My Partner's Anxiety Is Driving Me Crazy (Anxious Attachment Style Example)

My Partners Anxiety Is Driving Me Crazy (Anxious Attachment Style example)

In this video I’m going to talk about what it can be like to be in a relationship with someone who has an anxious attachment style.

Now for many of you guys watching, you may have an attachment style and you can gain some clarity and insight into how your behavior is affecting your partner.

I got an email from Adam who says he and his girlfriend keep fighting because she has a high level of anxiety.

Hello Craig, I was hoping you could help me with my girlfriend. I’ve been dating my girlfriend for just under a year now and I’m not sure we are going to last much longer. I’m a pretty patient guy, but I’m really getting exhausted by my girlfriend’s behavior. She is anxious all the time. I had no idea until I watch your video The Real Reason Relationships Fail. That video was incredible. Can you please help me understand her better? I know that her mother was an alcoholic and would often go out drinking, leaving her with her older brother. She was sexually abused by a neighbor numerous times when she was young. She often times can’t remember all the details, but it was pretty bad.

Well, trauma and anxiety affect your memory and it often makes you feel like you’re in a fog. Often times people repress abuse. They can’t handle it so they force it into their unconscious. In extreme cases they dissociate. This is how people have multiple personalities. Their brain can’t handle the pain of the trauma so it splits. The more trauma there is, the more personalities there usually are. Because each personality takes on a small part of the trauma.

Adam: Her behavior is so erratic, I’m overwhelmed and confused.  We argue over small things every day (female friends texting me, me wanting to go out with my guy friends, even me wanting to go to see my parents for a few hours). It’s like every little thing causes her to get angry.

Craig: So first and foremost you have to understand she is terrified. She wasn’t taken care of by her parents. The people who were supposed to keep her safe, didn’t. If a trauma is bad enough, we can’t separate it from the past.

She is absolutely scared to death that you are going to abandon her. She doesn’t feel safe. When her anxiety is triggered she feels scared and alone and she doesn’t know how to soothe herself.

She hasn’t felt loved. She hasn’t felt understood. She’s been repeatedly hurt and had her needs neglected and overlooked. She was traumatized by having to attach to others.  

One of the great things about understanding attachment styles is how helpful it is to understanding others. It’s like having a crystal ball. I can already tell a lot of the behaviors someone will have.

Here are some of the behaviors you can expect from someone who has an anxious attachment disorder.

Inability to listen to you. They are in their own world, because they are focused on trying to sooth their anxiety (which they probably don’t know how to do).

Loud fast paced voice. Nonstop talking (a struggle to have a give and take conversation). They just keep talking and talking and talking.

Hyper vigilant to you leaving them and feeling disconnected. Preoccupied fear of abandonment. Any small sense of disconnection and it triggers their anxiety. If they reach out to you and you don’t respond, they often times have a melt down right away.

Controlling behavior- Trying to control you (leaving the house, talking to friends, going places without them).

Lashing out and getting angry quickly. Becoming irate quickly. Cursing and yelling when they don’t get their way. Emotional melt downs. Arguments can escalate very quickly.

Attaching to someone new relatively quickly (like moving in with someone after only a month).

We are only as needy as our unmet needs. So when someone projects all these powerful intense feelings onto someone they barely know it tells me they have had a lot of unmet needs. There is a good chance they have an attachment injury.

You have to understand that for them, they didn’t feel loved. Didn’t feel listen to. Didn’t feel important. Over time, attaching to others didn’t make them feel good. It hurt. It was traumatic, painful and scary.

If you want to know how traumatic or intense the hurt was to them, look at their behavior. Look at how intense and upset they get in the present, then try to imagine them feeling that pain in their childhood.

The level of intensity of the present behavior and emotions are going to mirror their childhood pain.

You have to have empathy for them. Put yourself in their shoes, which can be incredibly difficult. But look at how they can’t calm themselves down. They can’t sooth themselves.

Now imagine them as a child being upset and no one soothing them. Feeling scared, alone, terrified, unloved.

It’s not easy to get over. It takes time. Even for me as hard as I’ve worked on myself. I still have a difficult time grasping how much pain and trauma I faced when I was growing up.

As an adult I look back and say, how could it have been so ignored. But I know that it was. My memory of my childhood is very foggy. I think I repressed things and kind of hid in my room and played with my toys to survive.

I never wanted to eat. I was very very controlling about what I would eat. It’s because I felt like I had very little control over my life. But I could control what I ate (even if they would yell at me or try to force me I would out wait them until they gave up).

I remember crying to my mom and saying to my step father you’re mean to me. All the time. I was 28 at the time… Just kidding. I was little.

One of my best friends really helped see how bad it was for me when he shared stories. He said he remembered one day my step father had me and him diving for rocks in the pool. He said he would give us a quarter for each one we picked up.

When we were done and added them all up he said my step father had given him the money, but not me. He felt so bad he left the money when he went home and asked his mom. Why is Don so mean to Craig? It was so powerful that my friend remembers that from 30 years ago.

So in a way, I give to you guys the kindness I wished I had gotten.

I wished I had been listened to. That’s part of why I became a therapist. To give you guys what I wished I had gotten.

Here’s a powerful example. I had a pet rabbit, and I had a cage in the room. My mom and step father told me they were going to put his cage outside that day to give him fresh air. Maybe it stunk, I don’t remember. But I begged them not to do it. I was crying and screaming and balling. Don’t put him outside, he’s going to die. He’s going to get too hot out there. They said, it will be fine. We will put water out there and leave her in the shade. This went on for a long time before they brought me to school.

I worried about her all day. All I could think about was she okay. As soon as I got home I ran to check on her. She had died.

I can still feel that moment. I can still feel that pain, that hurt. They didn’t listen to me. That is how I felt all the time. And do you know what happens when someone doesn’t feel heard by someone for a long time.

They get angry. How are you supposed to relate with someone who doesn’t hear you.

Now, as an adult and a psychotherapist I can understand that my mother’s high level of anxiety made it hard to hear anything past her own anxiety. She was in her own survival mode. So I have to consider that and look at things more objectively as an adult.

But just to help give you guys insight. What type of women do you think I’m unconsciously attracted to? Women who don’t hear me. Women who don’t validate me. Women who I am overly sensitive to their needs while ignore my own. I have to consciously focus on what I want in order to attract it.

I'll Never Get Her Back

I’ll Never Get Her Back

So for this video I’m going to be talking about when you believe you’ll never get the woman that you love back.

This is a really important video for you guys who are frustrated and don’t believe it can happen

I got 2 emails from guys who are dealing with break ups

The first email is from Murray who says, Hey Craig, I just came across your channel yesterday after my girlfriend dumped me last week. She told me she didn’t want to be in a relationship. She said she wasn’t happy. I asked her if she wanted to talk about it and she said “not really”. We had been dating for almost 9 months.

I know there has been some pressure on her from her family. They want her to focus on school and think I’m too much of a distraction. I left her alone for a few days but then I kept trying to convince her to give me another chance.

I’ve watched a ton of videos on break ups and it all felt like fluff. I researched all of the guys and not one of them had any type of degree in psychology. Most of them didn’t even look like they made it out of high school.

I have been where you are and felt like had no one that knew how I could get my ex back. I would spend hours online and came across guys who kind of seemed like they might know what they’re doing. I’d look at their products, everything felt sleazy to me, and I wouldn’t purchase anything.

That’s why I come on here and give you everything for free. If you want, you can watch all my videos and do things on your own.

The real value is having someone there for you. The way the brain works is that talking about things helps you heal. That’s why therapy is effective. But if you talk with friends and family, there’s a extremely good chance, they’ll give you bad advice.

I have some people do coaching with me weekly. I’ve even had some people do it more than once a week.

When I went through one of my break ups, I went to therapy twice a week. I needed it.

I’ve had attachment trauma growing up. I’ve had attachment injuries. My mom had tremendous amounts of anxiety and my mom had an avoidant attachment style.

I can’t guarantee you that she will want you back. I can’t make someone love you or care about you. They have to be attached.

I had 2 extremely painful break ups in my life. Those were what prompted me to me being where I’m at today.

I can tell you that the first one, I completely screwed it up.

I didn’t know what to look for, I didn’t know what to do. I wound up crying like a baby in a restaurant.

It completely destroyed her attraction to me. You guys can laugh. It’s funny. It’s embarrassing. But if it hadn’t happened maybe I wouldn’t be here helping you.

The second girl, after I figured things out, I actually got back with.

Let me tell you everyone that I knew, said we would never get back together. I literally thought there was a zero percent chance of it happening. Zero.

She had even started dating another guy.

As a coach I can tell you that there is no magic about this. Some of you want me to wave a magic wand and just make your ex come back. You may even watch a few videos and get her back… And then lose her because you didn’t really fix the problem.

The guys who get my help personally, through emails and especially Skype coaching are going to by far have the best results.

You may feel helpless and hopeless.

One of my favorite success stories is a guy I worked with. When I first started, he couldn’t even say hi to people. He was depressed and made no eye contact. Not even with his family. He spent all his time in his room playing video games. After working with me, he had 5 women ask him out on Valentines Day.

I know things feel hopeless right now. Because in this moment she doesn’t want to be with you. But that’s in this moment. Remember, feelings change like the clouds in the sky and a womans interest will rise and fall like the sea.

You have to change your belief that you will never get her back and replace it by saying she will want me back in time. I talk about that a lot in my video Focusing On What You Want.

In most cases, I believe an ex will revisit the idea of getting back together with you.

But you have to know exactly what kind of behaviors are going to turn her off or re attract her. I can help coach you into having the most attractive behaviors.

Attachment Trauma And Longing For Your Ex

Attachment Trauma and Longing For Your Ex

In this video I’m going to talk about attachment, and how trauma to the bond with our caregivers, affects our romantic relationships, and has a huge impact on how break ups affect us.

So, you’re going to learn why you may be having obsessive thoughts and longing towards your ex. I’m going to talk about some of the factors about why break ups affect everyone differently. Then I’m going to get into an email from someone who is obsessed with their ex.

Break ups are unique to everyone. There are so many different factors that affect how someone feels during a break up.

Were you the one who ended the relationship? Were you the one who got broken up with? How long did you date? How attached to the other person were you? How strong was your desire to be with them? What is your own attachment style.

Those are just some of the factors that affect how someone feels during a break up.Some people have an incredibly difficult time moving on from a break up. They obsess over trying to get their ex back.

For them, break ups are extremely painful. Remember, break ups literally cause you physical pain. They get tremendous amounts of anxiety (which is separation anxiety) and they become depressed because they lost the object of their love.

 

As Freud said "We are never so defenseless against suffering as when we love, never so helplessly unhappy when we have lost our loved object or its love".

So what does this all this have to do with wanting our ex back and obsessing and longing for our ex? Well it has to do with our attachment to others.

Our body is wired to attach and connect to others. It is for survival. It is the main strategy for survival from our species. We attach to our caregivers and unconsciously know that without them, it means death. Children cannot take care of themselves so we literally would die without an adult caregiver.

When we separate from our parents it feels like death. When we separate from our romantic partner it feels like death.

 

Now here is what is so important to understand. All of this information is to give you a real understanding of why break ups are so painful. You have to know about how attaching affects us to know how the detaching affects us.

 

We form attachments to our caregivers. We can form a healthy secure attachment or we have something go wrong.

We don’t get the love, affection, and attention that we need.  Over time we form an anxious attachment style and constantly fearing abandonment.

Or we can distrust that our parents will take care of us and we decide we are not going to trust them and take care of ourselves and form an avoidant attachment style.

The abandonment, neglect, hurt, and pain can be traumatic. The more intense and painful the trauma is, the more symptoms you will have.

I believe that the people who have a very difficult time with a break up have had attachment injuries in their childhood.

It could be a major event, like a parent abandoning you or a death that caused the loss.

Or it could have been their experiences with their caregivers that caused them this pain. Years of being ignored, abandoned, neglected.

People who have had that happen tend to have major abandonment issues and form an anxious or avoidant attachment style.

If a trauma is bad enough, our brain can’t separate the past from the present.

Think about it. If you had a trauma about an attachment with your caregivers. You are going to feel that same intense pain with your romantic partners.

 

The interesting thing is that there are tons of similarities between the relationship between our parents and our romantic partners.

I talk about attraction. I’ve explained how the relationships with our parents kind of create a blueprint for love. That we are attracted to people who are similar to our caregivers. We are attracted to romantic partners that are similar parents negative traits. They hurt us in a certain way.

Perhaps its because we are trying to correct it in adulthood. Perhaps we are just drawn to it on an unconscious level. Nobody really knows the answer to that.

I got an email here from Brian that says: Hey Craig: I wanted to say that your videos and your channel have been incredibly helpful. I have already learned a ton from you and am looking forward to our Skype coaching. Thanks to your video’s I know that I have an anxious attachment style. My father left our home when I was about 2 and he moved out of state. My mom was always stressed out and upset (bills, taking care of us, my older brother has issues). Here’s what’s been going on with me. My ex and I broke up about 2 months ago and I can’t stop thinking about her. I feel absolutely obsessed and I don’t know what to do to stop. I’m depressed and anxious all the time. I get sick to my stomach all the time and am constantly having diarrhea.

 

Disconnection hurts- You want to be conscious that when you lose the connection, which is the main source for safety and comfort, you lose the ability to regulate your emotions.  It causes intense grief and physical pain.

That separation anxiety is causing you to have the obtrusive thoughts. They are intrusive to the point where it’s all you can think about. It’s overwhelming and exhausting.

I believe for many people it’s because the break up triggers an Attachment injury from their childhood. Longing, obsessive and habituated thoughts.

Replaying events over and over again. Replaying memories  repeatedly. But our memories are distorted. It’s not a video, the intense emotions and reality distortions of how you were feeling and remembering slightly different each time causes more and more distortion over time.

I can remember during my break ups, bargaining was absolutely ruthless for me. I couldn’t stop bargaining in my mind. Over and over and over again. If I had done this differently. If she had only done this or made that effort. If we could have just done that. I would replay the days leading up to the break up over and over. If I had only confronted her in this way. I couldn’t stop.

Now what I’m about to tell you is key to understanding why you can’t stop obsessing over your ex.

The degree to which you are feeling the intensity of the longing for your ex, mirrors the degree to which you were hurt by your caregivers in your childhood.

Unseen, misunderstood. Ignored, abandoned.Not known in my family.

Intensity of those feelings of separation is the attachment injury. It’s the unresolved childhood grief coming out in the current life scenario.

The trauma from the past, the abandonment, is presenting itself in the present is projected onto the current loss.

It’s because you want to feel comforted.

One way to relieve your anxiety is remind yourself that there is a good chance your ex will revisit the idea of working things out. And even if she started dating someone else, there is an excellent chance that relationship will fail. This will calm your anxiety, clear that fog and help you to think more clearly.

By leaving your ex alone- completely, if they were attached to you, they will begin to wonder about you and think about you. It will cause them to have separation anxiety. Anxiety is the root of desire.

Courtship Anxiety (Anxiety During The Early Stages Of Dating)

Courtship Anxiety

In this video I’m going to be talking about something I call Courtship Anxiety

It’s a term that I’ve created that focuses on the very early stages of dating. 

I define Courtship Anxiety as worry and fear about the potential attachment with a new romantic partner.

When we find someone new that we are interested in romantically. It is very common to create a fantasy in our mind of who this person is and how they’ll meet our unmet needs.

We think about how amazing they are. How funny they are. How they’ll always be there for us.

Its almost like we are projecting our unmet needs onto a new person. I consider it a projection of Hope (Jungian term)

When we start to date someone new oftentimes we are anxious about the outcome. Now this happens to both men and women. But in some ways there are differences.

For example: men get courtship anxiety over asking for a phone number, making the first text, asking the girl out, worrying about what to talk about on the date, going for the kiss.

Women get courtship anxiety about: worrying if he will text you, find you attractive or find someone else more attractive. Worrying if he is just using you for sex. Being anxious if he will call you again. 

I think both men and women tend to have more courtship anxiety after a date. Because now you both have become more invested emotionally.

We fear become anxious that those unmet needs will stay unmet.

We start to make a connection but don’t know if it will pan out. There is no bond with them yet.

It’s the time and space between contact that causes the attraction to grow.

Anxiety is the beginning of desire. It’s the root of desire. So if you start dating someone and they take their time to contact you, it causes your anxiety to grow.

You start to wonder if they are no longer interested or found someone else.

Now if the man comes on too strong. He chases her away. If he tells a woman his feelings, there is no anxiety. It’s like being told what you’re getting for Christmas on November 1st.

This is the chase. The most exciting part of a relationship. Guys, being a challenge is part of what hooks a woman. Contact the woman when you want to set a date. Don’t spend all day texting her thinking it’s going to create attraction it doesn’t.

I got an email here from Orville. Orville? Orville it is: who says: Hey Craig, my brother and I are huge fans of your channel. We wanted to thank you for the daily videos, we can tell you put a lot of time and effort in them. I recently took a girl out on a date. I made a few mistakes, but I kind of got a kiss goodnight. It wasn’t a great kiss, but it was something.

Craig: What does that mean? She didn’t run away screaming? You’re still learning so good job going for the kiss.

Orville: I texted her the next day that I had a great time. I knew it was the wrong thing to do, but I was feeling anxious and wanted to hear from her. She wrote back “thanks”.

Well Orville it doesn’t sound like your date was poppin. Yeah, that joke was corny. Just kidding… It was aMAIZing. I love that you guys are all EARS (okay I admit, those were terrible, but I like to have fun)

Orville: I knew that I had to do something, so I asked her if she wanted to go to a movie.

Craig: Oh Orville you did have to do something but it was the exact opposite of what you did. You needed to give her time and space to wonder about you, think about you and let her feelings develop for you.

Most men make the mistake of contacting a woman 20 times a day when they’re anxious. This is why you don’t want to start vomiting your feelings. You take away the chase and you’re playing dead.

Side note: Don’t invite women to the movies. You can’t get to know her during a movie. Movies are a terrible idea for a date.

You want to contact her to set a date. Not chasing her when you’re anxious.

You want to be a secure base. Just like a child who returns to their parent when they feel disconnected. The father lets the daughter come to him when she needs. Focus on what your mission and doing what you need to do. Let her contact you when she wants to talk with you.

Women feel security through connecting and communicating. As she starts to develop feelings for you, she will reach out to you more and more.

Communication is constantly changing and so to experience certainty they need constant feedback.

Each time you simply set the next date. Go out, have fun, hook up.

Women test you during the courtship because they want to see how you handle uncertainty. They’re testing to see how confident and secure you are.

If you stay the same strong, confident guy under pressure she feels more certainty. The tougher the challenges you’re able to withstand and be strong, the more certainty she will feel.

The stronger her attraction will be to you.

When There's Drama, Look For Trauma

When There’s Drama Look For Trauma

Todays email was from a 30 year old woman who punched her boyfriend in the face after she saw him flirting with some other women.

I’m pretty sure it’s the longest email I’ve ever gotten so I did have to trim some of it out. I had to read this email about 5 times as it was really long and overwhelming.

Now, I didn’t mention this in my reply email to her, as it was something that I thought of as I was writing this out.

 

I have a saying that a lot of times helps me see things clearly: It goes when there’s drama, look for trauma.

Anytime I hear about something that seems outrageous or a behavior or response that’s out of proportion, it’s a signal to me that there may be trauma involved.

 

Before into I get into the email I just want to share some symptoms of trauma.

Poor memory problems (like their memory is in a fog), Difficulty concentrating, shutting down feelings, panic attacks, irrational behavior, difficulty regulating emotions, self injurious behaviors, hyperarousal to abandonment, excessive temper, demanding emotions, unable to trust others, separation anxiety, anxious or avoidant.

Can this person modulate affect?

When I hear of those symptoms, I know that theres a good chance there is a trauma involved somewhere. Remember, if a trauma is bad enough, the brain can’t separate the past from the present.

And until a trauma is talked about, nothing changes. Time doesn’t touch it. It floats in a timeless realm.

Kind of like the villains of Superman 2.

 

30 year old woman who has an Very anxious attachment style. I like to call her Rocky

Hi Craig so It was bad. Things were amazing until one day at a beer festival I got black out drunk (which magnifies my anxious behavior a hundred fold) I got jealous thinking he was flirting with some girls he was playing a game with. I don't remember anything, but apparently I walked up to him and punched him right in the face.

I screamed and caused a huge public scene in front of some of his friends as well. He took me to a friend's house and dropped me off and told me we were done. This was just last weekend. I actually hadn't had an episode of feeling jealous or insecure with him before this. And though I do often get angry when drunk, I've never been violent. It was like the alcohol caused me to have a PTSD flashback to my ex and I lost all control.

Craig: We’ll call her boyfriend Apollo.

Okay, so I have to point out the obvious first. Hitting someone in the face is grounds for a break up. So if he wants to break up with you over that, understandable.

It sounds like something triggered a flashback. I don’t know what kind of childhood you had, but it did not sound pleasant. Since you mentioned having a high level of anxiety, it sounds like you may have had some abuse or neglect going on. I would guess at least separation anxiety from abandonment issues. If trauma is bad enough we can’t separate it from the past and it feels like it’s currently going on.

 

I think there is a lot more going on than just you punching him. It seems to me that maybe he was flirting with other girls and you knew it. You got pissed and you attacked him. You are putting all the blame on yourself about the incident, but my gut tells me that maybe he was flirting with the other girls during that game. You are quick to discredit yourself because you were so drunk, I’m not so sure this was entirely your fault. What if he was flirting with other girls? Obviously it’s not okay to attack him, but that would trigger your separation anxiety.

 

 

Rocky: I was still currently very drunk at the time, though my memory was kicking back in, and tried to beg his forgiveness once we were in the car. I then punched myself in the face in an attempt to show him how sorry I was. (seemed rational at the time) and when that didn't work I threatened suicide. All things I would never do sober.

Craig: Now this is a conversation I would like to have seen. She wakes up from her black out and sees his shiner, what happened? Who hit you? I’ll kill them! Who did this to you?

Apollo: You did.

Rocky: Baby, I love you so much I’m gunna kick my own ass.

Craig: Sometimes ya just got to laugh at this stuff.

 

Rocky: We moved in together after only a month, but it just felt so right. We have so much in common it's like we were made for each other. Until this happened, of course. Now everything has changed.

Craig: They moved in together after a month. What can go wrong?

She says: This week has been strange. He was very angry with me the day after (understandably so) and I cried and begged forgiveness and swore to never touch alcohol again (which I fully mean. I will not ever allow myself to be violent again). He said I could continue to live here until I made new arrangements, then left and went and did all the things from our list of date plans without me. And told everyone he knows about what happened. He told me they were talking about what I psycho I am. 

Okay, I think it was decent of him to say you can stay there until she makes arrangements. Even if all his friends think you are a psycho, why is he telling you that. He’s throwing that in your face.

He is twisting conversations they’ve had in the past around.

Monday and Tuesday they hung out. Wednesday he freaked out when he texted her but she didn’t receive some of them. He called her in a panic when he thought she had blocked him. But as soon as he saw she hadn’t he stopped talking to her.

It’s ironic that when he thought you had blocked him he can call you in a panic (when he has separation anxiety) but when you have it, you’re “crazy”. If that makes you mad, it should! It’s okay for him to have separation anxiety and act irrational, but not for you. Sounds fair (I’m being sarcastic).

 

Rocky: He told me it was up to me, but I could come home if I wanted and said, though he didn't want to get back together, he'd give things time to see if I've changed (ei no anxious behavior. Waaay harder than I thought it would be.). Thinking everything was ok, I did come home on Thursday. I wish I hadn't.

When we're home together he's texting people constantly, which he didn't do nearly as much before. The first couple days I suppressed my anxiety about it. Assuming that he's just eating up all the attention he's getting. Though I did break down crying several times because it hurts to see how much happier his friends seem to make him. With me, even though he's being nice, he's still very cold and serious. When I try to talk about my feelings, he just says 'I don't know what to tell you.' Then he's right back on his phone.

Craig: He’s giving her mixed messages. Its setting her separation anxiety off. You can’t stay in this position. Not knowing one way or another is going to drive you crazy.

Rocky: On Saturday he stayed out late with friends. He didn’t tell her where he was. He said his phone fell between the seats. He came home at midnight and when she tried to say that she has feelings he said

"Well I'm still a person with feelings and the polite thing to do would have been to let me know!" Said in tears and anger. "Why?! We aren't together anymore. I don't have to tell you anything! You're making a huge deal out of nothing and being crazy!" We fought like this for awhile until I apologized and we went to bed in our now separate rooms.

Craig: More abusive behavior. He is minimizing her feelings and discrediting her by calling her crazy. His behavior is worse than hers.

I don’t like this guy. He is giving her mixed messages and he is cruel.

She went to apologize in the morning and as soon as she went in there to talk the phone goes off. 2 women text him. He says They’re friends. I’ve known them forever.

This dude is up to no good. If you want to say he’s single. That’s true, but stop with the conflicting messages. You’re in or your out. Don’t keep toying with someone’s emotions. It’s wrong. And he freaked out and lost self-control when he thought she cut her off.

He just kept saying "Not if you keep acting like this! If things get better, there may be hope. But not right now, not if you don't stop being crazy." So I calmed down and apologized once again. But now I'm more anxious about his phone than ever before. And he's been on it all day. He hides it on his chest when I walk by.

Come on. This dude wants the best of best worlds. He is keeping Rocky hanging on the ropes meanwhile he’s talking to like 5 different women.

He had a girl invite him out to a concert. But hes not interested ONLY because he has plans with one of his buddies.

She tries to talk to him about things with him. After I calmed down I calmly told him that seeing him on his phone so much makes me worry. He just shrugged and walked away.

This guy knows he has her in the palm of her hands and he is exploiting her. I don’t like him.

Rocky: I don't know what to do. I'm going to look at a room for rent tomorrow and told him that. Again, no reaction. I'm stuck feeling like a prisoner to my pain. He tells his dogs how much he loves them and how lucky he is right in front of me. Makes me feel awful. The DOGS are more deserving of love than I am. 

It sounds like he deliberately is trying to hurt you by telling the dogs how much he loves them in front of you. I’m not sure if there’s anything to this but you said the dogs are more deserving of love than you are. Has someone ever said or done anything like this before to make you feel this way? I’m guessing someone has.

 

Rocky:It seems that the requirements for my forgiveness are to act like a Stepford wife and just keep a big smile on my face while he knowingly does things that hurt my feelings. He seems to be enjoying my pain, but then what about the times he's nice?

Could be Borderline? Possibly Narcissitic?

Rocky: What I did was really terrible though, so maybe this is normal considering the circumstances? Is this punishment reasonable? Should I be tolerating this?

Craig: No. There’s something about this guy that feels off to me. I don’t like him. Now, I think you would be challenging in a relationship because you have a lot of anxiety. But this guys, I feel like he’s got a

Rocky: I just want things to go back to the way they were. It hurts that he doesn't care about my feelings anymore, but do I even deserve that? And if it IS reasonable for him to be acting this way, how do I control my anxiety about his phone and what he's doing in his now private life?

It would be perfectly reasonable for him to break up with you over this. What I don’t like is the mixed messages. Either talk it over and work it out or end it.

 

Rocky: Is it better to just be done and see if he goes into his own separation anxiety? I want him to understand that I'm hurting, but anytime I try to explain my emotions he says I'm attacking him. He thinks I'm crazy now, and I'm starting to worry the same. Am I being selfish?

Should I be swallowing my pain and just letting him do whatever makes him feel better? I feel lost and confused. I really want to fix things because it was REALLY good before. I feel like if I leave right after we've had a bad day like today then that's what he'll remember.

But maybe if I can keep my cool for a while and get him feeling better like he was earlier this week and THEN leave, just maybe he'll miss me. Or maybe the phone thing is a legit reason to leave for real. I don't know if I'm being paranoid anymore or not. Please help!

Craig: He has you questioning reality. And for good reason. After going through this email again I picked up a bunch more things that I didn’t the first time. Here are some of the manipulative behaviors that I picked up.

 

Gaslighting – that didn’t happen. You imagined it. they distort reality and erode your sense of reality. They get

 

Deliberately misrepresenting your thoughts and feelings to the point of absurdity. She had made the comment that the dog needs to be trained, that they shouldn’t get rid of it because it’s a good dog.

But he twisted it around to make it seem like she said We should get rid of the dog because you said it’s awful.

 

Name Calling- calling her psycho, crazy, spouse beater,

 

Smear campaigns- slandering you to all their friends and family.

 

 

My gut tells me you grew up with some abuse or neglect. It sounds like you’ve had trauma in your past and it hasn’t been dealt with. It is going to keep coming up until you really talk about it. For that, I would really encourage you to find a therapist who is experienced with trauma. I also think you need someone who has a good understanding of attachment theory as they can help you with your anxiety).

 

I would say alcohol is not your friend. You may have some real issues going on with that. It seems to me like drinking is only going to trigger all the trauma and anxiety that you have. You’re an adult, you have to make decisions for yourself. What are the benefits and risks of you drinking? Only you can decide that, but it played a major part in potentially ruining this relationship. If it has had any impact on your other relationships, than you need to take a real look at it.

 

A lot of your anxiety over this has nothing to do with him. You have to learn to calm yourself and sooth your own anxiety. My guess is that you have not learned to do that.

 

 

 

If it was me, here’s what I would do. I have rethought my original email to you. I don’t like this guy and I would move on. I would work on yourself. Watch every single one of my videos. Find yourself a therapist and work though your issues.

 

Now, if you decide you want him back here is the way I would do it. I would very seriously look for a room to rent. Find one that you like and be prepared to move there. Then say, listen I want to work things out but I understand if you don’t. Tell him your plans and see how he acts. If he talks to you like an adult and wants to really work things out, then consider it.

 

 

Don’t beg. Don’t plead. Come to him like an equal and act like an adult. If he says he does not, tell him Okay, I understand. Make arrangements to move out. When you do, simply tell him to contact you if he changes his mind. Then don’t contact him anymore.


If he is attached to you and starts to miss you, he will contact you. If that happens, then tell him you want to take things slow. If he does have an avoidant attachment style, he may not be attached to you enough to do so.

 

 

You are going to be okay. You survived for 29 years before him. You are an adult now. You can take care of yourself. It’s okay if someone walks out of your life (even though it hurts). You aren’t a little girl anymore. Remember, you are now an adult and you’re going to be okay!

How To Be Her Superman

Be Her Superman

 

I got an email here from Ernie. Hey Craig, I’ve been watching your videos and I have to say, excellent job. I get a little overwhelmed trying to learn everything. I really liked How To Make Your Partner Feel Loved and The Real Reason Relationships Fail. I was wondering if you could do another video on things to make relationships healthier. I want to be the man of my woman’s dream.

 

I think most guys want to be a woman’s hero. They want to be the guy to save her.

So I found a way for every guy to wear a cape for their woman. It’s not your typical cape. Like Frank Costanza’s lawyer wears.

This C.A.P.E is an acronym. It stands for Curiosity, Acceptance, Playfulness and Empathy.

Guys making relationships work is not easy. I hear a lot of people complain, a relationship shouldn’t be this much work. And I say, yes they are avoidant attachment types.

They’re the ones that say relationships take the most work. And for them it’s probably true. Because they have to learn so many more skills and abilities that they’ve never done before. So for them, it is work.

But this is a simple little way to remind yourself of some of the very core things that can make your relationship go well. Remember negativity is one of the worst things to have in a relationship.

 

Often times we are so unconscious of how negative we are. Think of what negativity means.

Negation. Any thing you do to another person that makes them less than you.

You do it all the time and you’re not even aware of it.

 

So what can you do to put on your C.A.P.E

Curiosity- active interest in your partner. What they like, what their experience is like, what their past is like. Ask them what their dreams are. Ask them about their childhood. Be genuinely curious about them.

People always ask me what to talk about on dates. Be curious about them! It goes a long way!

 

Acceptance- unconditionally accept who they are. Often times we try to change people because we don’t accept their otherness. We are afraid to accept who they are because we are afraid it will invalidate who we are. That it somehow makes us less. We are both equal. Even when we disagree.

 

Playfulness- Love should be playful and fun. A lot of times when we aren’t playful it’s because we haven’t had our needs met. If you were neglected in some area as a child we often tend to be depressed about it. The more you can play, the healthier your condition. The healthier the relationship.

 

Empathy- Understanding the other person’s world. What they are experiencing. Putting yourself in their shoes.

When your woman comes home from work and tells you about her problems with her boss, she doesn’t want you to fix her problem, she wants you to listen. She wants you to be present with her.

 

When Empathy is gone humanity is gone. We are now in a transactional world. We transact to get our needs met. We transact to our advantage which is based on our absorption. If they don’t want what I want they’re wrong. They’re in the wrong place. Losing empathy, other people become objects

You become an object to me, you’re no longer a person. I can then treat you anyway I want to treat you to get you to respond to my self-absorbed needs. Yell at you, scream at you, ignore you, deprive you, you’re not a person.

Finding Your Passion Can Improve Your Love Life

How Finding Your Passion Improves Your Love Life

 

One of the best things you can do for yourself in your life is find your passion. Find something that you absolutely love doing doing.

We all have our own desires and interests in life. Most people have that burning passion for something.

You know that thing that you love doing more than anything? That you can spend hours at a time doing it and completely lose track of time? That’s your passion.

 

If you can somehow find something that you absolutely love doing and make it into your career. Do it.

My passion is coaching you guys. Putting out as much information for you guys to have amazing relationships.

We only have one life and you don’t want to be at the end of yours thinking about regrets.

But having a passion can also have a huge impact on relationships. Because someone who is passionate about something is attractive.

 

Women hate apathy. They hate a man who spends his life sitting on the couch, isn’t inspired by his job or career, is unmotivated. It’s a turn off.

They would much rather have a man aligned with his purpose and put that purpose first. Sometimes she may even test you to see how much your purpose is important to you.

She wants to see if you will be weak and cave in, or if you will set a strong but caring boundary that lets her know you love her, and you’ll find time for her, but you must focus on your mission.

 

This is a little off topic but still relevant. If you’ve ever had a woman try to change who you are, they are testing you. They want to know that you value your opinion of yourself first.

Confidence is putting your opinion of yourself above anyone’s opinion of you.

 

It can be changing your style of clothes. Getting you to stop doing a hobby or interest. Compromising on the things that are valuable and important to you. When you do, they see you as weak and submissive.

I made the mistake of trying to please too much in at least one of my relationships. When my woman complained about certain things I thought it was right to compromise. I thought that’s that she wanted!

What that actually did is cause her to lose respect for me.

Women want to feel your strength. If they can easily sway you from your purpose, it disappoints them. They get angry. You aren’t as strong as she thought you were. Instead of her feeling that confidence and opening up even more because she feels safe. She feels less attracted to you because now that strong confident man looks weaker.

 

I talk a lot about more about confidence in my videos Confidence is Key and How to Be The Mountain

 

I got 2 emails from women who are frustrated by their man’s apathy. I’m sharing these so you guys see how it feels from a woman’s perspective and can hopefully get you to reevaluate your own behavior and how you’re coming across to women.

Amy writes: Good afternoon Craig, I have been feeling very frustrated with the man I have been dating. He is not like some of the other men I have dated and I don’t mean that in a good way. He is lazy and uninspiring.

Ouch. Lazy and uninspiring?

Amy: He comes home from work, sits on the couch and watches television for hours. I swear he does this every night. Even on the weekends I try to get him to go out with me and do things. He says he is tired or not in the mood. I’m so frustrated. No matter how many times I tell him lets go do something fun, he says not today. I’m not used to being with someone who was this unmotivated and it’s a real turn off.

Women love a guy who has a desire, a purpose. When a woman sees a man who has ambition. Guys if you have no passion or interest, it doesn’t give off a spark. She is losing interest in this man fast.

 

I got another email here from Shelia who is having a very similar issue. She says. Hey Craig, I’m having a difficult problem with my boyfriend. He’sreal lazy ass. He doesn’t do anything around the house. He doesn’t clean or help cook. I’ve asked him to help me do some projects in the home. It took him 4 months to paint the house. He would start projects and then leave them for weeks at a time. He’d only get back to the project if I told him over and over again.

I can’t help but look at him and be disgusted. He put on weight, he doesn’t take care of himself. He just doesn’t care about anything. I don’t even want him to touch me. My sex drive for him is dead.

 

You would be surprised how often I have women tell me things like this.

Women hate to tell men how to be a man. They want a man to know how to be a man.

 

Unfortunately, a lot of men these days are raised without their father in their life, without good male role models. So we don’t have men to teach us to be men.

That’s one of the main reason I put these videos out every day. To help you guys.

So I know the ladies that are writing me are not going to like what I’m going to have to say. Women hate to tell men how to act like a man. They hate it. It is a major turn off for them.

However, ladies you are going to have to tell your man how you’re feeling. If you have a man who you think needs a wake up call show them this video.

I recommend a book called The Way of the Superior Man by David Deida.

You have to let your man know that his apathy and lack of passion is completely killing your desire for him.

Trouble Moving On From A Break Up

Trouble Moving On

 

Sometimes break ups can be incredibly painful. We can have a very difficult time forgetting about the person who broke up with us and moving on.

I have an email from a guy who is having a very difficult time doing just that.

Hey Craig, I really need your help and I don’t know who to turn to. My ex and I have been broken up for just under a year. We have a little girl.  Sometimes she likes to spend time with us as a family, and I thought that doing that would cause her to think about how nice it would be if we could be together. I recently found out she is dating other people. I still have feelings for her. To be honest, part of me still loves her and wishes we could work it out. I think she gives me mixed messages. Sometimes she wants me and sometimes she doesn’t.

I’ve been watching your videos and I see that she has an avoidant attachment style. She has good things about her, but they bad tend to outweigh the good. I tend to completely overlook how she is distant she would be. She doesn’t even like physical touch. She is often very critical and self-absorbed. I’m not sure why I still love her as she has done many things to hurt me.

I watched your video We Are Attracted To The Familiar and I see that she is just like my mother and father. My mother is anxious attachment style and my father is avoidant. My mother is unable to hear me and meet my needs like yours was because of her anxiety. Thank you so much for helping me see that. I have spent my entire life not feeling listened to and now I know it’s because my mothers anxiety made it difficult to hear what I need.

I have a really strong attraction to my ex and I know it is because she is so much like my parents.  I think that is why I have such a difficult time moving on. I look forward to hearing what you have to say and to our skype coaching we set up.

 

Craig: So first thing I want to say is that I’m sorry you’re going through this. I know how painful break ups can be.

You mention that your ex is just like your mother and father. This is huge reason as to why you don’t want to move on. For you, your mind believes you have found the love that you need. Because it feels exactly like the love you felt from your parents. It feels so familiar, like how you believe love is supposed to feel, even though your parents didn’t make you feel good!

 

When we grow up in a family that does not know how to treat each other well. If we have caregivers that aren’t attentive, don’t validate us, connect with us, we tend to distort reality. We do it because living with reality is actually too painful. We say, oh I have a great relationship with my parents, even though you may be angry at them all the time.

When you don’t deal with that in your adulthood. You continue to date people who treat you the way your parents did. It’s called the repetition compulsion. You reenact things over and over again in an effort to understand it. It’s like Charlie Brown and Lucy. Every time he believes she will allow him to kick the ball.

 

Now, as far as your ex. People with an avoidant attachment style tend to be angry and can get pretty nasty. Why? Because they haven’t had their needs met. Their parents continually disappointed them. They probably experienced a lot of sadness, disappointment, anger, neglect.

When you grow up in that type of environment day in and day out for years, it really has a huge impact on someone. The problem is we are wired to connect to others. So they are always in a very difficult internal struggle. Not trusting people but wanting to be close to others.

 

You are going to have to make a choice. Do you want to continue going after this woman, who you know has an avoidant attachment style and will likely continue to mistreat you, or do you want to find someone who will treat you better.

I know you are hoping that she will change, or you can change her. I have to be honest. People with an avoidant attachment style really struggle to change. Believe me, I’ve looked everywhere and the findings and they are discouraging. They have to want it and work hard to change it. But they certainly aren’t going to do it for you. Because they’re simply not that attached to you to begin with.

 

Now, let me share something that can be extremely difficult to see during a break up. Break ups aren’t necessarily a bad thing. Try to have the mindset that everything happens for a reason AND that this is going to make you stronger.

You can find a lot of good things coming out of a break up. If it wasn’t for my break ups I wouldn’t be where I’m at, and despite how much I suffered, I love where I am right now.

 

I used my break ups to fuel me to becoming the best version of me and I continue to work on myself every day. Have that attitude and focus on becoming the best version of you that you can. You’ll either re attract your ex or find someone even better. Your ex may even coming running back and realize you are the best thing she’s ever had and was a fool for losing you.

Do This When She Backs Away

Do This When She Backs Away

There are times in our relationships when the person we are dating is less interested in us. This video can help you prepare for it by understanding why it happens and what to do when it does.

There are going to be times when someone you are dating is more distant, more disconnected, less present, and less attentive.

There are a lot of reasons as to why: They could be feeling smothered. Maybe they are having doubts about us. Maybe they are stressed about work or their health. Sometimes it has nothing to do with you.

When she backs away our natural instinct is to reach for them and cling to them.
 

I am going to give you the correct reason as to why men chase when the woman backs away. The real reason has to do with our instinct of separation anxiety. We are hard wired from birth to connect with others a survival strategy.

We have it from when we are infants.

If we lose our parents, we die. So we learn to scream and cry and throw tantrums to get them to protect us and stay close to us.

So when someone backs away from us it kicks in our hard wired separation anxiety.                                                                                                                   You have to ease your anxiety. One way you can do that is by reminding yourself that you are an adult now, and that if you needed to, you can take care of yourself.

I have 2 emails to get into. The first one is from Tyler who says: Hey coach, so I just started following your work about 3 weeks ago. I found your channel when I googled what do women want? Just to remind you I did my first email about a week ago and it helped A LOT. I have to say, my God the information on your channel is by far the most helpful. I used to follow other coaches, but half the time they just make up statistics and give out information that they make up as facts. Your channel is fantastic! The first time I saw your video, The Real Reason Relationships Fail, it was like my eyes were opened about things for the first time.

I wanted to make a quick recommendation of my top 5 videos by you. I really hope you share them. We Can’t Stop Arguing. We Create Our Own Value, How To Make Your Partner Feel Loved, You’ve Changed, and The Struggle of Intimacy.

So here is my question. I got this girls number at a party. At first she was texting me back right away. We went on a few dates and on the third date we hooked up. She was calling me and texting me daily. We started hooking up almost every day for about 2 weeks. I noticed she seemed distant from me for about 3 days I didn’t hear from her. On the 4th day I texted her. She didn’t reply. I texted her the next day. She didn’t reply. I called her the day after and left a message, no reply.

 

Craig: If you reach out to her and she doesn’t respond. Then do not continue to reach out to her.

If she backs away, you back away. It’s like her value in you has dropped. If you continue to reach out for her and she doesn’t reply, your value will drop in her eyes.

Tyler: I started to worry if everything was okay and then I saw she had posted a picture of her with a girlfriend on social media. I lost it, I texted her 3 times. She said, I needed some time for myself because things were going so fast, but now I’m not so sure about us anymore.

Craig: You have to Expect a woman’s interest level to drop. Sometimes someone’s interest level in you is going to drop.

When that happens, don’t lose emotional self control when you get separation anxiety. If she cuts you off, wait until you hear from her. If her messages are brief it means her interest has dropped

 

The second one is a success story from Dusty. Hi Craig, I am super pumped right now. Reason is, your videos helped me get with the girl I have had a crush on all summer. I had gone on 2 dates with her and tried to set up a third date. She tried to do a maybe date so I did your idea of the takeaway.

I told her to get in touch with me when she knows for sure. I didn’t hear from her for 2 weeks. But, I went out on a date and posted a pic. I don’t know if she saw it, but the next day she texted me and told me some days she was free.

I thought about your advice so I waited until the next day to respond. I figured, she took 2 weeks to get back to me.

Craig: Your inaction causes them to feel attraction for you. Because, like I said anxiety is the root of desire.

When a person has you chasing them, they lose anxiety, cause they know they have you, so they lose the desire.

When she contacts you, after you haven’t contacted them. Simply arrange the next time to get together.

Don’t pursue anyone who doesn’t want you. When their interest drops, you drop yours.

You want to be just as confident and secure, no matter how much her interest level drops. If her interest level drops from an 8 to a 3 just relax. You have to stay confident no matter what. That’s what she’s feeling in that moment.

Feelings change like the clouds in the sky and her interest level will rise and fall like the sea.

She will come back when she is ready. When she doesn’t hear from you, she will get anxious and start to desire you.

If she is still attached she will contact you.

 

Do This When She Backs Away

Do This When She Backs Away

There are times in our relationships when the person we are dating is less interested in us. This video can help you prepare for it by understanding why it happens and what to do when it does.

There are going to be times when someone you are dating is more distant, more disconnected, less present, and less attentive.

There are a lot of reasons as to why: They could be feeling smothered. Maybe they are having doubts about us. Maybe they are stressed about work or their health. Sometimes it has nothing to do with you.

When she backs away our natural instinct is to reach for them and cling to them.
 

I am going to give you the correct reason as to why men chase when the woman backs away. The real reason has to do with our instinct of separation anxiety. We are hard wired from birth to connect with others a survival strategy.

We have it from when we are infants.

If we lose our parents, we die. So we learn to scream and cry and throw tantrums to get them to protect us and stay close to us.

So when someone backs away from us it kicks in our hard wired separation anxiety.                                                                                                                   

You have to ease your anxiety. One way you can do that is by reminding yourself that you are an adult now, and that if you needed to, you can take care of yourself.

I have 2 emails to get into. The first one is from Tyler who says: Hey coach, so I just started following your work about 3 weeks ago. I found your channel when I googled what do women want? Just to remind you I did my first email about a week ago and it helped A LOT. I have to say, my God the information on your channel is by far the most helpful. I used to follow other coaches, but half the time they just make up statistics and give out information that they make up as facts. Your channel is fantastic! The first time I saw your video, The Real Reason Relationships Fail, it was like my eyes were opened about things for the first time.

Tyler: I wanted to make a quick recommendation of my top 5 videos by you. I really hope you share them. We Can’t Stop Arguing. We Create Our Own Value, How To Make Your Partner Feel Loved, You’ve Changed, and The Struggle of Intimacy.

So here is my question. I got this girls number at a party. At first she was texting me back right away. We went on a few dates and on the third date we hooked up. She was calling me and texting me daily. We started hooking up almost every day for about 2 weeks. I noticed she seemed distant from me for about 3 days I didn’t hear from her. On the 4th day I texted her. She didn’t reply. I texted her the next day. She didn’t reply. I called her the day after and left a message, no reply.

Craig: If you reach out to her and she doesn’t respond. Then do not continue to reach out to her.

If she backs away, you back away.It’s like her value in you has dropped. If you continue to reach out for her and she doesn’t reply, your value will drop in her eyes.

I started to worry if everything was okay and then I saw she had posted a picture of her with a girlfriend on social media. I lost it, I texted her 3 times. She said, I needed some time for myself because things were going so fast, but now I’m not so sure about us anymore.

You have to Expect a woman’s interest level to drop. Sometimes someone’s interest level in you is going to drop.

When that happens, don’t lose emotional self control when you get separation anxiety

If she cuts you off, wait until you hear from her.If her messages are brief it means her interest has dropped

The second one is a success story from Dusty. Hi Craig, I am super pumped right now. Reason is, your videos helped me get with the girl I have had a crush on all summer. I had gone on 2 dates with her and tried to set up a third date. She tried to do a maybe date so I did your idea of the takeaway.

I told her to get in touch with me when she knows for sure. I didn’t hear from her for 2 weeks. But, I went out on a date and posted a pic. I don’t know if she saw it, but the next day she texted me and told me some days she was free.

I thought about your advice so I waited until the next day to respond. I figured, she took 2 weeks to get back to me.

Craig: Your inaction causes them to feel attraction for you. Because anxiety is the root of desire. When a person has you chasing them, they lose anxiety so they lose the desire.

When she contacts you simply arrange the next time to get together. Don’t pursue anyone who doesn’t want you. When their interest drops, you drop yours.

You want to be just as confident and secure, no matter how much her interest level drops.  When she doesn’t hear from you, she will get anxious and start to desire you. If she is still attached she will contact you.