Who are “Aviodants” ?
From a relationship-attachment perspective, avoidants train themselves not to care about how the person closest to them is feeling. Avoidants embrace the notion of a perfect partner, and typically rate their partners bad and fail to understand them.
Avoidants are not strong to translate many verbal and non-verbal signals they receive during everyday interactions.
Attachment Style
- Secure attachment worked best because our ancestors lived predominantly in close-knit groups
- Evolved in order to increase survival chances in a particular environment
- The attachment style always manifests itself
Absence diminishes mediocre passions and increases great ones, as the wind extinguishes candles and fans fires – Francois de La Rochefoucauld
Avoidants
- Quick to think negatively about their partner
- See their partner as needy and overly dependent
- Ignore their own needs and fears about relationships
- Maintain some mental distance and escape route
- Feel deep-rooted aloneness even in relationships
- Are not exactly open books and tend to repress rather than express emotions
- The mind is governed by overarching perceptions and beliefs about relationships that ensure a disconnect with a partner
- Deactivating strategies
- Any behavior or thought used to squelch intimacy
- Suppress the attachment system
- Just the tip of the iceberg
- Examples:
- Flirting with others
- Avoid physical closeness
- Keeping secrets and leaving things foggy
- Pull away when things go well
- I am not ready to commit
- Focus on imperfections in your partner
- Beliefs
- Self-reliance
- Closely linked to a low degree of comfort with intimacy and closeness
- Overrating leads to diminishing the importance of getting support from others
- Self-reliance
To change avoidants, first, they need to increase their self-awareness about their thought patterns and then identify the instances in which they employ – attitudes and behaviors. Embarking on a voyage of change.
Avoidants can be seen as givers in their inability to confront situations. This can have the benefit of appearing to be trying in a relationship, yet distancing themselves. This ultimately exhausts them and overwhelms them to the point of “poor me”. ―
Inspired from Attached- by