s the why. Now we must talk about you—the woman sitting there asking, “How do they sleep at night? How can they look me in the eye and text someone else? How can they be warm one day and cold the next? Don’t they feel guilty?” This is the part you need to hear: the “how” is their operational manual, a set of tools they use, consciously or unconsciously, to manage this impossible system. Their first and most powerful tool is their secret weapon. Here’s your third “aha”: it’s called compartmentalization. Imagine their life and mind not as one open space but as a filing cabinet or a series of locked boxes. There’s a box labeled “Work.” A box labeled “Family.” A box for “Hobbies.” And then there’s a box labeled “You.” And next to it
There is another box labeled “the person” — the second one. Maybe there’s a third labeled “X,” the one they still message. And this is the cardinal rule of the entire system: those boxes never touch. That’s why they can sit with you on a Friday night, be fully present, look you in the eye, laugh with you, and make you feel like the only person alive. The instant the “you” box opens, every other box snaps shut. They are closed, tucked away in the cellar, as if they don’t exist. The moment they step out that door there’s a click: the “you” box is closed and returned to the shelf, and the work box is opened — or the box labeled for that other person — and suddenly you don’t exist. Don’t they feel guilty? No. Guilt requires integration: holding two opposing beliefs at once — “I care about this person” and “I’m doing something that will hurt them.” Their entire psychic defense is designed to prevent that integration. When they are with you, they care. When they’re texting someone else, they aren’t thinking about you. It’s a clever, devastatingly effective method — a warped way of organizing an internal world that’s terrified of intimacy. They don’t give you their whole heart. You’re not committing to a whole person; you’re committing to a box. You wonder why you’re kept out of every other corner of their life: you aren’t permitted in. Allowing you in would let the boxes touch, and if they touched, the whole system would collapse. That’s their inner tool. Now what about their outer tools? How do they manage you? How do they keep you confined to that box without everything exploding? This is the moment of clarity. Phase Four. I name it the shield of ambiguity. Raise your hand if you’ve heard any of these lines: “I just don’t like labels.” “I’m not ready for a relationship.” “I’m not a committed person.” “We’re just having fun.” “Why do we need a name for it?” Let me translate what that actually means. This isn’t harmless ambiguity or drifting with the flow. It’s a deliberate psychological shield. A verbal loophole. Their get-out-of-jail card. Because here’s the game: their actions pull you in. They treat you like a partner, speak to you intimately, sleep beside you, trust you — their behavior screams relationship. But their words, their scripted lines, protect them. They purposefully manufacture a gray area, a fog. Within that fog, they have plausible denial. As long as they never promise exclusivity, as long as they never say “you’re mine,” as long as they honestly claim they aren’t ready, they can convince themselves they aren’t doing anything wrong. They’re free to message an ex. They’re free to accept that friendly dinner invite. They’re practically free, they tell themselves. That’s why you feel on the verge of losing your mind: you try to reconcile what they do with what they say. It can’t be reconciled. You exist in contradiction. That fog is their safety net. It’s the space where they enjoy all the benefits of intimacy without the exposure and responsibility commitment requires. It’s the ultimate emotional loophole — allowing them to keep you available while keeping their options open, all while reassuring themselves they are decent people. But what happens when ambiguity isn’t enough? What happens when—
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