

You probably know someone who is Love Avoidant — someone who avoids and fears intimacy. Love avoidance is common for people who suffer from sex or porn addiction.
Love Avoidants often are attracted to Love Addicts — people who are fixated with love. One characteristic of both attachment styles is the fear of authenticity and vulnerability within a relationship.
There are four attachment styles with unique traits and behaviors.
Those attachment styles are:
Those in the Love Avoidant or Dismissive categories see intimacy as unreliable, dangerous, or risky. They think dependence on another person is a weakness.
Love Avoidant people keep potential partners at arm’s length. Relying on compulsive behaviors such as addictions is expected for love-avoidant people. This behavior allows them to create intensity elsewhere in their lives rather than in a relationship.
Love Avoidant people are showing a trauma response based around lack of attunement in childhood.
Trauma and responses to trauma impact everyone differently. Trauma manifests itself most clearly in adult relationships.
You are dependent on your caregivers when you are a child. Whether they responded to your needs impacts your romantic relationships, interpersonal relationships, and parenting.
As you grow up, you unconsciously develop a mental blueprint for healthy relationships. This map develops into a more solid understanding as you grow into adolescence and form relationships with peers.
If you grew up feeling like people did not respect your boundaries and would abandon you for expressing your needs, you’re more likely to develop a Love Avoidant attachment style. As a trauma-response, you may feel like you cannot rely on anyone and feel intense fear of disappointment. You may become independent and avoid intimate relationships where you develop a dependence on others.
Love Avoidant people share many of the same behaviors. Some of those behaviors include:
Some examples of the typical behavior of someone who is Love Avoidant are:
A Love Avoidant may only be interested in casual sex or one-night stands. They may have a reputation as a don’t-need-anyone person.
It’s challenging to develop an intimate bond with Love Avoidant people. You may find yourself shut out, feeling lonely, and experiencing gas-lighting behavior. This behavior is the Love Avoidant partner protecting themselves.

A hallmark of those who avoid love is prioritizing other things that give you a feeling of control outside of your relationship. You still seek the intensity that true intimacy allows. You seek it elsewhere.
This seeking is when many Love Avoidant people turn to addictions. These behaviors help them block feelings of intimacy by keeping them busy and preoccupied. Commonly, it is compulsive sexual behaviors, gambling, drugs, alcohol, or even becoming obsessed with their careers.
Addiction is a powerful form of escapism that Love Avoidants use to sabotage any chance of someone getting close to them.
Love Avoidant individuals usually maintain separate lives or activities they keep from their partners. They may not discuss what they do during this time away.
These secrets may be hobbies, friendships, addictions, hiding money, or being unwilling to talk about complex topics.
Physical contact is more than sex. For example, couples share a loving embrace, hold hands, or have their legs touch under a table. Those who are love avoidant avoid unnecessary contact. They view contact as a violation of their independence and autonomy.
A Love Avoidant may incorporate many distancing techniques into a relationship.
Distancing techniques include:
Commitment looks different to every person and couple. But Love Avoidants find ways to prevent labeling or finalizing any form of commitment.
Love Avoidants may engage in monogamous, stable relationships for extended periods, sometimes even years. But they still withhold their feelings from their partner or refuse to “label” the relationship.
They also may avoid situations that deepen their bonds with their partners. For example, they may refuse to go on a romantic vacation.
Love Avoidants fear vulnerability, intimacy, dependence, and genuine love. This avoidance of connection stems from difficulty developing healthy attachments in their early life. It is a form of self-preservation.
Love Avoidants fear giving up control, seeing their independence as the only way to get through life. They may refuse to verbalize their needs and yet, simultaneously, expect others to meet those needs.
If you are in a relationship with a love-avoidant person, you may feel unimportant, abandoned, isolated, and unloved. Your partner may need professional help to understand their behavior.
Suggestions for those in a relationship with a Love Avoidant include:
Many people suffering from sex or porn addiction are also Love Avoidant. At the Begin Again Institute, we know that trauma is at the center of these attachment styles and intimacy disorders. When you start our 14-Day Men’s Intensive for sex or porn addiction, we’ll work together to help you heal from your trauma and stop your addiction.
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