Avoidant Attachment: The Weight of the Love We Can't Carry
Or the unspoken struggle of pushing away what we most desire.
There is a unique kind of loneliness that arises from loving others without ever truly knowing how to let them love you in return. It’s a subtle, persistent ache, a constant tension between the yearning for connection and the fear of suffocating in it. For those of us with avoidant attachment, love is both the thing we crave most and the thing we push away farthest. It is the thing that feels like safety and danger, warmth and asphyxiation, all at once.
Avoidant attachment is not just a relationship style; it is a lens through which we see the world, a filter through which we interpret love and connection. At its core, it’s a defense mechanism, an attempt to protect ourselves from the vulnerabilities of emotional closeness. It begins early, often as a response to early experiences that were too overwhelming, too unpredictable, or too painful. It’s a learned behavior—something we picked up along the way, often without even realizing we did.
For those of us with this attachment style, love feels like a heavy burden, an anchor that tugs too forcefully at the soul. It's not that we don't long for love—it's that we've internalized the belief that love demands something we can't afford to give. Over time, we've come to see it as a delicate balance that, once disrupted, will pull us under, leaving us with no sense of self. We’ve internalized the belief that love will demand something we can’t afford to lose—something too valuable, too essential. We’ve learned to prioritize independence, to keep our emotions guarded, and to avoid leaning too heavily on others.
Yet, this need for emotional distance, this urge to protect ourselves from the vulnerability that love demands, often backfires. Because the very love we push away is the one thing that could heal us. The very connection we resist is the very thing that could fill the emptiness we carry. We long for it—desperately—but we don’t know how to accept it without feeling overwhelmed, consumed, or trapped.
The Paradox
At the heart of avoidant attachment is a paradox. We want connection—we yearn for it. We dream of the kind of love that is deep and lasting, the kind that provides comfort, safety, and understanding. But when it’s within our reach, we push it away. We sabotage our relationships, often without even realizing we’re doing it. We pull back when things get too close, when someone tries to love us in a way that feels too demanding, too dependent, too personal. We become distant, cold, or aloof, retreating into ourselves to preserve the sense of autonomy and independence we’ve spent so long cultivating.
The truth is, it’s not that we don’t feel love; it’s that we don’t know how to manage it. The emotions we experience in love feel too big, too intense, too overwhelming. They don’t fit neatly into the walls we’ve built around ourselves. And so, we react by pushing them away, by detaching before it all implodes. We build walls higher and higher, each brick adding another layer of protection, another shield to keep ourselves safe from the feelings that scare us.
The people who love us most, often feel the brunt of this. They become the target of our withdrawal, the recipients of our silence, the objects of our avoidance. And yet, it is not because we don’t love them. In fact, it’s often the opposite. We love them too much, we get too attached, but we don’t know how to express it without feeling like we’re losing ourselves in the process. We fear that if we give too much, we’ll have nothing left to give. We fear that if we rely on them too heavily, we’ll lose our sense of self, our independence, our ability to function without them.
But here’s the tragedy: in pushing them away, we push away the very thing we need. We push away the love, the connection, the emotional support that could give us the strength to face our deepest fears, to confront the vulnerability that we so desperately try to avoid. We become so consumed by the fear of being overwhelmed, of being hurt by love that we end up suffocating ourselves with the very thing we desire.
The Root
This attachment style doesn’t just appear overnight. It’s cultivated in the fertile soil of past experiences—sometimes in childhood, other times in formative relationships that laid the groundwork for how we view ourselves and others. The roots of avoidant attachment stem from an early sense of neglect, emotional inconsistency, or unavailability from those we were meant to rely on. Perhaps our caregivers were physically present, but emotionally distant, their love conditional or withdrawn in times of need. As a result, we learned to adapt by telling ourselves that we could survive without the reassurance of others. We didn’t feel safe enough to rely on anyone. The very concept of leaning on someone became synonymous with the fear of being let down, of being abandoned when we needed them most.
This attachment style is a silent protest against vulnerability. The lesson learned is that to be loved is to risk being hurt—to place ourselves at the mercy of someone who may not always be there, or worse, who may leave when we are most exposed. So we adapt, not by opening up, but by pulling back, convincing ourselves that we don’t need anyone. We construct an image of ourselves as independent, self-sufficient, and unaffected by the very thing we crave—connection.
Ultimately, deep down, we are afraid. Afraid of being vulnerable, afraid of letting someone in too close, and most of all, afraid of the pain that can come with love. We convince ourselves that if we don’t get too close, we won’t get hurt. We keep people at arm’s length, never fully allowing them to enter the inner chambers of our hearts, because we know what happens when we do. We’ve been there before—the intimacy that seemed so comforting slowly becomes suffocating, the trust that once felt like a lifeline turns into a burden. We are terrified of feeling smothered, of losing our identity in someone else’s emotions, of drowning in the weight of their needs, their expectations, their love.
The Belief
One of the most insidious aspects of avoidant attachment is the quiet, pervasive belief that we are not worthy of love. We carry this belief with us, often without realizing it, and it shapes the way we relate to others. It’s a belief that is formed in childhood, often in response to rejection or neglect, and it follows us into adulthood. We believe, deep down, that we are unlovable, that our flaws, our vulnerabilities, our imperfections are too much for anyone to handle.
This manifestation of impostor syndrome is what makes love feel so threatening. It’s not just the fear of losing ourselves in another person, but the belief that we are inherently flawed and incapable of being loved in a healthy way. We think that love will always come with conditions—that it will expose our weaknesses and leave us vulnerable to hurt.
For people with avoidant attachment, love feels like a transaction. It feels like something we have to earn, something that we are not automatically entitled to. We see love as something conditional, something that requires us to be perfect, self-sufficient, and emotionally invulnerable. And because we cannot meet these impossible standards, we convince ourselves that love is not for us. We believe that we don’t deserve it, and so we push it away before it has a chance to disappoint us.
The Cure
The path to healing for those with avoidant attachment is not an easy one. It requires confronting the beliefs we’ve internalized about love, about ourselves, and about our worth. It requires learning that love is not a burden—it is a gift. It is not something to be feared, but something to be embraced. It is not something that will consume us, but something that will help us grow, help us become more whole.
For those with avoidant attachment, healing means learning to let down our walls, to allow ourselves to be vulnerable without fear of losing ourselves in the process. It means learning to trust that love will not take away our autonomy or our sense of self—it will only enrich it. Healing means learning to accept that love is not a transaction, but rather an exchange, a mutual sharing of hearts, a giving and receiving that makes us better people.
It also means learning to trust ourselves, to believe that we are worthy of love just as we are, with all our flaws and imperfections. We don’t have to be perfect to be loved—we just have to be open to the possibility of love, to allow ourselves to receive it without the fear of being overwhelmed by it.
In the end, the weight of love is not something to be feared—it is something to be embraced. It is not a burden to carry, but a gift to receive. And when we learn to let go of the fear and allow ourselves to be loved, we find that the weight of love is not heavy at all. It is, in fact, the very thing that helps us keep going.
- L
"For people with avoidant attachment, love feels like a transaction." this one hit too close to home. i always tell myself that a relationship only works if it’s transactional. and while being in a relationship, I ask myself if I should pay back for the love people have given me. it’s so hard to unlearn this belief.
this was a great read! avoidants are pointed out so often, that people don’t even attempt to understand them. I wish all of them could read this :)