She sits across from me. 34 years old. Smart, self-aware, beautiful.
And she says the sentence I've heard hundreds of times:
"Jonas, why do I keep attracting the same type?"
The unavailable one. The emotionally cold one. The one who never really commits. Different faces, different names, the same pattern.
Her question isn't "What's wrong with these men?" Her real question is "What's wrong with me?"
My answer: nothing is wrong with you. But your childhood wrote you a blueprint, and you're following it blindly.
The Childhood Blueprint: Your Invisible Love Script
Picture yourself at 4 years old. You have no idea yet about relationships, about men, about love. But you're learning the most important lesson of your life: What does closeness feel like? What do I have to do to be loved? And what happens when I show my needs?
Your nervous system stores these experiences. Not as conscious memories, but as a bodily blueprint. A feeling. A pattern. An automatic reaction that shows up in your relationships 25 years later.
Attachment research calls these attachment styles. They were studied in the 1960s by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth and are today one of the best-documented areas of psychology.
Attachment Styles: The 4 Core Types
In the first years of life, everyone develops a dominant attachment style. That style shapes how you feel in relationships, how you react, and, above all, who you attract.
Your parents were emotionally available and reliable. You learned: I'm allowed to show my needs. Closeness is safe. I'm lovable exactly as I am.
Your parents were inconsistent, sometimes loving, sometimes dismissive, sometimes overwhelming. You learned: love is unpredictable. I have to work hard to earn it.
Your parents were emotionally unavailable. You learned: showing needs is dangerous. I can handle things alone. Closeness means getting hurt.
Your parents were a source of love and fear at the same time. You learned: the person who was supposed to protect me is also the one who hurts me. Closeness = danger and longing all at once.
"You're not looking for the perfect partner. Your nervous system is looking for what it knows, even when it hurts."
The 4 Most Common Relationship Patterns
These attachment styles give rise to concrete relationship patterns from childhood, patterns you repeat in every new relationship until you consciously break them.
Pattern 1: The Rescuer
As a child, you learned that you get loved when you take care of others. So you seek out partners who "need" you. You rescue, you care, you give everything. But you never get anything back.
Typical childhood experience: one parent was emotionally unstable, ill, or overwhelmed. You became the little therapist.
Pattern 2: The Waiter
You wait. For his text. For his commitment. For the moment he's finally "ready." You're patient, understanding, endlessly hopeful. But you're waiting for something that never comes.
Typical childhood experience: one parent was emotionally absent, physically there but somewhere else inside. You learned: love comes if you wait long enough and are good enough.
Pattern 3: The Perfectionist
You try to be the perfect partner. You adapt. You become whatever he needs. You dim your light, hide your edges, control every detail. But the more perfect you become, the less you are yourself.
Typical childhood experience: love was tied to performance. Good grades = attention. Mistakes = rejection. You learned: I'm only safe when I'm perfect.
Pattern 4: The Rebel
You sabotage every relationship before it gets too close. You pick fights, test limits, push him away, and then wonder why he leaves. You hurt before you can be hurt.
Typical childhood experience: closeness was dangerous. Trust was betrayed. You learned: if I let no one in, no one can hurt me.
Why the Wrong One Feels Right
Here's where it gets uncomfortable. Your nervous system isn't looking for what's good for you. It's looking for what it knows. Psychologists call this familiar attraction, the pull toward what feels familiar.
If you learned as a child that love is unpredictable, then an emotionally stable man feels, well, boring. No butterflies. No fireworks. No drama.
But the emotionally unavailable man? The one who reaches out and then disappears again? That feels like love. Because your nervous system recognizes it.
"Don't mistake familiarity for love. Just because something feels familiar doesn't mean it's good for you."
How to Break the Cycle
The good news: relationship patterns from childhood are not set in stone. You can change your attachment style. Research calls it earned secure attachment. Becoming securely attached, not through your childhood, but through conscious work.
Here are the 5 steps I use in my coaching:
Write down your last 3 relationships. Not the stories, the dynamics. Who invested more? Who held more power? Who did the adapting? The pattern becomes visible.
Ask yourself: when did I first feel this? Not in a relationship, in my childhood. The emotion you feel in toxic relationships is almost always a childhood emotion.
Every pattern has a belief behind it: "I'm too much." "I'm not enough." "I have to earn love." Say it out loud. Feel it. And then ask yourself: Is this true, or is this my childhood talking?
Your nervous system learns through new experiences, not through insight. Deliberately seek out situations that feel unfamiliar: let yourself be treated without feeling guilty. Say no without explaining yourself. Allow closeness without running away.
You've lived by this pattern for 25, 30, 40 years. It doesn't disappear in a week. Progress doesn't mean the pattern is gone, it means you recognize it before it runs you.
The Link to the Dimming-Light Phenomenon
If you've read my article on The Dimming-Light Phenomenon, you'll spot the connection right away: dimming is a relationship pattern from childhood.
You dim your light because you learned as a child: when I shine, I don't get love. When I'm too much, I get rejected. When I make myself smaller, I'm safe.
The Dimming-Light Phenomenon isn't a conscious decision. It's your nervous system running an ancient blueprint, right inside your current relationship.
"You don't dim your light because he wants you to. You dim it because your childhood taught you that shining is dangerous."
The good news: once you recognize the pattern, you can change it. Not overnight, but step by step. And the first step is always the same: awareness.
Your Next Steps
"You don't have to stay the child who had to earn love forever. You get to become the woman who receives love, simply because she is."