Why You Always Choose the Same Type of Partner
You find yourself once again with someone who is emotionally unavailable. Or perhaps you left a stable relationship because it felt "too easy," lacking the thrill of uncertainty. Maybe you invest everything in people who always end up leaving. If these situations feel familiar to you, it's likely that your history with your father figure plays a central role in your romantic choices—often without your awareness.
This is not inevitable. It's a logic that can be understood, and once understood, changed.
The Paradox of the Familiar: Why We Repeat What We've Experienced
Attachment psychology offers a powerful explanation for the repetition of romantic patterns. Children develop very early an internal working model (Bowlby)—a representation of themselves and others that guides their relational behaviors. This model is strongly influenced by the quality of early bonds with both parental figures.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceWhen the father figure is absent—physically or emotionally—this model develops around uncertainty, waiting, and often searching. The resulting adult doesn't necessarily seek a partner who resembles their father. They search, unconsciously, for a relationship that reproduces the emotional dynamic of that absence.
What feels familiar becomes confused with what feels reassuring. The flutter of anxiety you experience with a distant person can be interpreted as passion—because it resembles the emotional state of childhood.
Profiles of Partners Often Chosen
Without determinism, certain partner profiles recur frequently in the romantic history of adults who grew up without a father:
The unavailable partner. Taken, emotionally stirring but inaccessible, physically present but emotionally closed off. They reproduce the structure of paternal absence—you give much for little in return, you hope, you wait. This pattern is particularly frequent in daughters of absent fathers, as detailed in our article on daughters of absent fathers and their romantic relationships. The partner to save. You choose someone in difficulty, in pain, in the process of becoming. Love becomes a mission. This repair mechanism allows you to avoid being in a position of need yourself—a position too dangerous when you learned early that your needs wouldn't be met. The dominant or idealized partner. The absent father figure sometimes leaves a void where benevolent authority should be. You then seek to fill this void with a strong, authoritative, protective partner—until the relationship tips into submission or dependency. The "too good" partner. Paradoxically, some adults wounded by absence flee healthy and stable relationships. Security makes them anxious. The lack of intensity seems suspect to them. They leave reliable people to return to uncertainty—because uncertainty is what they know as love.The Repetition Pattern: An Unconscious Logic
The repetition pattern is not a bug in the psyche. It's an attempt at resolution. The unconscious tries to replay the original scene to, this time, change the ending. You hope that in the new relationship, you'll obtain what your father didn't give: recognition, presence, validation.
But replaying doesn't work. You cannot heal the wound of paternal absence by finding a partner who will eventually "compensate." You can only heal this wound by working on it directly.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceWhy Emotional Dependency Sets In
The paternal wound and emotional dependency are frequently linked. When you haven't received sufficient security from your father figure, you become an adult with an exacerbated need for external validation. You need the other person to continuously confirm their presence, their love, their faithfulness—because nothing within yourself can fulfill that role.
This intense need often frightens partners. It can also attract manipulative or emotionally unavailable people, who find in this need a lever of power.
How to Break the Cycle with CBT
Cognitive and Behavioral Therapy offers concrete tools to escape repetition:
1. Map the pattern. Identify precisely the relational dynamic that repeats: which type of person, which type of situation, which emotion triggered, which behavior follows. 2. Trace to origins. Without dwelling indefinitely, identify the link between the current pattern and your paternal experience. Cognitive awareness is a first break in the automatism. 3. Test contrary experiences. CBT recommends gradually exposing yourself to different relational experiences. Accept a date with someone stable and available. Observe the discomfort this produces—and move through it rather than escape it. 4. Work on core beliefs. "I don't deserve to be loved by someone good." "Men/women always end up leaving." These beliefs are cognitive distortions stemming from the wound. They are challenged with contrary evidence and progressive restructuring. 5. Learn to tolerate security. Relational security can seem bland at first for someone who grew up in uncertainty. It's an apprenticeship—not forgetting intensity, but learning to find depth in stability.What Reconstruction Demands
Breaking free from the repetition pattern is a process—not an event. It requires patience with yourself, a certain tolerance for discomfort, and often professional support to accelerate and secure the work.
This doesn't mean you're "too damaged" to love healthily. It means you've developed adaptive strategies that once served their purpose, and it's now time to replace them with chosen strategies.
Our article on 7 steps to reconstruction after an absent father offers you a complete protocol for this work.
Also Read:
- Absent father: psychological consequences in adulthood
- Emotional dependency and anxious attachment
- Disorganized attachment: understanding this painful style
Article written by Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychopractitioner, Nantes.
To go further: My book Understanding Your Attachment deepens the themes covered in this article with practical exercises and concrete tools. Discover on Amazon | Read a free excerpt
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