For what it's worth, I'm someone who often doesn't text people back for literally weeks, sometimes I don't email back for months.
For your SO?
It's not really a sign of not caring, it's a sign of, well, it's a sign that she has two young-ish children, who probably are starting to have homework and still make messes, and a job. And hopefully some long-standing friendships that she prioritizes.
Yeah but that's like...the week. The day. The times when she has freedom she doesn't use it to talk to me. Part of that I know is she's nervous about having space to talk to me. She's just got an apartment with her kids and I get the impression she's uncomfortable talking to me around them. I get that.
OTOH there's been times already where you absolutely would expect to hear from someone who is thinking about you and she was radio silent. She "shut down" over Christmas and didn't talk to anyone, me included for my birthday or for xmas or several days afterward. Other times she's said "Sorry, just fell asleep" or "Sorry, just started playing video games and stayed up until 3am." All shit I'm fine with. Except...there's more excuses than conversations. You know who is up at 3am playing video games too? This guy! All this fits into "you have your personal time too, and I want to respect that." It's not even that I think she isn't being legitimate in liking me. The conversations we have are so genuine they almost hurt. But then we have these lapses of communication where I do all the talking into the void. And that feels bad.
I would honestly just ask her at the end of work when she has an ability to exit: "hey, I don't want to make this weird, but do you want to go on a date sometime?" And if she says "yes, if I wasn't so busy," ask if you can help pay for a baby sitter (or whatever) so you can have a night out. If she says no, then too bad, but you're both adults, it's a reasonable adult thing to ask. Might as well get it over with.
So she lives 3 hours away. And we're well beyond the "do you want to go on a date" courting phase and firmly into "when do you want to be intimate" territory. Which contributes to how heady this all is but ultimately is less important to me than just getting to know her better.
We just knew last month wasn't going to work at all for anything. So sometime this year, she's said she's going to make time to be free so I can come see her. January or later, I dunno and I doubt she does either. But if she can barely keep up with texting me outside of work hours, it kind of undermines my confidence she can make space for an entire weekend. I don't think it's a money thing, or the lack of a baby sitter thing. I think she has all that if she needs. It's making the actual decision to do it. Again, I haven't been putting more energy into wondering when I'm going to go down and see her when most of my energy is being spent on "Do I actually get to talk to her?" first.
It's like, just because you're infatuated with someone and have talked at length about all that entails...it doesn't automatically turn into a commitment to pursue anything. Just having someone to flirt and dream with can be enough to keep people going for a while. Her background and mine put us both on semi-equal footing; neither of us have had a lot of relationships. I don't think she's playing games with me or anything so juvenile.....I'm just sort of wondering if she's too scattered to really focus on anything but her priorities. She's at least intimated as much for last month and I was like "I get it." But much as she might like to have the time, I'm starting to wonder if she's capable of actually making any. I mean if she isn't mindful enough to send a follow up text saying "sorry, just ran out of energy tonight, will try to talk to you tomorrow", should I expect her to make the effort to clear an entire weekend? Again, I've spent all of about 30 minutes in her actual presence since we met in the context of a business trip. There's so much actual relationship stuff we haven't tried to do yet.
*sigh* Mostly this is just my baggage. I'm probably taking it too personally or trying to crystal ball too hard on it. It's difficult not to feel a keen sense of disappointment though every time it happens. I'm a hyper communicator. By personality, by profession. And personal responsibility to people in relationships, romantic or otherwise, saying what you mean, meaning what you say, are all big with me.
Put it this way. If I said "I'll call you tonight" and then couldn't, I would at least say something that night to the effect of "Sorry, can't talk tonight after all but I'm thinking of you."
The truth is, all I have is free time to wonder, dream, worry when I'm done with work for the day. She doesn't. Her heart is already filled by something pretty significant; mine isn't. That puts us on unequal footing.