Why You Keep Attracting Emotionally Unavailable Partners (And How to Stop the Cycle)
Featuring Insights from Stephen Hedger, Relationship Coach & Counselor
The last text you sent is still unread. Itâs been three hoursâor maybe three daysâbut youâve stopped counting. You tell yourself you donât care. You tell your friends youâre fine. You tell your heart to be quiet. But your stomach is in knots, your chest feels tight, and you keep refreshing your phone as if love might arrive with a little âping.â
This is the dance you know by heart. You fall for someone magnetic, exciting, maybe even a little mysterious. But once youâre in, itâs like chasing shadowsâsometimes theyâre warm and attentive, other times they vanish into emotional fog. If this feels painfully familiar, itâs not a personal flawâitâs a pattern youâve been taught to dance to, and one you have the power to unlearn.
Why the Same Kind of Love Keeps Showing Up
Itâs not just that you âpick the wrong person.â Stephen Hedger explains that attraction itself is often wired by your past. Your nervous system is like an emotional GPSâexcept instead of guiding you to healthy, reciprocal love, it keeps rerouting you back to what feels familiar, even when itâs unhealthy.
- The Mirror Effect â Weâre unconsciously drawn to people who reflect our early emotional environment back to usâsometimes in painfully accurate ways. If you grew up with emotional distance, unpredictability, or the need to âearnâ love, you may find yourself magnetized to partners who withhold affection or attention.
- Attachment History â A childhood marked by inconsistency or emotional neglect shapes your inner compass. Without realizing it, youâre looking for the same patternsânot because theyâre good for you, but because they feel like home.
- Self-Worth Patterns â If youâve absorbed the belief that youâre not fully lovable as you are, you may gravitate toward people who confirm that belief by keeping you at armâs length. Each time you try to prove yourself worthy of their love, youâre replaying an old script.
Tap on This:
- Karate Chop: âEven though I keep being drawn to what feels familiar, even when it hurts, I deeply and completely accept myself.â
- Eyebrow: âThis attraction feels automatic.â
- Side of Eye: âIt feels like it chooses me, not the other way around.â
- Under Eye: âMaybe itâs not my fault I learned this.â
- Under Nose: âBut I want to choose differently now.â
- Chin: âI can honor the part of me thatâs trying to protect me.â
- Collarbone: âI can still choose love thatâs safe.â
- Top of Head: âIâm open to rewiring my heart for something better.â
Recognizing the Patterns While Youâre in Them
You probably already know the big warning signs. But knowing isnât always enoughâespecially when your body associates those signs with excitement. Thatâs why it helps to see them not as abstract bullet points, but as lived moments you can recognize instantly.
- Hot/Cold Connection: One week youâre planning a weekend getaway, the next they say they âneed space.â You replay every conversation, wondering what you did wrong.
- Mixed Signals: They text you late at night, saying they miss you⌠but then cancel plans the next day without explanation. Your stomach flips between joy and dread.
- Defensiveness or Avoidance: Whenever you try to have a real conversation about the future, they joke, change the subject, or accuse you of being âtoo intense.â
- Emotional Withdrawal in Conflict: The moment you express hurt, they go silent. They shut down. You feel like youâre shouting into a void, desperate for a connection that isnât coming.
Tap on This (when you notice a red flag):
- Karate Chop: âEven though I feel drawn to them despite these warning signs, I choose to see this clearly now.â
- Eyebrow: âI donât want to admit itâs a red flag.â
- Side of Eye: âItâs easier to hope theyâll change.â
- Under Eye: âIâve been here before.â
- Under Nose: âIâm ready to learn from the pattern.â
- Chin: âI can choose to protect my heart.â
- Collarbone: âIâm open to walking toward what feels safe.â
- Top of Head: âI trust myself to see the truth.â
Shifting From Old Cycles to Healthy Love
Breaking this pattern is not about finding the ârightâ person firstâitâs about becoming the version of you who no longer feels pulled toward emotional unavailability.
Turn Inward
Instead of trying to fix, heal, or prove yourself to someone whoâs distant, start asking: Why does this feel so familiar? What am I really craving here?
Tap as You Journal:
- Karate Chop: âEven though I feel this deep craving for closeness from someone who canât give it, I honor my need for love.â
- Eyebrow: âItâs hard to admit this isnât working.â
- Under Eye: âBut Iâm willing to look inside.â
Compassion Over Blame
Shaming yourself for past choices only deepens the wound. You made those choices for a reason, often because your nervous system was simply following its training.
Tap on Self-Blame:
- Karate Chop: âEven though I feel stupid for choosing this kind of partner again, I deeply and completely accept myself.â
- Eyebrow: âI was doing the best I could.â
- Top of Head: âI choose self-compassion over self-punishment.â
Set Clear Non-Negotiables
Write down exactly what you need in a relationshipâconsistency, kindness, emotional safety. Then commit to honoring those needs, even when itâs tempting to make exceptions.
Tap Before Saying No:
- Karate Chop: âEven though it scares me to let go of someone who doesnât meet my needs, I honor my boundaries.â
- Side of Eye: âBut if they canât meet me here, theyâre already gone.â
- Collarbone: âI deserve to be met fully.â
Challenge the Familiar
Chemistry is not always your friend. If you feel a rush of excitement with someone whoâs unpredictable or hard to read, pause and ask: Is this attraction, or is this my old wound lighting up?
Tap on Confusing Chemistry:
- Karate Chop: âEven though this rush feels exciting, I choose to check if itâs safe.â
- Eyebrow: âItâs familiar, but is it healthy?â
- Top of Head: âI choose calm, not chaos.â
Allow Yourself to Receive
Being treated well can actually trigger unease if youâre used to emotional scarcity. Tap on the awkwardness.
Tap on Receiving Love:
- Karate Chop: âEven though it feels strange to be loved like this, I choose to let it in.â
- Eyebrow: âIâm waiting for the other shoe to drop.â
- Under Eye: âBut maybe there isnât one.â
- Top of Head: âI am safe to receive.â
A Glimpse of Your Future Self
Picture this: youâre sitting across from someone who listens when you speak. They donât make you guess where you stand. You feel calm, not anxious. Safe, not on edge. And for a moment, you remember the version of you who used to chase people who couldnât meet you hereâand you feel a rush of gratitude that youâre not in that place anymore.
Future You might say: Thank you for not giving up on me. Thank you for walking away from half-love. Thank you for believing I was worth more, even before I fully believed it myself.
Stepping Into a Different Future
Imagine building a home inside your own heartâa place where love is steady, safe, and reciprocal. Every truth you speak, every boundary you hold, is another brick in that home. This isnât an overnight fix. Patterns built over decades take patience to undo. But every small shiftâa journal entry, a no to someone who canât meet your needs, a yes to a partner who canâmoves you closer.
Stephen Hedgerâs message is clear: you are not doomed to repeat this cycle. With self-awareness, compassion, and courage, you can step out of the loop and into the kind of connection youâve always deserved. The unread texts, the anxious nights, the feeling of being almost-lovedâthose belong to the past. From here on, love meets you halfway.