7 Reasons Most People are Afraid of Love
What keeps us from finding and keeping the love we say we want?
Published on January 16, 2014 by Lisa Firestone, Ph.D. in Compassion Matters

No
matter what the timeline, the story of lost love is one most of us can tell.
This leaves the question “why do relationships fail?” to linger heavily in the
back of our minds. The answer for many of us can be found within. Whether we
know it or not, most of us are afraid of really being in love. While our fears
may manifest themselves in different ways or show themselves at different
stages of a relationship, we all harbor defenses that we believe on some level
will protect us from getting hurt. These defenses may offer us a false illusion
of safety or security, but they keep us from attaining the closeness we most
desire. So what drives our fears of intimacy? What keeps us from finding
and keeping the love we say we want?
1. Real love makes us feel vulnerable. A new relationship is uncharted territory, and
most of us have natural fears of the unknown. Letting ourselves fall in love
means taking a real risk. We are placing a great amount of trust in another
person, allowing them to affect us, which makes us feel exposed and vulnerable.
Our core defenses are challenged. Any habits
we’ve long had that allow us to feel self-focused or self-contained start to
fall by the wayside. We tend to believe that the more we care, the more we can
get hurt.
2. New love stirs up past hurts. When we enter into a relationship, we are rarely
fully aware of how we’ve been impacted by our history. The ways we were hurt in
previous relationships, starting from our childhood,
have a strong influence on how we perceive the people we get close to as well
as how we act in our romantic
relationships. Old, negative dynamics may make us wary of opening
ourselves up to someone new. We may steer away from intimacy, because it stirs
up old feelings of hurt, loss,anger or
rejection. As Dr. Pat Love said
in an interview with PsychAlive, “when you
long for something, like love, it becomes associated with pain,” the pain you
felt at not having it in the past.
3. Love challenges an old identity. Many of us struggle with underlying feelings of
being unlovable. We have trouble feeling our own value and believing anyone
could really care for us. We all have a “critical inner voice,”
which acts like a cruel coach inside our heads that tells us we are worthless
or undeserving of happiness.
This coach is shaped from painful childhood experiences and critical attitudes
we were exposed to early in life as well as feelings our parents had
about themselves.
While these attitudes can be hurtful, over time, they have become
engrained in us. As adults, we may fail to see them as an enemy, instead
accepting their destructive point of view as our own. These critical thoughts
or “inner voices” are often harmful and unpleasant, but they’re also comfortable
in their familiarity. When another person sees us differently from our voices,
loving and appreciating us, we may actually start to feel uncomfortable and
defensive, as it challenges these long-held points of identification.
4. With real joy comes real pain. Any time we fully experience true joy or feel
the preciousness of life on an emotional level, we can expect to feel a great
amount of sadness. Many of us shy away
from the things that would make us happiest, because they also make us feel
pain. The opposite is also true. We cannot selectively numb ourselves to
sadness without numbing ourselves to joy. When it comes to falling in love, we
may be hesitant to go “all in,” for fear of
the sadness it would stir up in us.
5. Love is often unequal. Many people I’ve talked to have expressed
hesitation over getting involved with someone, because that person “likes them
too much.” They worry that if they got involved with this person, their own
feelings wouldn’t evolve, and the other person would wind up getting hurt or
feeling rejected. The truth is that love is often imbalanced, with one person
feeling more or less from moment to moment. Our feelings toward someone are an
ever-changing force. In a matter of seconds, we can feel anger, irritation or
even hate for a person we love. Worrying over how we will feel keeps us from
seeing where our feelings would naturally go. It’s better to be open to how our
feelings develop over time. Allowing worry or guilt over how we may or may not
feel keeps us from getting to know someone who is expressing interest in us and
may prevent us from forming a relationship that could really make us happy.
6. Relationships can break your connection to
your family. Relationships can
be the ultimate symbol of growing up. They represent starting our own lives as
independent, autonomous individuals. This development can also represent a
parting from our family. Much like breaking from an old identity, this
separation isn’t physical. It doesn’t mean literally giving up our family, but
rather letting go on an emotional level – no longer feeling like a kid
and differentiating from
the more negative dynamics that plagued our early relationships and shaped our
identity.
7. Love stirs up existential fears. The more we have, the more we have to
lose. The more someone means to us, the more afraid we are of losing that
person. When we fall in love, we not only face the fear of losing our partner,
but we become more aware of our mortality. Our life now holds more value and
meaning, so the thought of losing it becomes more frightening. In an attempt to
cover over this fear, we may focus on more superficial concerns, pick fights
with our partner or, in extreme cases, completely give up the relationship. We
are rarely fully aware of how we defend against these existential fears. We may
even try to rationalize to ourselves a million reasons we shouldn’t be in the
relationship. However, the reasons we give may have workable solutions, and
what’s really driving us are those deeper fears of loss.
Most relationships bring up an onslaught of challenges. Getting to
know our fears of intimacy and how they inform our behavior is an important
step to having a fulfilling, long-term relationship. These fears can be masked
by various justifications for why things aren’t working out, however we may be
surprised to learn about all of the ways that we self-sabotage when
getting close to someone else. This is one of the subjects I will address in
the upcoming eCourse “Creating Your Ideal Relationship.”
By getting to know ourselves, we give ourselves the best chance of finding and
maintaining lasting love.
Комментарии
Отправить комментарий