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Pursuing and Distancing in Relationships
Pursuing and Distancing in
Relationships – Making Sense of On-again Off-again Craziness
Most of us are
familiar with relationships in which one person desperately pursues a
partner who creates distance or is unavailable. In a variation on
those straightforward roles, some couples do a dance in which one
person pursues a distant partner and then the dynamic flips so that
the pursuer becomes unavailable or uninterested and the distant
partner becomes the desperate pursuer. If we're watching such
relationships, it can seem impossible to make sense of what's going
on. And worse, if we're in one of these relationships it can be
totally crazy-making and create an overwhelming sense of despair.
So what is going on
with pursuers and distancers? Part of the answer to that question
lies in what we learned in our early relationships. As children we
all have emotional needs to be loved and accepted for who we are, and
to be encouraged to develop into individuals. However, to a greater
or lesser extent, our parents (or primary caregivers) fail to act
according to our best interests and instead act from their emotional
needs and insecurities. These failures in turn help to establish our
ways of being in relationships.
In general, our ways
of being were adaptive in that they ensured we got as much love,
care, or attention from our parents as possible. Another facet of how
we behave in relationships is about asserting our unmet emotional
needs. This facet was also learned based on whether and how it was
acceptable or safe to express our needs as children. In our current
relationships unmet needs can be legitimate adult needs combined with
carried unmet needs from our past.
Pursuers
We all have a lifelong
need for connection and intimacy. However, if as adults we feel
desperate for love, connection, or validation, our parents may have
been incapable of being close to us or acknowledging that we were
special and unique beings. If our parents were abandoning or
rejecting, as adults we may feel desperate to establish and maintain
connections even if they're unhealthy. Needing to desperately pursue
love may reflect some of the following:
We have a fear of
abandonment or rejection tied to a traumatic absence or loss of love
in our childhood. This fear can be intense and visceral and feel
like our very survival is being threatened.
We need to be
chosen by our partner (or any partner) or we feel worthless or that
we have no identity. This lack of self-esteem or sense of self is
tied to not being validated as a child or to it not being safe to
develop and express a unique self as a child.
We are recreating
the relationship dynamics from our childhood. This compulsion to
recreate serves several purposes. When we choose someone unavailable
or rejecting we hope for a different outcome. If they choose us, we
will prove that our parents were wrong and that we are worthly of
love. Recreating childhood relationship dynamics provides a
situation in which we can continue to broadcast our unmet needs. It
also keeps us from coming face to face with the unspoken messages of
not having had our needs met and it keeps us from feeling the grief
of not having been cared for or loved well.
Distancers
If we desperately need
distance in our adult relationships, our parents may have been too
emotionally close or demanding when we were children. Such emotional
closeness or demands were not about our needs as children but were
about our parents' needs. Our parents may have needed us to behave in
strictly defined ways or to achieve or accomplish things. They may
have looked to us to care for them emotionally. They may have
controlled us through emotional manipulation or abuse to manage their
own anxieties, insecurities, or emotional frailty. Needing to create
distance in relationships can reflect some of the following:
We feel like
we're being smothered or engulfed in relationships, tied to never
being allowed to develop or express ourselves. Early relationships
were about the other person and being close equated to losing or
stifling ourselves.
We feel like the
relationship and its demands will drown us. This sense is tied to
our needs not being acknowledged and to inappropriately being asked
to manage an adult's needs as a child.
Being in a
relationship triggers feeling angry and resentful because we expect
to have our needs for love, caring, and nurturing denied based on
our early experiences.
We have a
compulsion to establish and hold on to a separate self, and the only
way we know how to or feel safe doing that is through activities and
behaviors that put up walls.
Some of the ways we
may create distance in relationships include substance use, affairs,
being grandiose or contemptuous, or pursuing outside interests
obsessively.
On-again Off-again
What about those of us
who flip-flop between desperately needing a partner and then
retreating and creating distance once we have a degree of closeness?
If as children we were required to deny our needs, to become needless
and wantless, because our parents couldn't handle our demands or
shamed us about having needs, we may have the same desperate need for
love talked about above. However, when we approach closeness, we may
experience intense anxiety related to:
We've been taught
that it's not okay to have needs and wants or to have them honored
We have
internalized shame from being told indirectly that we're not worthy
of having our needs and wants met
As we move toward
intimacy, we feel that our shameful secrets are going to be exposed,
which increases the perceived risk of rejection and abandonment
Creating distance in
response to these anxieties in turn triggers our desperate need to
pursue love and connection, perpetuating the cycle.
As difficult as these
dynamics are, it is possible to move beyond them. Healing requires
understanding the legacy of our childhood relationships, grieving
what we didn't receive, learning to honor our needs and wants in our
adult relationships, and practicing taking risks with closeness,
intimacy, and vulnerability. Author and therapist Pia Mellody talks
about the distancing/pursuing dynamic in terms of Love Dependency (or
Love Addiction) and Love Avoidance. She does an excellent job in
several of her books explaining how these tendencies get established
in our childhood relationships and the process of recovery (see my
Recommended Reading List at www.hlcounseling.com).
If you would like help exploring
and improving your relationship, I would love to help. You can
contact me at 720-363-5538, or by visiting my website,
www.hlcounseling.com.
To
sign-up for future newsletters and articles visit
www.hlcounseling.com.
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