
Being avoidant in relationships isnāt only the obvious signs ā refusing to commit, swinging between warmth and coldness, disappearing when conversations about commitment start. You might not notice this, but if you keep falling for people like that, youāre avoiding closeness too ā just in your own way. So what happens when two people who fear intimacy end up head over heels? Todayās letter comes from a woman named Nelly, who writes: Dear Anna, Iām in a baffling situation with someone I used to be friends with. We met fifteen years ago as college freshmen. Iāll pick out a few things to revisit, but hereās my story. Back then, because of my cPTSD, any attention made me uneasy. I tended to rush into sexual encounters without thinking, then shut down at the first sign of emotional depth; if someone rejected me, Iād suddenly chase them. With him it felt different ā at least I thought it was just friendship. He liked me but didnāt say so, and I felt safe because he never pressed. After the semester he returned to his home country; over the next year and a half we emailed or video-called now and then, once even including his family. I still believed we were only friends, even though he occasionally told me he missed me and called me beautiful ā it simply didnāt register. Two years later, after a stretch without contact, he messaged to say he was visiting my country for the holidays, but I was wrapped up in life and missed it until meeting was impossible. Fast forward ten years: Iām married to a decent man I care about, but I never felt a deep bond with him. In part, I chose him because a closer connection scared me; I thought a more ordinary relationship would avoid triggering my trauma. My husband and I were in therapy over our incompatibility and lack of intimacy and discussing separation when this former friend reappeared. I reached out to apologize for not being a better friend years ago; thatās when he admitted heād always liked me and still thought of me. He said his plan when he came here had been to bring me back with him ā which I assumed meant a proposal ā and the idea that this could be true love lit me up. He mentioned having a girlfriend who was having relationship problems and said a future together wasnāt on the table. I tried to set boundaries, but he began complimenting and flirting, and I gave in. We crossed a line and had a sexual encounter over video chat. Once I remembered that he had a girlfriend, I suggested we stop the sexual stuff for now and just be friends; he replied with one or two words agreeing. Later I mentioned Iād be visiting his country in a few months and would love to meet if he was available. He seemed receptive. I told him about my traumatic childhood and why I hadnāt seen his feelings before, and I told him Iād shared what happened with my husband and that we were finalizing our separation, so Iād be free to see him then. After that, he vanished ā no replies. I begged him, sent many messages asking what was happening and what he was thinking, but silence crushed me. Months later I saw online that heād moved to the same city as his girlfriend, so I wrote one last time to say I respected his decision but wanted to understand what had happened. He briefly confirmed heād moved and was engaged to her. I told him if he was happy I was glad for him. He explained his disappearance by saying he still liked me and thought of me but felt our video call was dangerous and didnāt want to repeat it. I was bewildered: I still had feelings for him, yet knew things could get messy. I asked if he thought his fiancĆ©e was the one; he said he thought so but hinted at problems, then suggested we meet up. The flirting resumed and I got swept in, then the next day he pulled away ā cold and brief. I never had the chance to tell him I wouldnāt build anything with him if it had to be secret or if it would hurt someone else; he cut me off again. I decided to contact his fiancĆ©e and tell her the truth. It felt like a risk, but she replied kindly and thanked me, saying heād betrayed her before. He tried to defend himself by accusing me of lying: heād made a fake profile pretending to be me and messaged himself as me to create a sense of fate, and when his fiancĆ©e saw through the fake message she left him. One of his explanations, given to both her and me, was that his messages this year were trickery and payback for my not paying attention to him when heād previously visited my country. I felt both hurt and bewildered, as if I were being punished. Despite his lies, betrayal, and awful behavior, I canāt seem to let him go. A part of me holds onto the idea that he was the love I missed out on, even though I recognize thatās problematic. Iām doubting my choices and my judgment. I hope you can offer clarity, wisdom, or guidance. Thank you, Nelly. Alright, Nelly ā letās unpack this. Your history shows you were repelled by people who openly liked you and would rush into sex without considering emotional consequences, then retreat when connection appeared ā a strong avoidant pattern. But when you then chase someone after rejection, thatās the anxious side. Together that makes an anxiousāavoidant mix, one of the most challenging attachment profiles. In attachment theory terms, alongside secure attachment there are insecure types like avoidant, anxious, or a blend ā and thatās whatās in play here. The man you liked seems to mirror this: he rushes in with romance and love-bombing, then retreats. That pushāpull cycle ā come close, pull back ā means the relationship could never stabilize for long. You were close friends and he secretly liked you; that dynamic suited him because you werenāt pursuing him, and when he visited your country you didnāt notice his message because you werenāt waiting for him; youād moved on with your life. Ten years later, you married a good man but without deep feeling, which is common when avoidance governs your choices: comfort and safety can feel preferable to the risk of intense connection. The good news is this can be healed. People can learn a middle ground with partners who stay while helping them manage trauma wounds. Often these avoidant patterns stem from early trauma, and you admitted you chose your husband partly to avoid triggers. You said you were in counseling and then reached out to this older friend to apologize ā that move, while understandable emotionally, likely sabotaged the work you were doing in therapy. Reaching out to someone from your past while discussing separation felt like creating an escape route; thatās a common impulse for anxiousāavoidant people who fear being alone but also fear closeness. When he told you heād always liked you, he became an option ā a possible way out ā which is tempting in that moment. But do not assume intentions: you took his remark about bringing you back to his country to mean a proposal. Thatās a leap; a proposal is explicit. You lit up at the fantasy of true love, and he told you he had a girlfriend who was having problems. You tried to impose boundaries, but when he began flattering and flirting, you gave in and eventually had a sexual encounter. If you havenāt heard this before: once thereās been sexual contact between two people where one is involved with someone else, ājust friendsā is rarely realistic and often harmful, especially for someone with trauma. Being complicit in someone elseās betrayal damages you too; you become part of the harm. Itās not your job to manage or fix someone elseās relationship problems. That behavior revealed his character. You later mentioned visiting his country; it reads like you were hoping to engineer a meeting. Itās okay to admit that motive to yourself ā honesty matters for healing. After you told him youād be free because of your separation, he disappeared. In your mind you might have believed a mutual romance was about to start ā enough to justify leaving your marriage and trying to ārescueā him ā but if someone is already in a relationship, especially a vulnerable one, stepping in is the worst timing. If the other couple is dealing with difficulties, they need space to work through them, not an outsider fueling temptation. When he ghosted you, it was cruel, but also the right boundary: continuing emotional contact with someone whoās committed would have been a slippery slope. You were devastated to be cut off, and later learned heād moved and become engaged. He told you he still thought about you and found the video call dangerous yet tempting ā a classic ambivalent message designed to keep you close. You felt confused ā a normal reaction to cognitive dissonance when someoneās words and actions conflict. You asked if his fiancĆ©e was āthe oneā; he hedged, implied problems, and suggested meeting up, flirting again, then withdrew. That pushāpull pattern hooked you. You say you never got the chance to tell him you wouldnāt build something secretive or hurtful, but the truth is that you were participating: arranging meetings, planning a trip while married, and maintaining contact with someone who was unavailable. Healing requires brutal honesty with yourself: you were trying to re-create a chance at him. Reaching out to his fiancĆ©e to tell her the truth is something I wouldnāt recommend; itās a fraught choice. In your case she responded graciously and thanked you, saying heād betrayed her before. He tried to deflect by accusing you of lying, even creating a fake profile to fabricate a āfatedā message, which she saw through and that contributed to the breakup. He also told both of you that his contact was a form of trickery or revenge for your past inattention ā which reads like a manipulative excuse. You felt punished, but actually you were collateral damage: his selfish, impulsive sexual behavior and deception hurt both women. Now to the core struggle: despite his lies and mistreatment, you canāt let him go and keep convincing yourself he was the missed love. Thatās painfully common with attachment wounds: when someone whoās inconsistent withdraws, your longing spikes and you romanticize what could have been. Your logic sees the problem, and your heart clings anyway. The clear guidance is: your judgment was right about the danger ā end contact and cut ties. This man caused real disruption in your life, harmed another woman, and lies; staying connected will only prolong the harm. Donāt contact him again. You and he are both trauma-affected, and this pattern wonāt turn into a healthy relationship simply because you want it to. If you want to repair whatās left of your marriage, or at least to stop this recurring hurt, seek help for your attachment wound. Therapy can teach you practical skills to regulate the urge to flee or to chase, and to build safer closeness with others. There are various resources ā therapy, support groups, structured programs ā that can help you understand these drives and calm the panic that makes you run toward impossible love. This man wonāt be the cure. Whether you try to salvage your marriage is a separate decision, but I strongly urge you to get professional support: healing these patterns is possible and worth the effort. If anyone watching recognizes these signs ā difficulty tolerating closeness because of past trauma ā you arenāt alone; there are tools and support available to help you change how you relate and stop repeating this painful cycle. Goodbye for now, and take care.





