It was a crisp Saturday afternoon in October of 2020 when my friend Julia called me: “I can’t believe I haven’t heard from him.” I knew this day was coming.
See, originally, Julia branded Mikey as a casual fling—they’d have sporadic sex, usually incited by a pang of pandemic loneliness, and they agreed to leave emotions at the door. In fact, when things first started, Julia’s attitude was totally apathetic. “He’s just a distraction,” she said when I once asked if Mikey was cute. “I definitely wouldn’t go for him outside of lockdown, but it’s comfortable—we’ve known each other since elementary school.” My antenna immediately shot up when I heard her say comfortable. As I anticipated, Julia’s motto slowly transitioned from “I’d never actually date Mikey” to “I wonder who Mikey dated in college.” And by the time the foliage turned yellow four months later, she’d officially entered the “How do I get Mikey to date me” phase.
As with most situationships, my friend’s casual arrangement devolved into a festering source of anxiety. Our weekly FaceTimes went from indolent mentions of Mikey to full-blown psychoanalyses of what was wrong with him. She had a theory for everything: why his astrology sign made him a player, how his dad’s infidelity scarred him and, eventually, what she could do to get him to commit. “If he’d just let me in, I know we could be happy,” she’d lament. To be fair, I didn’t discount her conjecture; Julia was probably right. The guy did seem to have baggage he had to work through—and according to her screenshots, he appeared to genuinely care about her, too. But Mikey’s Aquarius zodiac and family trauma were beside the point. The truth of the matter was that he couldn’t give my friend what she wanted, and she was driving herself crazy waiting for a commitment (which never came).
If you’re reading this, it’s likely because you’re the “Julia” in a situationship right now. I’ll tell you what I told her: It’s time to let them go. As a relationship editor, the number one question I’m asked is, “How do I turn this into something more?” Yet, my CliffsNote’s answer is that you can’t. (Read: Soonicorn.) Situationships are often a result of poor timing while relationships happen when both people are ready to commit. The only thing you can do is move on to find someone who aligns with what you want (easier said than done). So below, I tapped a psychologist for her best advice on how to get over a situationship.