โEmotional unavailability is only attractive to people who are emotionally unavailable themselves. When we are truly ready for love, we donโt tolerate people who arenโt ready to meet us there.โ โ Mark Groves
โWhat attracts people, initially, is sometimes what breaks them apart in the end.โ This was what my mom said during my aunt and uncleโsย divorce. I never really understood theย wisdomย of her statement until I studiedย childhoodย traumaย andย attachment.ย
A human beingโs need toย remasterย attachment trauma is profound, yet, because it is anย unconsciousย tendency, people are not always aware that theย attractionย they feel for another person may be fueled by a desire toย heal painful childhood wounds.ย
For example, if a personโs father was emotionally unavailableโmeaning he constantly fluctuated between dismissive and rejecting to idealizing and controllingโthe person may be drawn to a partner who operates similarly. The unconscious promise ofย remastering a painful childhood dynamicย is exhilarating and intoxicating. Winning the love of a partner who unconsciously reminds a person of a rejecting parent offers a chance to eradicate the original pain.ย
The hook is that many emotionally unavailable people launch a relationship by wooing their partner. Byย idealizingย and showering a partner with the affirmation and validation the partner is hungry for, the emotionally unavailable person easily reels a partner in. Yet once the emotionally unavailable party has the partner invested in the relationship, he or she changes the game. Suddenly he or she becomes dismissive and critical.
This throws the partner into aย panicย because the love he or she longs for is yanked away, which reawakens the trauma that anย emotionally abusiveย parent inflicted. Instead of recognizing the reality of the emotionally abusive relationship, the partner experiences searing emotional pain.
Related: 6 Dominant Personality Traits of Emotionally Unavailable Men You Should NEVER Expect Love From
The dynamic unconsciously reinforces the actions of an emotionally abusive parent and in order to escape the pain, the partner scrambles to return to โgood graces,โ which grants the dysfunctional person additional control.ย
Usually, the emotionally unavailable person reverts to an idealizing mode in order to manipulate the partner into staying and investing. Because the partner regains the โloveโ he or she desperately longs for, he or she absorbs the blame for the rupture in the relationship and unintentionally grants the emotionally unavailable person additional power.ย ย
This cycle usually continues and slowly erodes a partnerโsย self-esteem. The partner inevitably feels the injustice and unfairness of the emotionally unavailable personโs attacks and reacts with hurt andย anger.
The emotionally unavailable person typically responds in two ways: He or she either abandons the partner because the risk of being found out and losing control is too much or accuses the partner of being โtoo emotionalโ or โtoo sensitive.โ Either way, the โhotโ relationship immediately cools or comes to a screeching halt.ย
Frequently people assume that an emotionally abusive person is consistently mean. Yet, if that were true, his or her manipulations would be readily and easily uncovered. It is the emotionally abusive personโs pattern of oscillating from devaluing to idealizing that deceives a partner and keeps him or her second-guessing.ย
Several hallmarks of emotionally unavailable people include:
1. They swing from loving you to treating you with disdain.
2. They believe they are right and have difficulties entertaining a partnerโs perspective if it differs from their own.
3. It is their way or the highway.
4. It is almost impossible to resolve conflict, and simple disagreements explode into nightmarish fights.
5. They play the victim in order to garner sympathy and avoid taking responsibility for their actions.ย
6. They display sympathy but lackย empathy.ย
7. They induceย shameย in a partner.ย
Related: 8 Dangers of Dating an Emotionally Unavailable Person
If a person had or has a tenuous relationship with a parent, talking to a psychotherapist may help. Gaining insight into childhood wounds helps illuminate the manipulations of an emotionally unavailable partner. Secure and authentic love is possible with the right person.
You can read Dr. Erin Leonardโs book โEmotional Terrorism, Breaking The Chains of A Toxic Relationshipโ to know more about this, and you can get it here. She has several other books to her credit, and you can check them out here.ย
Written By Erin Leonard Originally Appeared In Psychology Today
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