Should I stop initiating to see what happens?





Should I stop initiating to see what happens?

The Moment Before I Don’t Send It

I’m sitting at the small round table by the window again, the one that wobbles slightly if I lean too hard on the edge.

The café is loud in that gentle way it always is — steam hissing, low conversation, ceramic touching ceramic.

My phone is in my hand, thumb hovering over a half-typed message: “Are you free this week?”

I don’t press send.

I just sit there with it.

The Pattern I Already Know

I know how this usually goes.

I send the message. They respond warmly. We coordinate. We meet. We laugh. It’s good.

I’ve written about that rhythm before in why I’m always the one who makes the plans — how motion begins with me and then unfolds easily once it’s started.

There’s nothing hostile about it.

Nothing cold.

Just direction.

What Happens If I Don’t?

The question isn’t dramatic.

It isn’t fueled by anger.

It’s quiet and almost clinical in tone: what happens if I don’t move first?

I explored the anxiety of that pause once in why I feel anxious waiting to see if they’ll ever initiate — how silence feels heavier when you’re used to being the one who breaks it.

That anxiety isn’t loud. It’s anticipatory.

Like standing still in a room where you’re usually the one turning on the lights.

Stillness Has a Sound

I imagine not sending the message.

I imagine the day unfolding without my suggestion shaping it.

The café door opens again; the bell rings; people walk in and out without knowing the experiment happening in my chest.

Stillness has a sound.

It’s the absence of the notification I usually create.

It’s the lack of movement I’m accustomed to supplying.

The Fear Isn’t Rejection

I realize something as I sit here: I’m not afraid they’ll reject me.

I’m afraid nothing will happen at all.

That’s the quieter fear I named in why I question whether they’d notice if I stopped trying — the possibility that silence won’t feel like absence to them the way it feels to me.

Not because they don’t care.

But because they don’t track initiation the way I do.

What I’m Really Testing

If I stop initiating, I’m not just testing them.

I’m testing the structure of the connection.

Does it move toward me on its own?

Or does it remain still until I nudge it forward?

That question feels heavier than I expected.

Relief and Tension, Together

There’s a strange relief in not sending it.

In letting the phone rest face down on the table.

In allowing the moment to exist without my intervention.

And there’s tension too — a tightening in my chest that feels like waiting for proof.

Proof of motion.

Proof of intention.

The Café Doesn’t Care

A couple at the next table is planning something for next weekend.

The suggestion flows easily from one to the other, as though initiation doesn’t carry weight at all.

I notice how light that looks.

How unmeasured.

How untested.

And I wonder what it would feel like if connection didn’t require this quiet internal audit every time.

The Quiet Ending That Lands

I still haven’t pressed send.

The coffee has gone lukewarm. The light has shifted lower against the wall.

I don’t know what will happen if I stop initiating.

I only know that the act of not moving first feels like standing still in a current I’ve been swimming in for a long time.

And for now, I’m just noticing what stillness feels like in my body — unfamiliar, slightly tense, and undeniably real.

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Daniel Mercer

Writer and researcher on adult relationships. Creator of Thethirdplaceweneverfound.com

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