https://youtu.be/ow5bPIeVTzU

The Horrors That Hide by Julianna Rowe (coming Soon)

Tuesday, February 10, 2026

What Men Say When They Don't - "I Don't Want to Put Labels on It" by Julianna Rowe

 

“What Men Say When They Don’t”  

A series on language, clarity, and the quiet announcement peple make before they disappear. Hosted on?  The Happy News Lady

While these pieces focus on  men, the language of avoidance isn’t gendered. Anyone whose disappeared will recognize it.

“I Don’t Want to Put Labels on It”

“I don’t want to put labels on it,” he says, as if labels are the problem and not the absence of clarity.

It sounds modern, even flexible. Like he’s being thoughtful instead of evasive. But labels aren’t cages, they’re coordinates. They help two people know where they are, what they’re building, and what they’re responsible for. When men say they don’t want labels, it’s often after connection has already formed…after time has been spent, intimacy has grown, and routines have quietly taken shape. Everything feels like a relationship. It’s just not being named as one.

“No labels” usually means:

Keep the benefits, avoid the expectations, and preserve an easy exit. It allows closeness without commitment and intimacy without accountability. It keeps the door open while asking you not to knock.

You’re encouraged to act invested but not expect security. To show up consistently while accepting uncertainty as the cost of entry. If you ask what this is, you’re told not to overthink it. If you ask where it’s going, you’re told not to rush it. But refusing to name something doesn’t keep it simple. It keeps it undefined.

Men use this phrase when they want the relationship to stay flexible….for them. When they want room to maneuver without renegotiating the terms. Because once something has a name, it has boundaries, and boundaries require intention. Healthy connections don’t fear clarity. They welcome it. They don’t confuse labels with pressure or definition with loss of freedom. If someone resists naming what’s already happening, it’s not because labels are dangerous. It’s because commitment would change how they’re allowed to behave. So, when you hear,

“I don’t want to put labels on it,” listen to what’s being protected. If the connection continues but the responsibility does not, the label isn’t the issue. The hesitation is. And you’re allowed to decide whether staying unnamed serves you when you’re already showing up fully. Classic avoidance language, clarity vs convenience.

Stay tuned for more: “I Thought We Were On the Same Page”

No comments:

Post a Comment

Send comments to dianeogden.ogden@gmail.com