The Pattern
You notice the distance and try to fix it with more attention, more communication, and more gestures. Instead of bringing your partner closer, your increased effort seems to push them further away. This is called the Pursuer-Avoider Cycle – and it is the most common dynamic in long-term relationships experiencing intimacy breakdown.
Why It Happens
Pressure – even well-intentioned pressure – is felt as a demand. In the context of desire, need creates resistance. The person you are reaching toward does not feel pulled. They feel pushed. Their withdrawal increases not because they want to hurt you, but because the energy of need is uncomfortable to be around.
The Feedback Loop
The more the pursuer chases, the more the avoider withdraws. The more the avoider withdraws, the more anxious and pursuing the pursuer becomes. Each person is responding logically to the other’s behavior – but the combined dynamic creates the opposite of what both people want.
Breaking the Cycle
The cycle does not break by the avoider ‘trying harder.’ It breaks when the pursuer stops pursuing from a place of need. This is not about playing games or withholding. It is about genuinely understanding what the pursuit energy is communicating – and shifting it.
The Clarity
Intimacy cannot be built through escalation of effort when that effort carries the energy of need. Most people think ‘trying harder’ is the solution, but in the realm of attraction, it is the accelerant. To stop the withdrawal, the pursuit must transform into something else entirely.
Rupesh Ojha identifies the exact behavioral pattern behind your relationship in one 30-minute session.