It started innocently, the way so many online connections do. Late-night messages. Compliments that felt warm instead of forced. He lived far away, in another country, but he wrote every day, telling me how wonderful I was, how much he wished I would come visit. At first, I brushed it off as fantasy — words typed easily because distance made them safe.
After months of this, curiosity got the better of me. I wanted to know if his feelings were real or just something he enjoyed saying. So one evening, I decided to test him. I wrote back, “That’s it. I quit my job. Nothing’s keeping me here. I’m coming.”
His reply came fast — but not how I expected.
Instead of excitement, there was panic. He asked if I was serious. Then he said I was moving too fast. He reminded me of responsibilities, told me I should think carefully, said he never meant for me to change my life for him. The romantic tone vanished in seconds, replaced by hesitation and distance.
That’s when it hit me. He didn’t want me to come. He wanted the idea of me — the attention, the messages, the feeling of being admired from a safe distance. My reality scared him. My presence would have required effort, commitment, and honesty he wasn’t ready for.
I didn’t quit my job. I didn’t pack a bag. But I did walk away.
The next day, I sent one last message thanking him for showing me the truth without meaning to. He never replied. And that silence told me everything I needed to know.
Sometimes, the test isn’t cruel. It’s clarity. And sometimes, the bravest thing you can do is stop investing in someone who only loved you when you were far away.