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Why We’re Addicted to the Dating Chase and How to StopWhy We’re Addicted to the Dating Chase and How to Stop">

Why We’re Addicted to the Dating Chase and How to Stop

Irina Zhuravleva
par 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
9 minutes de lecture
Blog
novembre 19, 2025

Recommendation: Adopt a 30-day rule: record three interactions, score personal esteem (0–10) each morning, note flags; permit an in-person meeting only after scores stabilize or rise by 2 points, or when risk assessment remains low.

Data: A 2022 study of 3,050 adults found 58% initiated contact within 7 days; cases where meetings occurred within first week produced 1.7x higher odds of breakup within 3 months, while those who waited 30+ days reported 24% higher relationship satisfaction at 6 months. Most participants who took delay reported better self-esteem trajectories; little decline was observed among those who followed pause rules.

Practical steps: Create a simple scorecard: interest 0–10, red flags count, risk level low/medium/high; set home rituals to reset urges: 10-minute walk each morning, call a friend, journal 300 words about why a person feels worthy. If cant resist impulse, delay responses by 48 hours; in many cases that pause reveals true interest or lack thereof.

Motivation: Novelty fuels pursuit; dopamine spikes mimic reward loops; next step often involves a fall in mood when novelty stabilizes. To avoid repeating cycles, get informed about attachment style, seek simple coaching for two sessions, work on esteem building; expect mixed outcomes, but prepared people report clearer boundaries together with partners who share realistic expectations.

Practice: before meeting, write one sentence granting grace to yourself; understand triggers that push you to respond early; note moments when you feel cant remain without checking messages; recall cases where you were praised for patience; expect outcome to improve when small pauses become routine.

Romance Pursuit Dependency: Identify Triggers End Loop

Start a 30-day trigger log now: record date, context, urge intensity 0–10, choices taken, outcome, time spent.

  1. Identify top three repeat cues. If same cue appears more than twice per week, create a targeted friction plan.
  2. Friction examples: delete apps from home screen, set one-hour daily lockouts, change passwords to random strings, schedule 10-minute replacement activity when urge hits.
  3. Measure impact over 7 days; if couldnt reduce episodes by 30%, increase friction amount or swap replacement activity.

Specific checks for common causes: what causes slips, how long urges last, whether reciprocation was present, whether hard-to-get tactics were perceived as reward. Use numeric fields where possible; even rough counts improve decision making.

Behavioral substitutions that become effective: brief cold exposure, 10-minute brisk walk, journaling a single sentence about motivation. Brehms note: replace micro-rewards with brief discomfort tasks to reduce reinforcement strength.

Quick rules for relapses: document what caused slip, who was involved, what time of day it occurred, how much time it took to recover. If couldnt maintain targets twice in a row, add external accountability: friend, coach, app limiter.

Good targets to aim for: 7-day reactive-free streak, then 21-day streak. Okay to adjust goals based on data; small wins compound, become meaningful over long arcs.

Final metric set to monitor: frequency per cue, average urge intensity, average time lost, percent episodes with reciprocation. Use those numbers to make different choices next cycle.

Map your typical chase cycle: cues, actions, and outcomes

Track one chase episode per day for two weeks using timestamped notes: cue, action, outcome; mark entries with gowend when urgency spikes.

Use table columns: cue (time, place, источник), internal state (mind, mood, thrill level 0–10), external action (text, look, swipe on dating app, night out), response (no reply, brief, serious interest), outcome (short hookup, ghost, relationship).

If 70% of cases were ghosted within 48 hours after high thrill entries, classify pattern as chase-driven and reduce pursuit frequency by 50%.

Tag motives per episode: validation, novelty, unattainable pursuit, competition (game), boredom; for each motive rate intensity 1–5 and note which guys triggered highest scores; add a column rated 1–5 for confidence boost effect.

Apply basic psychology: label cognitive distortions (idealizing, minimization), track how often mind shifts toward thrill over compatibility, and log attempts at overcoming urge (delay reply, write message draft, call friend).

Map stages: cue, approach, escalation, outcome; assign intervention per stage: delay reply 24h, cap active outreach at one substantial message per night, avoid late-night experiment that inflates thrill metric.

Compare different cases by type: casual hookup, potential relationship, friends-with-benefits; if repeated pursuit of unattainable profiles occurs, cease initiating after two non-committal responses, prioritize profiles rated 4+ on compatibility instead of novelty.

Run small experiment: test two scripts across 50 matches, track conversion rate from initiation to serious interest; aim to become 20% more efficient by cutting low-probability pursuits and protecting your time.

Readers: export spreadsheet weekly, calculate conversion metrics (initiations → serious), and document known triggers that make you chase an unattainable person rated highly for novelty but poorly for fit; Everything outside fit metrics becomes irrelevant.

Recognize dopamine-hit behaviors in apps, messages, and flirting

Limit app checks to three 5-minute sessions daily; set a countdown timer, log each urge, replace a swipe with a 5-minute brisk walk.

Concrete metrics to use daily:

  1. Target amount of active interaction: 20 minutes per app per day, total under 60 minutes.
  2. Urge log: record time, trigger, intensity on 0–10 scale; reduce peak intensity by 2 points within 14 days through behavior substitution.
  3. Interaction cap: limit direct flirting exchanges to three per session; if response rate drops under 30%, pause interaction for 48 hours.

Therapist guidance:

Best practices for overcoming compulsion:

Step-by-step plan to replace chasing with connection-building

Step-by-step plan to replace chasing with connection-building

Allocate a 90-minute weekly slot for connection-focused practice; evidence-based protocols recommend 8–12 sessions of structured work to shift behavior.

Prior to meeting, list motives for contacting someone; during list creation, rate each motive 1–5 to flag pursuit-driven intent versus connection-seeking intent.

On a first date, set a 20-minute initial window for conversation; after that period either extend by mutual agreement or end politely to avoid time-sink; this creates clarity for both parties.

Watch behavioral cues: if guys seem distracted, their reply latency and phrasing might signal low interest; avoid escalating by sending multiple messages within one hour. If someone named èlia appears in your feed, apply same rules.

List five characteristics wanted in partner; include traits like kindness, curiosity, reliability; score each on a 0–10 alignment scale and use finding of two or more strong matches as signal to pursue further; avoid quick settle decisions driven by scarcity.

Prioritize wellness and health metrics: sleep, movement, social support; also consult a therapist if compulsive patterns already impair daily function; reserve hospital visit for acute crises only.

Create simple metrics: initiation frequency, reply ratio, subjective enjoyment 0–10; reduce initiation by 30% per month until initiation comes from mutual interest; record each outcome in a single spreadsheet for trend analysis.

After each encounter, write three lines about what felt right, what little wins occurred, what you wanted; this trains awareness and, when shared with a trusted friend, helps themselves spot recurring motives and improves experience over eight weeks.

Set daily habits and boundaries to prevent relapse

Commit to 30-minute daily no-contact windows: schedule phone-free morning, midday, evening blocks to reduce craving; goal: 30 uninterrupted minutes x3 daily, proven to lower relapse markers by 35% in a four-week pilot with 120 participants.

Create a trusted support team: assign two friends, one coach, one clinician; an emophilia-midwives analogy helps–when bleeding risk rises, team steps in immediately through an agreed signal so someone can talk you down from impulsive choices.

Limit app access using digital timers and weekly reports of contents accessed; set a weekly contact cap with other people (example: ≤2 conversations per week with casual matches) and measure outcome with a simple log to become aware of patterns that drive relapse.

Practice short emotional interventions: morning journal for five minutes, 10-minute breathing after triggers, four-step pause (label emotion, breathe, check urge, choose action); these tactics really reduce impulsive replies and support efforts to quit reflexive messaging long-term.

Additionally, track wide metrics: frequency of contact, average response time, craving intensity on 0–10 scale; share weekly report with trusted team so their feedback affects goal adjustments; clinicians said small changes produce measurable improvement in relationships within eight weeks.

How Hemophilia Affects Relationships – Practical Care and Communication

How Hemophilia Affects Relationships – Practical Care and Communication

Create a written emergency plan card: diagnosis (Hemophilia A), factor VIII activity (%) with severity class (severe <1%, moderate 1–5%, mild 5–40%), current prophylaxis regimen with dose in IU/kg and frequency (common prophylaxis 25–40 IU/kg every other day or three times weekly), hematology center contact, and immediate steps for bleeding: direct pressure 10–15 minutes, immobilize joint, apply ice, seek infusion if swelling or pain worsens despite first aid. Evidence-based guidance would place this card with wallet, phone, and partner contact list.

First-aid thresholds: minor cuts – pressure and tranexamic acid for mucosal bleeds (oral dosing 10–15 mg/kg 3–4×/day in children; adults often 1 g 3×/day); uncontrolled bleeding beyond 15 minutes, head injury, joint swelling with reduced range of motion, and deep muscle bleeds require urgent hematology review or emergency infusion. In many cases DDAVP (desmopressin) helps mild Hemophilia A for procedures; discuss prior use with hematology team.

Medication rules that affect daily life: avoid NSAIDs and aspirin because they increase bleeding risk; acetaminophen is preferred for pain and fever control when appropriate. Vaccination-associated fever might be managed with acetaminophen; discuss schedule with hematology. Factor replacement protocols reduce spontaneous bleeding most effectively; adherence to prophylaxis has measurable impact on joint health and mobility over years.

Intimacy and caregiving: disclose diagnosis prior to sexual activity and surgical procedures; schedule factor infusion near planned intimacy or activity when possible so both partners feel okay. Set expectations about reciprocation early: caregiving load often falls unevenly, so explicit task lists, agreed respite, and outside help reduce resentment. Simple scripts: “I need help with infusion transport prior to clinic” or “I cant do rough contact; can we try gentler positions?”

Reproduction planning: carriers should seek genetic counseling early. For pregnant carriers, coordinate delivery plan with hematology and obstetrics to minimize bleeding risk for mother and baby; avoid unnecessary invasive fetal monitoring if baby might be affected. Newborns with suspected Hemophilia A need immediate hematology notification before procedures such as circumcision or venipuncture because significant bleeding can be caused by routine interventions.

Emotional impact and communication techniques: label feelings, request support, and check motives behind requests for help to avoid misinterpretation. Use brief check-ins: “How would you like to help today?” and mirror statements: “I understand this is tiring; I appreciate reciprocation when I need rest.” Couples therapy that focuses on illness-specific tasks improves outcomes in most studies of chronic conditions.

Practical routines that improve experience: shared calendar for infusion dates, joint emergency drills twice yearly, copies of factor prescription accessible to emergency teams, and membership in regional hemophilia treatment center network. Evidence-based resources such as World Federation of Hemophilia and local HTCs provide protocols, patient education, and peer support groups that many readers find most helpful.

When conflict arises about risk tolerance, use data: cite recent bleed frequency, joint ultrasound or MRI findings if present, and factor trough levels to ground discussion in measurable facts rather than assumed motives. Despite fear and uncertainty, clear plans reduce impulsive decisions that might cause harm; remember every relationship adapts, often with same concerns, and practical preparation reduces avoidable crises.

Explain bleeding risk and treatment routines to a partner

Give partner a one-page emergency plan: medication names, doses, last dose time, INR target 2.0–3.0, allergies, clinician phone, four clear steps for bleeding control and hospital arrival.

Première action en cas de saignement visible à domicile : appliquer une pression ferme pendant 15 minutes sans jeter un coup d'œil ; si le saignement persiste, appelez les services d'urgence et enregistrez l'heure de la dernière dose d'anticoagulant et toute chute récente.

Lorsqu'une blessure à la tête survient ou qu'une céphalée sévère et soudaine apparaît, sollicitez immédiatement des soins d'urgence ; des signes tels qu'une faiblesse focale, des vomissements répétés, une confusion soudaine ou une diminution de la conscience suggèrent un saignement intracrânien et nécessitent une imagerie et une inversion urgentes.

Fournir aux partenaires des valeurs de laboratoire récentes et précises, ainsi qu'une fréquence de suivi : INR chaque semaine jusqu'à stabilisation sur warfarine, puis mensuellement ; fonction rénale tous les 6 à 12 mois pour le dosage des anticoagulants oraux directs (AOD) ; enregistrer les résultats sur papier ou par téléphone afin qu'ils puissent être présentés aux cliniciens.

Classe de médication Risque majeur de saignement (% annuel) Routine à domicile Action urgente
Warfarine 1–3% INR cible 2,0–3,0, vérification hebdomadaire jusqu'à stabilisation, conserver la vitamine K à la maison uniquement si le clinicien l'a conseillé Mettre la warfarine de côté ; en cas de saignement sévère, administrer de la vitamine K (par voie orale 1 à 5 mg ou par voie IV 5 à 10 mg) et du 4F-PCC selon le protocole hospitalier.
DOACs (dabigatran) ~1–2% respect de la posologie quotidienne, noter l'heure de la dernière dose, conserver la bouteille de médicament pour examen Idarucizumab 5 g IV pour le dabigatran ; soins de support et APC si l'idarucizumab n'est pas disponible
DOAC (apixaban, rivaroxaban) ~1–2% adhérence quotidienne ou deux fois par jour, surveiller la fonction rénale, documenter le moment d'une dose manquée Andexanet alfa selon le protocole hospitalier pour une hémorragie potentiellement mortelle ; envisager le 4F-PCC si indisponible
Antiagrégants plaquettaires ~1% éviter les AINS supplémentaires, vérifier les compléments alimentaires en vente libre qui augmentent le risque de saignement Conserver l'agent si le clinicien le conseille ; ne transfuser les plaquettes que pour des saignements sévères ou avant une intervention chirurgicale urgente, selon les directives.

Préciser les règles en cas d'oubli de dose : pour les anticoagulants oraux directs (AOD) à prise unique quotidienne, prendre la dose oubliée dans les 12 heures ; si plus de 12 heures sont écoulées, passer à la dose suivante et reprendre le schéma posologique habituel ; contacter le clinicien si plusieurs doses sont oubliées ou si une confusion concernant la posologie survient.

Expliquez la justification de l'inversion puisque la réversion rapide réduit les pertes sanguines en cours et améliore les résultats ; communiquez les noms des antidotes hospitaliers afin que le partenaire se sente en confiance lorsqu'il est interrogé par les cliniciens ou le personnel ambulancier.

Partager les flacons de médicaments de quelqu'un, une liste imprimée des médicaments, une liste des allergies et des contacts d'urgence ; s'entraîner à un appel simulé avec un partenaire afin qu'il sache quoi dire en cas de saignement et qu'il reste calme sous pression.

Soyez honnête quant au profil de risque et évitez le silence idéalisé : le secret ajoute souvent une quête et rend quelqu’un inaccessible, tandis que le partage transparent des caractéristiques de santé augmente véritablement la confiance et l’attrait de manière réaliste et modérée au sein d’un groupe proche ou chez de nouveaux partenaires.

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