
Most people who have been in a relationship know what itās like to fall in love, and many of us have also experienced the pain of unreciprocated feelings. But what happens when your partner wants to be with you and cares for you, yet admits they donāt āfeel in loveā with you? What does that even mean, and is there any chance their emotions will shift? Todayās letter comes from a woman Iāll call Kayla. She writes: dear fairy, my boyfriend loves me but is not in love with me. He confessed this to me after what was supposed to be our Valentineās Day date. Okay ā Iāve got my fairy pencil ready to mark a few things Iāll return to on a second read ā letās unpack Kaylaās story. Weād been back together a little over a year after reconnecting years after college. We first met while studying abroad and traveled the world together, making memories that stuck with me. That early romance didnāt last because we were young and needed to stay unattached to focus on our futures. Since we stayed friends it wasnāt hard to light that flame again; Iād always kept him in the back of my mind as āthe one.ā So I was ecstatic when he showed interest. He made grand promises to sweep me off my feet and I dove in eagerly. During the time apart I had other relationships and even fell in love. He, by contrast, said heād never formed deep attachments in his dating life. He told me that after two years with an ex he ended it because he didnāt love her ā and when I asked why it took him so long to realize that, he couldnāt give a clear answer. In our relationship we struggled with connection for most of the time. We were long-distance, seeing each other roughly once a month, but on the phone daily. A few months ago I moved to his city and we entered a new phase. Throughout, I raised concerns about feeling emotionally distant ā wanting more quality time, needing reassurance and thoughtful gestures to feel loved. At first these felt like small things. For example, he uses his phone a lot. I would point out that given the distance and the limited time we had together, it didnāt make sense for him to be absorbed in his screen instead of being present with me. But my complaints seemed to fall on deaf ears; over time my attempts to connect faded and I accepted that I was spending time with someone who was more interested in his phone than in being engaged with me. Another problem was what I experienced as a lack of consideration. Some moments of selfishness were glaring and baffling. The most recent fight about this started after Iād worked a full day on nearly no food while he heated up a meal and didnāt offer any to me. Heād come over while I was swamped with work and, since I work from home, didnāt have time to cook. I grabbed snacks during the day and by the time I ordered dinner for both of us heād already warmed his own food and never offered any. When I complained, he reacted with annoyance and said he was tired of constantly being expected to āroll out the red carpetā for me. Needless to say, that hurt. In recent months Iāve had to ask him repeatedly to make time for us. He was often traveling or booked with his friends. The worst example was when I came to his house for a weekend and that same evening he remembered plans and left me to go to a friendās party. He seemed to habitually prioritize his friendships over our relationship instead of seeking a balance. Even this past weekend, what should have been our Valentineās Day celebration was split with his friends ā Iām not laughing at you, Iām laughing because this has happened to me too ā he told me on the day of our date that heād be leaving early the next morning to see friends and would be busy watching the Super Bowl on Sunday. The final blow came when we discussed meeting my family: he said he loved me but was not in love with me. That revelation sent me into a tailspin and absolutely gutted me. He asked that we go to therapy, though Iām skeptical it will help. I love him and he doesnāt seem to return the depth of feeling I have for him. Iāve been open and vulnerable the whole way ā I disclosed my history of sexual abuse, and even when his response was lukewarm and he went back to scrolling on his phone, I kept showing up with full honesty. Now I feel like thereās nothing left to try, yet he keeps insisting on talking even after I asked for space. He now accepts that he needs therapy, which heād always denied when I suggested it. He told me he struggles with vulnerability because it wasnāt modeled for him: his father was an alcoholic who left his mother to raise him and his brothers alone. He says he doesnāt want to dwell on negative feelings toward his dad and would rather move on. When he talks about emotions he canāt bring himself to use āIā statements and instead speaks in a distancing way, almost saying āyouā instead of āI.ā That deeply unsettles me and makes me feel heās out of touch with his inner life ā thatās called illeism, by the way, and it always bothers me when people speak like that. Now Iām at a crossroads. Iāve been in the painful place of loving someone who doesnāt love me back before, and Iām wary of allowing myself more harm by staying. Yet Iām asking if thereās any hope this can be salvaged. If he admits heās not in love, can we continue together? Many thanks for your attention. Wow ā what a painful situation. Letās walk through some of what you shared and try to make sense of it. You dated in college, had that intense travel romance that was short-lived, and later reconnected. Short youthful romances often arenāt expected to become deep love affairs, so itās understandable neither of you was fully in love then. He reached back out to you later, which suggests you held some significance for him, and it sounds like he may have hoped this would grow into a more conventional, committed relationship. His history ā saying heās never built strong attachments and that he couldnāt explain why he didnāt fall in love with a past partner ā is telling. There are several possible explanations, but letās look at the facts first. You moved to the same city as him ā thatās a major step. Itās noteworthy that you did so before heād told you he was in love; if someone isnāt emotionally invested, moving closer is risky. I understand why people sometimes feel they need to spend more time together to test things out, but once you were physically present, the disconnection persisted and, as you said, became more obvious. Wanting reassurance and thoughtfulness to feel loved is entirely normal and reasonable. Many of the issues you described initially seem small ā like excessive phone use ā and thatās a common complaint. Phones are seductive and distracting, and most people who do it would agree itās inconsiderate and needs work. Still, in your situation his lack of presence was significant, and when your bids for connection were repeatedly ignored, you understandably stopped trying. Your use of the word ābidsā suggests youāre familiar with the Gottman approach: researchers can often predict relationship outcomes based on how partners respond to small requests for attention, affection, or help. If those bids are regularly ignored, thatās a bad sign. Regarding the dinner incident, from his perspective he might have simply seen himself as hungry and not fully aware of the context of your stressful day. That can be true, yet it doesnāt absolve him from the way his behavior felt to you. The weekend where he chose friends over you, the Valentineās split, and the prioritizing of social plans over shared time all point to someone who may be either clueless about what matters to a romantic partner or unwilling to shift priorities. The confession that he ālovesā you but is ānot in loveā with you understandably landed like a bomb. Youāve been together a bit over a year, and that admission leaves you with real uncertainty. He now acknowledges he needs therapy, which he had earlier resisted. Itās common for people to hope therapy will āfixā a partner so theyāll love them the way they want to be loved ā but thatās not a reliable strategy. If someone lacks the capacity for a certain kind of emotional involvement, therapy wonāt guarantee a transformation into the person you need. He might be an āaromanticā person ā that is, someone who doesnāt experience romantic attraction in the usual way. Signs of aromanticism can include not making romantic gestures, seeming oblivious to a partnerās emotional needs, and a history of not forming deep romantic attachments. What you describe ā a pattern of not building strong attachments and lacking insight into why ā could fit that profile. If his nature is simply not to fall in love in the conventional sense, it will be a hard road for a partner whoās waiting for that feeling to appear. Alternatively, his behavior might reflect an avoidant attachment style rooted in trauma. You mentioned his fatherās alcoholism and abandonment; people with that background often develop avoidant strategies and have trouble accessing or expressing vulnerability. There are rare but real cases where a partner who initially couldnāt access feelings of love later did, sometimes after a significant event that shook them up ā but thatās not something to count on or to try to engineer. The way he treats his fatherās role in his life ā insisting on āmoving onā and dismissing strong feelings ā is consistent with a defensive stance toward emotional pain. If heās now willing to go to therapy, thatās a positive sign, but it doesnāt guarantee the outcome you want. If heās requested couples counseling, that might be a constructive next step to help both of you understand the dynamics and see whether thereās potential to grow closer. A skilled therapist can help illuminate attachment patterns and communication habits, and sometimes that makes a meaningful difference. At the same time, you have every right to protect yourself: if being in a relationship filled with doubt and emotional scarcity is harmful to you, you donāt have to stay. Both choices ā trying couples therapy or stepping away ā are valid, and you get to decide what your heart and boundaries need. Wishing you the best, Kayla ā this is a painful situation and thereās no way through it without some hurt. If anyone watching wants to clarify what a healthy partner looks like and craft their own vision of relationship needs, thereās a free download called āSigns of a Great Partnerā you can get right there. I will see you very [Music]
![Most people who have been in a relationship know what itās like to fall in love, and many of us have also experienced the pain of unreciprocated feelings. But what happens when your partner wants to be with you and cares for you, yet admits they donāt āfeel in loveā with you? What does that even mean, and is there any chance their emotions will shift? Todayās letter comes from a woman Iāll call Kayla. She writes: dear fairy, my boyfriend loves me but is not in love with me. He confessed this to me after what was supposed to be our Valentineās Day date. Okay ā Iāve got my fairy pencil ready to mark a few things Iāll return to on a second read ā letās unpack Kaylaās story. Weād been back together a little over a year after reconnecting years after college. We first met while studying abroad and traveled the world together, making memories that stuck with me. That early romance didnāt last because we were young and needed to stay unattached to focus on our futures. Since we stayed friends it wasnāt hard to light that flame again; Iād always kept him in the back of my mind as āthe one.ā So I was ecstatic when he showed interest. He made grand promises to sweep me off my feet and I dove in eagerly. During the time apart I had other relationships and even fell in love. He, by contrast, said heād never formed deep attachments in his dating life. He told me that after two years with an ex he ended it because he didnāt love her ā and when I asked why it took him so long to realize that, he couldnāt give a clear answer. In our relationship we struggled with connection for most of the time. We were long-distance, seeing each other roughly once a month, but on the phone daily. A few months ago I moved to his city and we entered a new phase. Throughout, I raised concerns about feeling emotionally distant ā wanting more quality time, needing reassurance and thoughtful gestures to feel loved. At first these felt like small things. For example, he uses his phone a lot. I would point out that given the distance and the limited time we had together, it didnāt make sense for him to be absorbed in his screen instead of being present with me. But my complaints seemed to fall on deaf ears; over time my attempts to connect faded and I accepted that I was spending time with someone who was more interested in his phone than in being engaged with me. Another problem was what I experienced as a lack of consideration. Some moments of selfishness were glaring and baffling. The most recent fight about this started after Iād worked a full day on nearly no food while he heated up a meal and didnāt offer any to me. Heād come over while I was swamped with work and, since I work from home, didnāt have time to cook. I grabbed snacks during the day and by the time I ordered dinner for both of us heād already warmed his own food and never offered any. When I complained, he reacted with annoyance and said he was tired of constantly being expected to āroll out the red carpetā for me. Needless to say, that hurt. In recent months Iāve had to ask him repeatedly to make time for us. He was often traveling or booked with his friends. The worst example was when I came to his house for a weekend and that same evening he remembered plans and left me to go to a friendās party. He seemed to habitually prioritize his friendships over our relationship instead of seeking a balance. Even this past weekend, what should have been our Valentineās Day celebration was split with his friends ā Iām not laughing at you, Iām laughing because this has happened to me too ā he told me on the day of our date that heād be leaving early the next morning to see friends and would be busy watching the Super Bowl on Sunday. The final blow came when we discussed meeting my family: he said he loved me but was not in love with me. That revelation sent me into a tailspin and absolutely gutted me. He asked that we go to therapy, though Iām skeptical it will help. I love him and he doesnāt seem to return the depth of feeling I have for him. Iāve been open and vulnerable the whole way ā I disclosed my history of sexual abuse, and even when his response was lukewarm and he went back to scrolling on his phone, I kept showing up with full honesty. Now I feel like thereās nothing left to try, yet he keeps insisting on talking even after I asked for space. He now accepts that he needs therapy, which heād always denied when I suggested it. He told me he struggles with vulnerability because it wasnāt modeled for him: his father was an alcoholic who left his mother to raise him and his brothers alone. He says he doesnāt want to dwell on negative feelings toward his dad and would rather move on. When he talks about emotions he canāt bring himself to use āIā statements and instead speaks in a distancing way, almost saying āyouā instead of āI.ā That deeply unsettles me and makes me feel heās out of touch with his inner life ā thatās called illeism, by the way, and it always bothers me when people speak like that. Now Iām at a crossroads. Iāve been in the painful place of loving someone who doesnāt love me back before, and Iām wary of allowing myself more harm by staying. Yet Iām asking if thereās any hope this can be salvaged. If he admits heās not in love, can we continue together? Many thanks for your attention. Wow ā what a painful situation. Letās walk through some of what you shared and try to make sense of it. You dated in college, had that intense travel romance that was short-lived, and later reconnected. Short youthful romances often arenāt expected to become deep love affairs, so itās understandable neither of you was fully in love then. He reached back out to you later, which suggests you held some significance for him, and it sounds like he may have hoped this would grow into a more conventional, committed relationship. His history ā saying heās never built strong attachments and that he couldnāt explain why he didnāt fall in love with a past partner ā is telling. There are several possible explanations, but letās look at the facts first. You moved to the same city as him ā thatās a major step. Itās noteworthy that you did so before heād told you he was in love; if someone isnāt emotionally invested, moving closer is risky. I understand why people sometimes feel they need to spend more time together to test things out, but once you were physically present, the disconnection persisted and, as you said, became more obvious. Wanting reassurance and thoughtfulness to feel loved is entirely normal and reasonable. Many of the issues you described initially seem small ā like excessive phone use ā and thatās a common complaint. Phones are seductive and distracting, and most people who do it would agree itās inconsiderate and needs work. Still, in your situation his lack of presence was significant, and when your bids for connection were repeatedly ignored, you understandably stopped trying. Your use of the word ābidsā suggests youāre familiar with the Gottman approach: researchers can often predict relationship outcomes based on how partners respond to small requests for attention, affection, or help. If those bids are regularly ignored, thatās a bad sign. Regarding the dinner incident, from his perspective he might have simply seen himself as hungry and not fully aware of the context of your stressful day. That can be true, yet it doesnāt absolve him from the way his behavior felt to you. The weekend where he chose friends over you, the Valentineās split, and the prioritizing of social plans over shared time all point to someone who may be either clueless about what matters to a romantic partner or unwilling to shift priorities. The confession that he ālovesā you but is ānot in loveā with you understandably landed like a bomb. Youāve been together a bit over a year, and that admission leaves you with real uncertainty. He now acknowledges he needs therapy, which he had earlier resisted. Itās common for people to hope therapy will āfixā a partner so theyāll love them the way they want to be loved ā but thatās not a reliable strategy. If someone lacks the capacity for a certain kind of emotional involvement, therapy wonāt guarantee a transformation into the person you need. He might be an āaromanticā person ā that is, someone who doesnāt experience romantic attraction in the usual way. Signs of aromanticism can include not making romantic gestures, seeming oblivious to a partnerās emotional needs, and a history of not forming deep romantic attachments. What you describe ā a pattern of not building strong attachments and lacking insight into why ā could fit that profile. If his nature is simply not to fall in love in the conventional sense, it will be a hard road for a partner whoās waiting for that feeling to appear. Alternatively, his behavior might reflect an avoidant attachment style rooted in trauma. You mentioned his fatherās alcoholism and abandonment; people with that background often develop avoidant strategies and have trouble accessing or expressing vulnerability. There are rare but real cases where a partner who initially couldnāt access feelings of love later did, sometimes after a significant event that shook them up ā but thatās not something to count on or to try to engineer. The way he treats his fatherās role in his life ā insisting on āmoving onā and dismissing strong feelings ā is consistent with a defensive stance toward emotional pain. If heās now willing to go to therapy, thatās a positive sign, but it doesnāt guarantee the outcome you want. If heās requested couples counseling, that might be a constructive next step to help both of you understand the dynamics and see whether thereās potential to grow closer. A skilled therapist can help illuminate attachment patterns and communication habits, and sometimes that makes a meaningful difference. At the same time, you have every right to protect yourself: if being in a relationship filled with doubt and emotional scarcity is harmful to you, you donāt have to stay. Both choices ā trying couples therapy or stepping away ā are valid, and you get to decide what your heart and boundaries need. Wishing you the best, Kayla ā this is a painful situation and thereās no way through it without some hurt. If anyone watching wants to clarify what a healthy partner looks like and craft their own vision of relationship needs, thereās a free download called āSigns of a Great Partnerā you can get right there. I will see you very [Music]](https://soulmatcherapp.sfo3.digitaloceanspaces.com/wp/images/some-people-are-not-wired-to-experience-romantic-love-n2zvbzim.jpg)

