Whats the best way to make him want you back?
Dated this guy for a couple of weeks and he got kinda weird after we got serious and said he needed time to think, he decided was not ready for a relationship but we still acts like he likes me and talked about in the future trying again, so to make him change his mind should i cut all contact and give him his space or do i be friends and just live my life?
but we didnt have sex lol does not apply lol
Related Information:
Tagged with: acts • relationship • sex lol
Filed under: How To Get Him Back
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!




You need to find a good balance. If you think you two could just be friends, then try that. If not, just go on with your life. I know you may want to, but there is no possible way to make a person love you or want you back, they have to decide that on their own. If you two are meant to be together, you will be. If not, then you won’t. Remember however that everything happens for a reason and if he’s not the one, then your guy is still out there waiting to meet you and love you to the best of his ability each and every day, ok? If he comes back to you on his own, then great! If not, then you know it just wasn’t meant to be and you have something a million times better out there waiting for you. Be patient. Hope this helps!
Don’t want HIM back
Move on
hes a nice guy but all guys are the same:there animals. they want sex. after he got it, he said he needed "space"! its obvious, hes a nice guy who doesnt want to hurt ur feelings. u two are over. he got wut he wanted:ur vag
I think you should just try to be a good friend. He has commitment issues. You can tell because when you got too close he backed away.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:Fear of commitment in much popular literature refers to avoidance of long-term partnership and/or marriage but the problem is often much more pervasive, affecting school, work, and home life as well.
The term commitmentphobia was coined in the popular self-help book Men Who Can’t Love in 1987. Following criticism of the perceived sexist idea that only men were commitmentphobic, the authors provided a more gender balanced model of commitmentphobia in a later work, He’s Scared, She’s Scared.