​There are people who genuinely want connection — deep, honest, real. And who, at the same time, when someone gets closer, take a step back. Who cut conversations short when they become too personal. Who put up walls without knowing why.
​That’s not a contradiction. It’s a very human pattern.
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​This simultaneous pull and push usually traces back to early experience:
- ​The connection between closeness and pain: Learning that intimacy often leads to loss.
- ​Vulnerability as a risk: A past where opening up was used against you or the person you trusted disappeared.
​The result is a constant internal battle: one part of you deeply wants closeness, while another part loudly warns against it. This conflict doesn’t show up as a rational decision. It shows up as behavior: warmth that suddenly goes cool, or opening up followed by a sudden shutting down.
​Why This Isn’t Manipulation
​For the people who experience this from the outside, it can feel like inconsistency or emotional unreliability.
​Rarely is that what it is. More often, it’s someone who never learned how to be simultaneously open and safe. Their nervous system still registers closeness as a potential threat — even when the mind knows better. It’s a protective reflex, not a game.
​What Becomes Possible
​This pattern can shift. Not through sheer willpower, but through:
- ​Consistent relationships: People who show up reliably over time.
- ​Safe intimacy: Environments that allow closeness without “punishing” it.
- ​Patience: The slow, step-by-step realization that it is finally safe to be here.
​It takes time, but the nervous system can learn a new story.
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