Why you feel so alone in your relationships - and how to find your way back.

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Over time, even the strongest relationships can fall into patterns that leave both partners feeling misunderstood. One of the most common - and most painful - is the pursuer–distancer cycle.

In this pattern, the partner who longs for closeness (the pursuer) moves toward the relationship,reaching for connection. The other partner (the distancer) pulls back, creating space. The pursuer often interprets that distance as disinterest: “If they cared, they’d want to spend more time with me or open up emotionally.”

 Meanwhile, the distancer often feels overwhelmed, shut down, and inadequate, as if no matter what they do, it’s not enough.

For the pursuer, emotions and anxiety tend to rise quickly and spill onto the surface.

For the distancer, emotions stay under lock and key, and anxiety hides beneath the calm exterior.

If this sounds like your relationship, you’re not alone. This is a deeply human, often unconscious pattern, and one that can run on autopilot for years. It’s also one of the reasons couples therapy can be so powerful: a trained therapist can spot these patterns objectively and help you both step out of them together.

Here’s the first step: awareness. Simply noticing your own thoughts, feelings, and urges in the moment can begin to loosen the cycle’s grip.

For the Pursuer:

● Notice when your anxiety spikes — when you feel the need to resolve conflict immediately, chase after your partner, or try to control their actions to feel secure.

● In that moment, pause. Take a slow breath. Remind yourself: “I can wait. We can come back to this when we’re both ready.”

●Give yourself comfort in healthy ways — reach out to a friend, journal, or take a walk —while leaving the door open for connection later.

For the Distancer:

●Notice when your body says,“I need to get away.” That’s your signal to pause, breathe, and slow things down — without disappearing emotionally.

●Tell your partner: “I love you, and I’m not leaving. I just need some time to think so I can come back with a clear head.”

●This reassurance is critical — it helps your partner know your distance isn’t rejection, it’s regulation.

Change doesn’t happen overnight. But with patience, awareness, and the right support, couples can turn this tug-of-war into a dance where both partners feel safe, seen, and valued.

If you recognize yourself in this cycle and want help finding a new way forward, couples therapy can give you the tools to reconnect — without falling into the same old fights.

- Lauren Fisic, MA, LMFTA