Avoidant attachment is a survival response developed in childhood where individuals learned that needing others leads to pain, causing their nervous systems to interpret closeness as danger; they don't avoid love itself but the feeling that love will cost them their sense of self, and they become most attracted to partners who are genuinely secure, complete within themselves, and don't chase or perform for approval, as this creates the safety they've never experienced.
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Play to the Avoidant's Fantasies and They Will Never Leave You | CARL JUNGAdded:
They never reach out first. When you say, [music] "I love you," the response comes late, if it comes at all. They vanish for days, then waltz back in like time just [music] stood still. And you start convincing yourself they're just not the emotional type. But that's not really it. You fell for someone who made you believe that if you were [music] just calm enough, lowmaintenance enough, easy enough, they'd finally choose to stay. But here's what nobody tells you.
They didn't [music] leave. They were just never fully there to begin with.
And here's the part that changes everything. They're not avoiding you.
They're avoiding the feeling that love will cost them who they are. The moment you truly get that, you stop chasing.
You stop making yourself smaller. You stop performing for their approval.
[music] And somehow you become the one person they can't easily walk away from.
Because understanding how an avoidant thinks isn't manipulation. It's not mind games. [music] It's not strategy. It's seeing another human being clearly at the level of their psychology. So you stop feeling like a threat and start becoming something they've never had before, a safe place. Stay with me. This is going to shift how you see every relationship you've ever been [music] in. Comment the word safe if you've ever loved someone who pulled away the moment things [music] started to feel real.
Drop it right now. Let's see who this actually hits home for. Let [music] me ask you something personal.
Have you ever been in a relationship where you felt like too much? Too emotional, too present, too needy, just too. And the harder you tried to close [music] the gap, the wider it got, like running down a hallway that kept stretching no matter how fast you moved.
You'd share a real moment together, [music] genuine laughter, a meaningful conversation, a touch that actually felt like connection. And then the next day they'd be gone. Not cruel, just behind glass. And your mind would start spinning. What did I do? Did I come on too strong? Was I not enough? Was I too much? That loop, that [music] exhausting spirit draining cycle, that is not you losing your mind.
That is what [music] it feels like to love someone with avoidant attachment.
And today I want to take you somewhere most people never go. I want to talk about the avoidance inner world. The thing they want more than anything but have never once asked for out loud.
Because when [music] you understand what's actually driving their behavior, not just what you see on the surface, [music] but what's happening underneath it, everything shifts. You stop taking their distance personally. You stop [music] letting it define your worth.
And if you genuinely care about this person, not because you're hooked on the chaos, but because you actually love them, you'll know how to show up without triggering the deepest alarm system they [music] have. So, who is the avoidant really? First, we need to drop the villain narrative.
Popular psychology hasn't been fair to avoidance. We've turned them into the emotionally unavailable one. The person who keeps you confused, [music] runs before you can, and somehow always seems fine afterward. But that's not who they are at their core. That's what [music] unhealed pain looks like on the outside.
Avoidant attachment isn't a character flaw. It's a survival response. [music] And once upon a time, it made complete sense. As children, avoidance learned something that got wired deep into them.
Needing people is dangerous. Maybe their parents were cold, dismissive, or simply absent in the emotional sense. Maybe when [music] they cried, nobody came.
Maybe when they reached out, hungry, scared, lonely, they [music] were told to toughen up. Stop being so sensitive.
Handle it yourself. So their nervous system adapted. [music] It said, "Okay, needing people leads to pain. So I will stop needing people."
They became [music] fiercely independent, self-sufficient, contained.
They made themselves someone who didn't require anything [music] from anyone.
And for a while, that worked. The kid who didn't cry got praised. The teenager who [music] didn't seek reassurance looked mature. The adult who never complained seemed effortless. They built their entire [music] identity around not needing anyone. And then they fell in love. And the whole structure started [music] cracking. Here's the truth about real love. You cannot love someone deeply without needing them. Genuine intimacy requires vulnerability. It requires the terrifying act of saying, "I need you." and trusting that you won't be punished for it. For most people, that's just part of loving someone. For the avoidant, [music] it feels like standing on the edge of something that's already hurt them before. Every time they feel closeness, that warmth, that softness, that real connection, their nervous system fires an alarm. Not just a thought, a physical response. Their body reads closeness as danger, as a warning that pain is on its way. [music] The same pain they spent their entire childhood learning to outrun. So, they do the only thing they know how to do. They pull back. [music] They go quiet. They create distance. Not because they don't care, but because they do. And that's the crulest part of all of this. The closer you get, the louder the alarm. The louder the alarm, the faster they move away. And you on the other side feel [music] that withdrawal like rejection, like proof that you aren't enough. So you do what your nervous system knows. You reach out more, try harder, become more available, more understanding, more accommodating, [music] and that that well-meaning response makes the alarm even louder.
Now [music] they feel not just close, but overwhelmed, suffocated, [music] just like they did when they were young.
So they run harder, and you chase [music] harder. This is the anxious avoidant loop and it will wear both people down to nothing if you don't understand what's actually happening beneath it. Now, here's where I want to shift because we spend so much time talking about what avoidance do that [music] we almost never talk about what they want. And I want you to really sit with this. The avoidant wants to be loved. Not carefully, not from a safe [music] distance, fully. They want a partner who doesn't unravel when they need [music] space. Someone who doesn't make their silence feel like a crime, [music] who doesn't turn every quiet moment into a heavy conversation about where things stand. They want someone who is genuinely okay. Not performing okayess while internally scorekeeping every unanswered message. Someone whose [music] sense of self doesn't hinge on the avoidance attention on any given day. Someone with their own life, their own grounding, their own wholeness.
[music] Someone who chooses them from a place of abundance, not from fear [music] of being alone, not from an old wound that makes unavailable people feel [music] familiar. That is the avoidance fantasy.
A partner so complete [music] within themselves that the relationship feels like freedom, not a trap. Because [music] avoidance don't hate love. They hate what love has cost them before. And if you can be the person who makes love feel genuinely safe, [music] safe to feel, safe to stay in, safe to move toward, you become something [music] they didn't know existed. You become proof that their fear belongs to the [music] past. But I have to be straight with you. I'm not here to tell you that loving an avoidant the right way is all it [music] takes. But that's not the whole picture. And I want to be real with you here because what I'm about to say matters. Many of us who end up in anxious avoidant cycles aren't simply victims of someone else's patterns. We are also part of the pattern. I say that with genuine care because I've been in that place, too. A lot of us are drawn to emotional unavailability and that pull is worth sitting with. Honestly, there's something about the chase, the highs and lows, the rare moments of closeness that feel almost like a prize that can become its own kind of addiction. It's not just about receiving love. It's about earning it. And that feeling connects to something much older, something that started long before this relationship [music] ever did. It likely started in a childhood where love wasn't consistent, where it was conditional, where affection [music] came when you behaved the right way and disappeared when you didn't. Where you quietly learn that love is not given freely, it's something you have to keep proving yourself worthy of. So when you meet someone who makes you work for it, someone who's warm one day and unreachable the next, part of you recognizes that feeling, not because it's healthy, but because it's familiar, because we don't always move toward what's good for us. We move toward what we know. [music] So the real work here isn't only about understanding the avoidant. It's about understanding yourself. why you're drawn to this dynamic, [music] what need it's meeting, what old story you keep living out, and whether that's a story you actually want to keep telling. Now, let me paint you a picture of what the avoidant is actually imagining when they picture a relationship that works for them, not some vague fantasy, the real version.
They want something that feels [music] easy, not shallow, but not suffocating either. They want to come home and not feel like they've walked into someone else's emotional emergency. They want to take a weekend for themselves without it becoming a relationship issue. They want to love someone without that love slowly becoming a cage. And here is the deep, painful irony of all of it. The more you chase them, [music] the more you confirm the belief they've held their whole life. That love is exactly the trap they always feared. But the moment you genuinely step back, not as a strategy, [music] not to make them panic, but because you actually respect yourself and your own wholeness, something shifts. They start to [music] notice. Where did she go? What is he up to? Do I even [music] cross their mind?
For maybe the first time, they feel something unfamiliar inside a relationship. Space they didn't have [music] to run away to find. Space that was simply given. And inside [music] that space, their nervous system starts to settle. They breathe. They calm down.
And sometimes, not always, but sometimes, [music] they come back. Not because you pulled them back, but because you gave them somewhere worth returning [music] to.
Now, I need to be clear because this is where people get it wrong. Stepping into the avoidance fantasy [music] does not mean pretending you have no needs. It doesn't mean performing independence while quietly keeping score. It doesn't mean making yourself so small you practically disappear. [music] That is not the fantasy. That is self-abandonment.
And it will hollow you out. Eventually, you'll break. And when you do, you'll become the very [music] thing that confirms every fear they ever had. The real version of this is becoming [music] genuinely full within yourself. Building a life so rich and [music] so grounded that you're not sitting around waiting.
You're actually living. It means the relationship stops being the center of your entire emotional universe. [music] It means when they go quiet, you don't spiral into shame. You go do something that matters to you. It means you [music] stop overexplaining. You stop sending the long messages. You stop flooding their phone trying to understand what happened. It means [music] becoming secure. Not performing security, but actually growing into it.
[music] Because avoidants have finely tuned nervous systems. They've [music] spent years scanning their environment for emotional demands they can't meet. For the moment, closeness starts to feel like [music] loss. They can sense when something is performed. They can feel the difference between [music] someone who is genuinely at peace and someone using distance as a tactic. What they cannot ignore, and I mean this, is someone who is honestly, authentically okay with being alone. Someone who wants them [music] without needing them to function. Someone who makes the relationship feel like a bonus to an already full life, not a lifeline. That is the [music] person who stays on their mind. That is the person they find themselves moving toward. That is the person who becomes maybe for the first time in their life proof that love doesn't [music] have to take everything from them. There's one more thing I want you to understand because it can [music] save you from a lot of unnecessary pain.
Avoidance have what you could call an activation window. [music] It's the stretch of time different for every person. Between when they shut down and when their curiosity naturally comes back online, [music] when they go distant, cold, or completely silent, most people panic and chase. And that [music] chasing actually keeps the avoidant locked in shutdown mode. Every message, every missed call, every [music] are we okay? Makes their need for space grow stronger, not weaker. But when you go genuinely quiet when you pull your energy back and return to your own life, something else happens. The avoidant comes to the end of their withdrawal, [music] looks around, and you're simply not hovering. Not in a dramatic way, not to punish them. You just have your own life. And that activation window opens.
They start to wonder. They reach [music] back out. They lean back in. That's not manipulation. That's giving their [music] nervous system what it actually needs to feel safe enough to return.
Proof that coming back won't cost them [music] their sense of self. Now, let's talk about triggers because understanding these will spare you a lot of pain. [music] Constantly asking for reassurance is one of the biggest ones.
Are we okay? Do you still [music] care?
Why are you being so quiet?
Even when those questions are completely reasonable, [music] they register as pressure to an avoidant. Their body hears, "You're about to need something from me I don't know how to give." and they shut down. Making the relationship itself the constant subject of conversation is another one. When every interaction circles back to how things are going, what you mean to each other, where this is headed, the avoidant starts to feel like the relationship is a problem that's always in the room, always demanding something. They begin to associate being with you with feeling drained. [music] And then there's escalating when they go quiet. They pull back. You push forward. They go quieter.
[music] You push harder. Within a short time, you're both locked in a full shutdown cycle. And neither of you feels good.
What they actually need in those moments [music] isn't pursuit. It's space.
Overexplaining your emotions is another trigger worth understanding.
Most avoidants grew [music] up in homes where feelings weren't modeled well. So, emotional language doesn't come [music] naturally to them. When you send long, heavy messages unpacking everything you felt, they [music] don't feel seen. They feel flooded and they shut down. The same goes for centering all your pain [music] during conflict. It's completely human to express hurt. But there's a [music] real difference between saying, "I felt distant from you this week and I miss us." And sitting someone down for a deep breakdown [music] of how their behavior affected you emotionally. The first one [music] lands. The second one overwhelms.
Neither means your feelings don't matter. They absolutely do. But the timing, the delivery, and how much you share at once determines whether you're actually heard or whether you push [music] them further behind that wall.
Now, let's talk about what to actually do. Because this isn't just about stopping certain behaviors, [music] it's about building new ones. Give them space before they even feel the need to ask for it. This might feel counterintuitive, but if you genuinely offer space, not as a punishment, but naturally, [music] as in, "You've got a lot going on. We'll catch up later," you take away their need to create that [music] distance themselves. They feel understood instead of crowded. Show curiosity about their inner world without pushing the door open by force.
Avoidance carry a lot inside them. They think deeply [music] and feel deeply.
They just don't always have the words or the safety to express [music] it. Ask a question and let it breathe. Don't demand an answer. [music] Pressure locks doors that patience opens. Be consistent. People with anxious attachment can sometimes be just as unpredictable. Calm one moment, reactive [music] the next, chasing, then withdrawing. That inconsistency keeps the avoidant on high alert. But when you're steady, present without being overwhelming, grounded without being rigid, something in them starts to soften. They begin to [music] feel safe, maybe for the first time. Build a real life outside of this relationship, not for appearances.
Actually build it. Friends, work, passions, purpose. When you're genuinely engaged [music] in your own world, two things happen simultaneously.
You stop putting excessive weight on them and you [music] become genuinely more compelling. Avoidance are drawn to people with depth, people who are growing, people who don't need them to be everything. And when they come back warm after a cold spell, [music] don't punish them for it. Don't meet their warmth with distance to even the score. That only confirms what they already fear, [music] that relationships are battlegrounds. Instead, receive them. Stay warm. Stay steady. Let them feel that returning to you doesn't come with a price. Now, here's something that's harder to hear, but needs [music] to be said. For any of this to actually work, you have to grieve something first. You have to [music] let go of the relationship you wished this was. The one where they reach out first, where they say [music] they miss you without being prompted, where closeness doesn't feel like a negotiation.
where you don't have to study someone's [music] psychology just to feel loved.
That version of this relationship with this specific person may not exist. And holding on to that image will keep you trapped in a cycle of hoping and waiting while slowly losing yourself in the process. The belief [music] that if you just get everything right, if you become secure enough, if you understand their attachment perfectly enough, then they'll finally give you what [music] you've been longing for.
That belief can keep you in something that is genuinely hurting you. Here is the line I want you to see clearly.
Understanding an avoidant, adjusting how you show up all while maintaining real self-respect that [music] is healthy. That can build something deep and real. It has for many people. But contorting yourself into someone quieter, smaller, less expressive, less alive, hoping they'll eventually notice how easy you are and reward you with their full [music] presence. That is not a relationship strategy. That is a slow erosion of who you are. You deserve a relationship where you don't have to earn the right to feel hurt, where you don't have to calculate how much emotion is acceptable, where love isn't a puzzle.
you have [music] to solve every single day just to keep it from falling apart.
If the person you love is avoidant and they're genuinely trying, doing the inner work, going to therapy, showing up imperfectly but showing up, then understanding their psychology is one of the most loving things you can offer.
But if you are the only one making effort, if understanding their avoidance has [music] become your entire focus while they remain unchanged, that is [music] not a relationship. That is you waiting. And at some point, you have to ask yourself honestly, whose life [music] are you actually living? I want to say this clearly before we close.
Avoidance can [music] change. Not all of them will. Not without genuine willingness to face what's hiding under all that protection. But the ones who do shift, the ones [music] who move from avoidant towards something more secure, almost always describe something similar that made it possible. They met someone who didn't confirm their fear. Every relationship before had confirmed [music] it. Getting close means losing yourself. Letting someone in means losing control. Love means [music] eventually being overwhelmed. And then someone came along who was different, not perfect, [music] not endlessly patient in a way that felt like martyrdom, just genuinely different.
Someone who had their own full life and loved from that place. Someone who didn't chase them into a corner. Someone who, when they pulled away, didn't collapse, just quietly kept living.
someone who made safety [music] feel real. And in the presence of that person, the internal alarm grew quieter.
Not overnight, not without the [music] avoidant still pulling back sometimes when closeness got too intense, but quieter. And slowly, they began to believe something they had never let themselves believe [music] before, that they could be loved without being consumed.
That closeness [music] didn't have to feel like danger.
that staying didn't mean disappearing.
That shift is one of the most profound things that can happen [music] between two people. It's not magic. It's not tactics. It's two people [music] each doing their own inner work slowly learning to meet somewhere [music] that feels safer than anywhere they've been before. That is worth working toward, but only when both people [music] are actually working. So, let me bring it all together. If you love an avoidant, [music] here's what I need you to hold on to. Their distance is not a verdict on [music] your worth. It's not proof that you're too much, not enough, too intense, [music] or too needy. It's the automatic response of a nervous system that learned very early that closeness [music] wasn't safe. You cannot love them out of this. More love, more chasing, more self- adjustment [music] doesn't heal attachment wounds. it can sometimes deepen them. What creates real change is security. Yours first, then theirs. Do your own [music] inner work.
If you keep finding yourself drawn to emotionally unavailable people, that's information about your own patterns, too. Not blame, understanding. Why does emotional unavailability feel like love to you? What part of your nervous system is still running on old programming?
That's the real work. Know your [music] limit. There's one version of this where you grow into your own security. You create genuine space [music] and the person you love steps forward to meet you. And there's another version where you do all of that and they still can't meet you there. Being honest with yourself about which one you're living in is one of the most important [music] things you can do for your own life. You are not responsible for healing them.
You can be a healing presence. You can create an environment where someone feels safer than they ever have, but you cannot do their healing for them. And you cannot [music] keep pouring from an empty place just to hold on to someone who isn't [music] choosing to stay. The avoidance dream isn't a relationship without connection. [music] It's a relationship that feels like freedom, not distance, not loneliness. Real freedom, [music] the freedom to love without losing themselves. If you can become someone who offers that not by shrinking [music] but by being so grounded and whole that the relationship feels like something added to your life rather than something draining it. You become the one thing they never believed existed. Living proof that their fear [music] was never the full truth. And that changes everything. [music] If something in this hit home, if you've been living in this cycle and [music] today something finally clicked, drop the word safe in the comments. Let me know you're here. Let me know [music] you're doing the work. You are not alone in
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