This story is so painful and poignant as a New Beginning thread.
I see I'm not the only person who has found new insights about a similar "relationship" we thought we had, in our post-divorce lives.
Your description of this man fits 3 very similar men that were attracted to me when I was age 32-42 (Back-to-back-to-back, OUCH! The latter 2 pursued me; I'd been the pursuer in my 1st post-divorce love affair that went nowhere after 4 years.)
I ended up angry that I'd invested 10-plus precious years of my adult single life having to learn the fine points about such personalities, AFTER my divorce from a 12 year marriage in my 20's. My 30's were burned up in repeated attempts to "start over" .. over and over again...
During that era, I read dozens of books on psychology and relationships, but not many of them helped, much. Throughout that decade of prime-time career growth and romantic misadventure, my father (who my mom had left at age 50) did his best to offer me some attempts at insight into the male brain. (In a time before the internet.)
My father would often tell me that most guys he'd known in his time, were more or less predatory about women. I took that with a grain of salt, because I didn't know if his experiences translated to what is termed the General Population, so I wasn't sure if his opinions were valid for MY enlightened generation (ha!), or they were just my cynical, older divorced dad speaking. KWIM?
But, bottom line: I gathered that there exist men who count on women to give them the kind of encompassing love they hope to receive (but with no obligation to reciprocate), while at the same time/later on, they report they were just looking to "get some." Sure happened in my life....
And just to ice the cake, at age 46, I finally married for the 2nd time, 4 years after what started out as my super slow, friends-first rebound relationship I'd entered reluctantly right after Ghost Guy "ghosted" me. After 4 years, just dating weekends and spending quality time together but not living together, I felt a need to make a decision about him, one way or the other. (That should have been my clue!)
But instead, our counselors, families, friends, co-workers - on both sides - assured us that we were a "match." Maybe we didn't have the intensity of the earlier passionate relationships, but we were getting a lot of assurances that we could "go the distance."
Fast-forward only 4 more years, to age 51, and the gut-wrenching discovery that my husband, "Mr. Steady," had deliberately withheld the truth about his entire prior sexual history, one of using female prostitutes! Apparently, after the honeymoon, his old lifestyle was calling his name; it was a part of his life he had never shared with me, even though I had shared my history with him.
That was the worst blow of my life, after all the other painful endings and abandonment. It is why I have found this website so helpful in the last few years.
kpstartingover shared something I also experienced, hope you don't run into this: counselors can totally miss a lot of these kinds of sinister moves by very disordered people, thus setting us up for further pain. That was our pre-marital counseling experience!
So, fraeuken, may you feel encouraged during this difficult time by receiving the empathy from everybody who has posted on your thread. Please forgive my lengthy post that I thought might be relevant. It's just that what you are going through is so spooky-similar to my experiences, and I have always wished someone had shared with me about this crazy stuff. You will do better than I did, because you are getting better feedback than I did, from so many kind SI posters.