Many people come to therapy with a painful sense that the same difficulties keep showing up across their relationships. Despite different partners, friendships or workplaces, familiar emotional dynamics seem to replay.
You might notice that you repeatedly end up with partners who are unavailable or overly dependent. You may feel unheard or diminished in friendships, or find yourself working for bosses who feel critical or undermining. Over time, this can lead to a troubling question: why does this keep happening to me?
Understanding how these patterns develop — and how they can change — is one of the central tasks of psychotherapy.

What we recognise and is predictable, somehow feels safer than new and unknown ways of being and relating
One of the most confusing aspects of repeating relationship patterns is the pull towards people and dynamics that hurt us.
Freud described this as a compulsion to repeat familiar relational experiences. Contemporary research supports this idea, showing that we move towards the reassuringly familiar — even when it is also painful.
What we recognise and is predictable, somehow feels safer than new and unknown ways of being and relating.
This can help explain why:
This is not a conscious or reflective choice. It is an unconscious pull towards what once felt familiar — often learned early in life.
Repeating patterns in relationships is simply being human. It is how we are ‘wired’
In fact, repeating patterns in relationships is simply being human. It is how we are ‘wired’.
From early childhood, we learn how relationships work not primarily through thinking, but through emotional experience. Much of this learning happens before we have language or conscious memory.
These early relational experiences shape not only how we relate to others, but how we experience ourselves.

So, if we grow up with a caregiver who was emotionally absent, that absence can become familiar.
As adults, we may repeat this dynamic by choosing unavailable partners — or by becoming emotionally unavailable ourselves. Often, we move between both positions in different relationships.
We can also repeat dynamics we witnessed between our parents. If one parent consistently carried the emotional and practical burden, we may later find ourselves compulsively caring for others — or avoiding responsibility altogether.
These patterns were not chosen. They were learned.
Our expectations of how relationships work are not conscious beliefs but felt assumptions — it’s as if we are programmed that way
Human beings are wired for connection. We develop in relationship with others, and from infancy - long before we have language or conscious memory - we learn powerful emotional lessons about closeness, safety, conflict and care.
Attachment theory, developed by Bowlby, describes how these early experiences shape expectations of ourselves and others. These expectations are not conscious beliefs, but felt assumptions — emotional understandings of how relationships work.
For example, we have assumptions about whether:
These assumptions were intelligent adaptations to the emotional environments we grew up in. As children, our families were our entire world, and these conclusions were often accurate at the time.
Difficulties arise when these assumptions persist long after the original context has changed.
Although relationship patterns originate early, they are reinforced in adult life through unconscious relational loops.
For example:
Each person’s protective strategy triggers the other’s. Without awareness, these cycles can feel inevitable.

Psychotherapy can help interrupt these patterns
Psychotherapy can help interrupt these patterns — but it is not a quick fix.
Insight alone is rarely enough. Understanding why something happens is important, but change occurs through experience.
Just as unhelpful ways of relating developed within emotionally significant relationships, new and healthier patterns must also be experienced within relationship.
In therapy, these new relational experiences develop gradually within a consistent, safe and supportive therapeutic relationship. Over time, they sit alongside older patterns, offering more psychological space and choice.
Old patterns may still be triggered, but:
Psychotherapy can help interrupt these patterns
Research consistently shows that the quality of the therapeutic relationship is one of the strongest predictors of positive outcomes, across all approaches.
A helpful therapeutic relationship offers:
It also involves your active participation: attending regularly, reflecting honestly, and gradually bringing more of yourself into the room.
Feeling a sense of connection with your therapist matters. I have written more about this in How Do I Find the Right Therapist for Me?
Repeating relationship patterns is something all of us do. They are understandable ways of adapting, shaped by our early experiences and strengthened over time.
Therapy offers a space to gently recognise these patterns, to experience something different within a safe relationship, and to begin making more conscious, compassionate choices about how we live and love.
If any of this resonates with you and you’d like to talk about it some more, you are welcome to get in touch with me.
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©Jack Schneider
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