“I Need To Date Other Men To Know If You’re My Forever. If Not, No Wedding,” My Fiancée Declared…
A Predictable Algorithm
Stage two: the panic pivot. Weeks one to two.
The tone shifted from anger to wheedling manipulation. “Okay, I get it. You’re hurt. I’m sorry I hurt you, but you’re overreacting. Can we please just talk?”
“The ‘experience’ thing… it’s not what you think. It’s making me realize how good we had it. These guys are awful. They’re so self-absorbed. They just want one thing.”
“I went on three dates. Three. That’s all it took. I get it now. You’re the one. I’m calling it off. Please answer me.”
“I’m at our apartment. Where are you? It feels so empty without you here.” Stage three: desperation.
Weeks three to four. The messages grew longer, more unhinged, punctuated by late-night sends.
“I told my parents we had a fight, that you needed space. They think you’re being unreasonable. I’m defending you. Please just give me a chance to fix this.”
“I can’t sleep. I keep thinking about the way you used to make tea for me when I was stressed. No one does that. No one knows me like you do.”
“I’m ending the experiment. It’s over. I choose you. I am certain! Do you hear me? I am sure. The wedding can be back on. We can reschedule. Just say something, Jake. I’m scared. I need you. This isn’t what was supposed to happen.”
Resuming the Post
I read them with a detached, clinical interest. There was no pain, no longing, just the observation of a predictable algorithm: anger, bargaining, pleading.
The subtext of every message was clear: “My experiment yielded unsatisfying results. Please resume your post as my primary comfort provider.”
I was about to close the app when my phone buzzed in my hand. Not a text, a call: Melissa, Sarah’s sister.
I let it ring three times. This, I decided, I would answer—not for her, but to set a boundary that would hopefully filter back.
I accepted the call. “Melissa.”
“Jake, finally! Oh my God, do you have any idea what you’re doing?” Her voice was a burst of accusatory static, devoid of greeting.
“Sarah is a wreck. She’s devastated. She can’t eat, she can’t sleep. What you’re doing is so cruel!” I waited a beat for her to finish.
“Is there a specific reason you’re calling?” “The reason is you need to stop this ridiculous silent treatment and act like a man!”
“She made a mistake, okay? A tiny human mistake. But you’re blowing up your entire future over a little fight! You’re destroying everything!”
A Conditional Subscription
“There was no fight, Melissa,” I said, my voice calm and low.
“She issued an ultimatum. I accepted it. The wedding is off. My decision is final.”
“An ultimatum?” she said.
“She just needed some reassurance! A little space to feel sure. You’re twisting it because your pride is hurt. For God’s sake, she loves you!”
“Are you really going to throw away five years because your feelings got bruised? Be the bigger person. Call her.” I could see the family script playing out perfectly.
Sarah had spun the story, minimizing her demand into a vague need for reassurance, painting me as the petulant, prideful villain. “I am being the bigger person,” I replied, the phrase feeling new and true in this context.
“By removing myself from a situation where my commitment was treated as a conditional subscription. I’m not discussing this with you. Do not contact me again.”
“You’re being an ash—” I ended the call.
I then blocked Melissa’s number. The action felt clean, surgical.
Shattered Fragments
The texts from Sarah’s number, now unblocked and thus able to come through, began again with renewed frenzy. They were no longer paragraphs, but shattered fragments.
“Did my sister call you?” “Please don’t listen to her.” “Jake, answer me.” “I’m sorry. I’ll do anything.”
Then they stopped. For two days, there was nothing.
The silence felt different: charged, like the air before a lightning strike. It broke at 2:17 a.m. on a Tuesday.
My phone on silent lit up with the familiar number. It went to voicemail.
A minute later, the notification appeared. This one, I played.
I needed to hear the end of the story. Her voice was a raw, venomous scrape.
All pretense of sadness, all manipulative sweetness, was gone. This was the core: exposed and furious.
