Man, lemme tell ya, when people ask me about dating a Pisces man and how to figure them out in relationships, I just gotta laugh. Not because it’s funny, but because it’s a whole damn journey, and I’ve been on more than one of those rides. Seriously, I used to think I had it all sussed out, like I could read people. Then I met him – well, them, actually, ’cause it wasn’t just one. It was a pattern, a cosmic joke played on me multiple times, I swear.
I remember the first time I really fell for one. It was years ago, back when I thought love was all about grand gestures and intense feelings. He was this incredibly sensitive guy, artistic, a musician. He’d look at you with those deep, watery eyes, and you just felt… understood. Like he saw into your soul, ya know? He’d say these poetic things, make you feel like you were the only person in the world. I was completely smitten. I’d never felt such a connection with anyone, like we were two pieces of a puzzle just slotting right in. We spent hours just talking, or sometimes not even talking, just being together, and it felt profound.
But then, the other shoe dropped, usually without a sound, which was kinda the problem. One minute, he’d be this attentive, loving guy, texting sweet things, planning cute dates. The next? Poof. Gone. Not literally gone, but emotionally checked out. It felt like walking into a fog. I’d send a message, no reply. I’d call, straight to voicemail. And when he did resurface, hours or even days later, it was like nothing happened. “Oh, I was just chilling,” he’d say, or “Had a lot on my mind.” And I, bless my naive heart, would just accept it. I wanted to believe the best, always. I convinced myself he just needed space, he was an artist, he was deep. What a load of crap I fed myself.
The Rollercoaster of “Understanding”
My brain, it was just reeling. I spent so much time trying to decode him. I’d analyze every word, every look, trying to figure out what I did wrong. Was I too clingy? Not interesting enough? Did I say something that upset him? I’d rack my brain, talking to my friends, getting all sorts of advice. Everyone had an opinion, but nobody truly got it. It was like I was constantly trying to grab smoke. The harder I tried to pin him down, the more elusive he became.

I remember one specific evening. We had plans for dinner, something we’d talked about all week. I was excited, got dressed up, even cleaned my apartment. Six o’clock rolled around, no sign. Seven, nothing. Eight, I called. No answer. By nine, I was in tears, just furious and heartbroken. He finally texted around midnight, “Hey, sorry, just got caught up with my band practice. We were just jamming.” Jamming. My ass. I was left hanging, feeling like an idiot. This wasn’t some isolated incident; it was practically a recurring theme.
I went through cycles with these kinds of relationships. Each time, I’d swear it would be different. I’d tell myself, “Okay, this time I’ll understand. I’ll be more patient. I’ll give him more room.” But the pattern persisted. The charm, the sensitivity, the initial intense connection… followed by the drifting, the emotional unavailability, the feeling of being utterly lost in their personal ocean. It was exhausting.
- I tried to be his rock, his stable point.
- I tried to go with the flow, be as adaptable as he was.
- I tried to communicate my needs openly, directly.
And honestly? None of it truly worked the way I hoped. It wasn’t about my actions always. It was just… them. And my reactions to them.
The Realization That Hit Me
It took a really brutal breakup, one where I felt completely blindsided and abandoned, for me to finally get it. It wasn’t about chasing him, or trying to fix him, or making him fit into my idea of a perfect partner. It was about seeing them for who they are, not who I wanted them to be. I started digging into astrology, not as some silly fortune-telling thing, but as a framework to understand different ways people operate. And when I landed on Pisces, it was like a floodgate opened. All those traits – the dreaminess, the escapism, the deep empathy that could also lead to emotional overwhelm and withdrawal, the blurring of boundaries… it all clicked. It wasn’t just him; it was a fundamental aspect of their being.
I realized I’d been so focused on trying to pull them into my reality, when their reality was inherently more fluid, less defined. They live in a world of feelings and intuition, and sometimes, the harshness of everyday decisions or commitment can just be too much. They don’t necessarily mean to hurt you when they ghost or get distant. Sometimes, they’re just trying to survive their own emotional storms. Or they’re lost in a dream, literally or figuratively. It’s not malice; it’s just… how they navigate the world.
It was a tough lesson, really. It meant I had to stop taking their withdrawals personally, and instead, understand it as part of their make-up. It also meant I had to look at my own needs. Could I handle that level of emotional ambiguity? Could I love someone who might perpetually feel a bit out of reach? For me, the answer, after all that heartache, became a clear “no” for long-term partnership. I still appreciate their beautiful, sensitive souls, but I understand now that my practical, grounded self needs something different. It’s not a judgment on them; it’s just me finally understanding the relationship dynamic that truly works for me after living through all that experience.
