Sis, I need to talk to you about the painful feeling that won’t go away, even though you’re in a relationship.
Many people feel unchosen in relationship even when they are technically committed.
You’re committed to him. He says he’s committed to you. You’re together. You’re in a relationship.

And yet—you feel unchosen.
You feel like you’re an option he settled for, not the person he truly wanted. Like you’re the backup plan, not the first choice. Like he’s with you because you were available, not because you were the one.
Even though he chose to be with you, you don’t feel chosen.
You see how he looks at other women. You notice when he talks about an ex. You catch moments where it seems like he wishes you were different. You sense that he’s not all in, not fully present, not completely here with you.
You’re in a committed relationship—but you feel like a placeholder for someone he’d rather be with.
And it’s eating you alive. The wondering if you’re enough. The fear that he’s settling. The pain of feeling like you’re not the one he really wanted—you’re just the one he ended up with.
I see how lonely this makes you feel. You’re constantly trying to prove you’re worth choosing. How can you not fully trust that he wants you? How do you live in fear that he’s one better option away from leaving?

And I see you wondering: “Why do I feel unchosen when we’re together? Is it just my insecurity? Or is he really settling for me? How do I stop feeling like I’m not the one he truly wants?”
Sometimes the feeling is your intuition telling you the truth, sis. And sometimes it’s your wounds making you doubt what’s real. Let me help you understand which one it is.
Let me help you understand why you feel unchosen even when committed, and what to do about it.
What’s Really Happening: The Unchosen Paradox
Let me be honest with you: Being in a relationship doesn’t automatically mean feeling chosen. Commitment can exist without that deep sense of being truly wanted.
There are two possibilities here:
- He’s genuinely not all in—and you’re feeling the truth of that
- He is all in—but your wounds make you unable to feel chosen
Or sometimes—it’s both.
Here’s what might be really going on:
He’s Not Fully Committed (You’re Feeling Reality)
Consider this painful possibility: Maybe you feel unchosen because you ARE unchosen.
Signs he’s not fully in:
- He compares you to others (exes, other women)
- He keeps one foot out the door
- He’s still on dating apps or “keeping options open.”
- He doesn’t introduce you or claim you publicly
- He talks about being “unsure” or “taking it slow” even after a significant time
- He makes you feel like you have to constantly prove yourself
- He’s with you but seems to be waiting for something better
If these are true, you’re not imagining it.
You feel unchosen because he hasn’t fully chosen you.
Your intuition is telling you the truth: He’s settled, not committed. He’s with you, but not fully present.
You Have an Anxious Attachment Style
If you have anxious attachment:
You might feel unchosen even when someone is fully choosing you because:
- You don’t trust that love is stable
- You’re hypervigilant to signs of rejection
- You interpret neutral behavior as a lack of interest
- You need constant reassurance to feel chosen
- Past wounds make you doubt present commitment
Your nervous system is stuck in “he’s going to leave” mode—so even when he’s showing up, you can’t feel it.
You might be projecting past experiences of being unchosen onto a present relationship where you actually are chosen.
You Never Felt Chosen Growing Up
Think about your childhood:
Maybe:
- You felt like the second choice
- You had to compete for love with siblings
- A parent was emotionally unavailable or absent
- You felt overlooked or invisible
- Love felt conditional or inconsistent
You learned: I’m not the first choice. I’m not the one people truly want.
Now, even when someone chooses you, you can’t feel it—because it doesn’t match your internal narrative about being unchosen.
The wound from childhood is so deep that present-day choices can’t penetrate it.
He Shows Ambivalence (Mixed Signals)
Maybe he IS committed—but he’s also ambivalent.
He shows:
- Commitment (he’s with you, he says he loves you)
- AND ambivalence (he’s distant, he questions the relationship, he compares you)
So you feel unchosen because you’re picking up on his mixed feelings.
He’s chosen you logically or practically, but emotionally, he hasn’t fully committed.
You’re sensing the gap between his commitment and his wholehearted presence.
You Don’t Believe You’re Worthy of Being Chosen
Deep down, you don’t believe:
- Anyone would fully choose me
- I’m someone’s first choice
- I’m the one someone truly wants
So even when someone chooses you:
- You question it
- You don’t trust it
- You wait for them to realize you’re not actually worth choosing
You can’t feel chosen because you don’t believe you’re choosable.
You’re Comparing to a Fantasy
You have an idea of what “being chosen” should feel like:
- Constant passion
- Never any doubt
- Total certainty
- Always feeling prioritized
But real relationships include:
- Ups and downs
- Moments of distance
- Life stresses that create distraction
- Human imperfection
You might feel unchosen because the relationship doesn’t match your fantasy—even though it’s actually healthy and committed.
He’s Emotionally Unavailable
He might be committed in action (he’s in the relationship) but not emotionally:
- He’s not present
- He doesn’t connect deeply
- He withholds emotional intimacy
- He’s physically there but emotionally absent
You feel unchosen because you can sense his emotional unavailability—even though he’s technically committed.
Commitment without emotional presence feels like being unchosen.
You’re Seeking Certainty That Doesn’t Exist
You want to feel:
- Absolutely certain he chose you
- Zero doubt he wants you
- Complete assurance you’re the one
But that level of certainty:
- Doesn’t exist in relationships (because humans are complex)
- Cannot be provided by another person
- Has to come from within you
You feel unchosen because you’re seeking external certainty that no relationship can provide.
Why This Feeling Is Destroying You
You can’t enjoy the relationship. You’re too busy questioning if you’re truly wanted to actually experience the love that might be there.
You’re constantly anxious. Living with the fear that you’re not the real choice creates chronic relationship anxiety.
You’re desperate for reassurance. You’re always seeking proof you’re chosen, which can push him away.
You can’t trust the relationship. Even when things are good, you’re waiting for him to realize you’re not the one.
You’re performing instead of being yourself. You’re trying to be worthy of being chosen instead of just being you.
You’re one foot out the door. If you don’t feel chosen, you can’t fully commit either—you’re protecting yourself.
You’re missing a real connection. The fear of being unchosen prevents you from experiencing the connection that exists.
You’re either with the wrong person or sabotaging the right one. Either he’s not fully choosing you (leave), or he is, and you can’t feel it (heal).
What You Need to Do
Step 1: Assess the Reality
Honestly evaluate:
Is he actually fully committed?
- Does he introduce you and claim you?
- Does he prioritize the relationship?
- Does he make plans for a future together?
- Does he show up consistently?
- Has he fully closed doors to other options?
Or is he keeping you in limbo?
- Does he avoid labels or commitment conversations?
- Does he keep you uncertain about the future?
- Does he compare you to others?
- Does he seem to be waiting for something better?
Be brutally honest about which it is.
Step 2: If He’s Not Fully Choosing You Leave
If the evidence shows he’s genuinely not all in:
You don’t have an insecurity problem. You have a relationship problem.
Don’t wait around for someone to fully choose you.
Choose yourself and leave.
Step 3: If He IS Choosing You Work on Your Wounds
If the evidence shows he IS fully committed and you still feel unchosen:
This is about your wounds, not his behavior.
Work on:
- Anxious attachment
- Childhood wounds around being unchosen
- Beliefs about your worthiness
- Ability to receive love
This is your healing work to do.
Step 4: Communicate Your Needs
If you need more reassurance to feel chosen:
Tell him: “I sometimes struggle to feel chosen because of past wounds. It would help me if you [specific action: verbally affirm you want me, express appreciation, etc.].”
Make it clear what would help, but also acknowledge this is partly your work.
Step 5: Challenge Your Interpretations
When you feel unchosen:
Ask:
- Is this based on evidence or my fear?
- Am I interpreting neutral behavior as rejection?
- What’s the actual proof he hasn’t chosen me?
- What evidence exists that he HAS chosen me?
Reality-check your feelings.
Step 6: Work on Self-Worth
The core issue:
“I don’t believe I’m worthy of being chosen.”
Work on believing:
- I am choosable
- I am someone’s first choice
- I deserve to be fully wanted
When you believe you’re worthy, you’ll be able to feel chosen.
Step 7: Notice When You Feel Chosen
Train your brain to notice:
- Moments when he shows up for you
- The times he prioritizes you
- Ways he demonstrates commitment
- Evidence he chooses you
Your brain is hyper-focused on signs you’re unchosen. Actively notice the opposite.
Step 8: Decide What You Need
You have to decide:
Do I need:
- Him to do something different to feel chosen?
- To work on my own wounds so I can feel chosen?
- To leave because I’m genuinely unchosen?
Get clear on what needs to happen and take action.
What You Need to Understand
Commitment Isn’t the Same as Wholehearted Presence
Someone can be:
- In a relationship with you (committed)
- But not emotionally present (not fully choosing)
If you feel unchosen despite commitment, pay attention—you might be sensing emotional unavailability or ambivalence.
Your Intuition Might Be Right
Don’t automatically assume you’re just insecure.
If you consistently feel unchosen:
- Trust that feeling
- Investigate if it’s based on reality
- Don’t gaslight yourself into ignoring your intuition
Sometimes, feeling unchosen is your intuition telling you the truth.
But Sometimes Your Wounds Lie
If your past includes being unchosen:
Your wounds might:
- Make you see rejection where none exists
- Prevent you from feeling chosen even when you are
- Create self-fulfilling prophecies
Wounds can distort reality. That’s also true.
You Can’t Make Someone Choose You
If he’s genuinely not fully in:
Nothing you do will make him fully choose you.
You can’t:
- Be perfect enough
- Love him enough
- Prove yourself enough
To make someone choose you who hasn’t.
If he’s unchosen you, leave.
What You Deserve
You deserve to feel chosen—not just committed to.
You deserve someone who is all in, not half-present.
You deserve to feel wanted, not settled for.
You deserve certainty that you’re the one—or the freedom to find someone for whom you are.
That feeling of being chosen is possible. But it requires either healing your wounds or finding someone who genuinely chooses you all the way.
The Bottom Line
Sis, you feel unchosen even when committed because:
- He might genuinely not be fully choosing you (trust your intuition)
- You have anxious attachment or childhood wounds around being unchosen
- He’s showing ambivalence or emotional unavailability
- You don’t believe you’re worthy of being fully chosen
- You’re comparing reality to a fantasy
Figure out which it is. Then take action.
If he’s unchosen, you leave. If he’s chosen you, but you can’t feel it—heal.
Choose yourself, sis. You deserve to feel fully chosen.
FAQ
Q: How do I know if it’s my insecurity or if he’s really not all in?
Look at the evidence: Does he show up consistently? Does he claim you publicly? Does he plan a future with you? If yes, it’s likely your wounds. If no, trust your intuition.
Q: What if he says he’s chosen me, but I don’t feel it?
Words matter less than actions. Look at how he treats you. But also consider: can you receive love? Your wounds might prevent you from feeling chosen even when you are.
Q: How much reassurance is too much?
If you need daily reassurance and it never sticks, that’s about your wounds, not his lack of choosing. Work on healing so you can feel chosen without constant external proof.
Q: Should I stay if I feel unchosen?
Not indefinitely. Either he needs to show up more fully, or you need to heal your wounds. If neither happens after a genuine effort, the relationship isn’t sustainable.
Q: Can this feeling ever go away?
Yes—either through him demonstrating a clearer commitment, or through you healing the wounds that prevent you from feeling chosen. But it requires work from one or both of you.

