The Mindset Mentor - Why You Fall in Love with the Wrong People
Episode Date: April 25, 2025Why do we fall for people who are wrong for us? In this episode, I dive deep into the psychology behind romantic patterns. If you've ever felt stuck in a cycle of toxic relationships or wondered why t...he “wrong” person feels so right, this episode is for you. Reveal the hidden patterns shaping your choices, habits, and success. Take my FREE Identity Quiz to discover who you really are and how to break through to the next level.Join here 👉 https://www.identityunlockquiz.com/ My first book that I’ve ever written is now available. It’s called LEVEL UP and It’s a step-by-step guide to go from where you are now, to where you want to be as fast as possible.📚If you want to order yours today, you can just head over to robdial.com/bookHere are some useful links for you… If you want access to a multitude of life advice, self development tips, and exclusive content daily that will help you improve your life, then you can follow me around the web at these links here:Instagram TikTokFacebookYoutube
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Welcome to today's episode of the mindset mentor podcast. I'm your host Rob Dial. If
you have not yet done so hit that subscribe button so you never miss another podcast episode. We put
out episodes four times a week to help you learn, grow and improve yourself. So if you're one of the
people who's looking to improve yourself, to improve your life, subscribe so you never miss an episode.
Today, I'm gonna be talking about why you fall in love
with the wrong people.
And today we're gonna talk about why you don't necessarily
just fall in love with people.
What you do is you fall in love with patterns
of people who remind you of your unhealed trauma
with your parents.
And I know it sounds kind of crazy,
but we're gonna dive into it today.
And until it's healed, it will most likely keep you
stuck in those patterns.
And what's really odd about the whole thing is that
our significant others, the longer that you're with somebody,
the more romantic this relationship becomes.
You're with them for two years, three years,
five years, 10 years.
They often become proxies for our parents and the things that we need to heal in our
relationship with our parents.
So for instance, if you've ever noticed that you date someone and you're like, you know
they're not really good for you, or you know it's not really a good fit, but for some reason,
you can't really break it off.
Maybe you've been there before, maybe you've noticed friends be there before.
And you might ask yourself, like, why do I keep falling for this type of person?
Why do I keep falling for this type of personality when I know eventually how it's going to end?
In reality, the real question that you should be asking yourself is why do I keep choosing
people who trigger the same wounds that I got from my childhood?
And so we're going to dive into it. It's really interesting.
And I think that you're gonna learn a lot about yourself
and a lot about other people who you're like,
why can she not just divorce him?
Why can she not break up with him?
Why can he not divorce her?
The interesting part about this whole thing
is the psychological truth
that we don't just fall in love with people,
we fall in love with patterns,
especially the ones that
mirror the emotional landscape of our childhood.
And so it's not usually a conscious choice.
It's usually a subconscious urge.
And in psychology, this is called repetition compulsion.
It's the unconscious drive to recreate unresolved emotional wounds in new relationships in hopes of, and this
once again is not conscious, in hopes of actually healing them. So your partner isn't just your
partner, they're a stand-in for the parent who didn't or maybe couldn't or didn't know how to
love you the way that you actually needed. In this time, you're kind of trying for a different ending.
And so according to Dr. Harville Hendricks,
he's the creator of imago relationship therapy.
We are subconsciously drawn to partners
who reflect both positive and negative traits
of our primary caregivers when we were children.
And he calls this our imago.
And it's an unconscious image that we hold of love
based off of early childhood experiences.
So I want you to think about this and really understand.
Not only do our parents teach us how to walk
and talk and speak and how to act in the world,
our parents also consciously and unconsciously
teach us what love
is and what intimacy is. So wouldn't it be normal and natural for us to then be attracted to the
people who reflect what love and intimacy was shown to us as a child? I'll give you an example.
I remember this, once I learned all of this, all of this started clicking in place and
made so much sense, right?
I once dated this girl years ago and we dated for quite a few years.
And her ex-boyfriend before me, he was like this very loving, very affectionate, like
very high highs, very low lows, and very loving, very affectionate, but then also like screaming and throwing and
crazy fights.
And so it was like really high highs, really low lows.
And what was interesting is that when I found out, as we had been together for years, how
her father was and met her father and got to know him is he was the exact same way.
He was much calmer as an adult and as she was older, but she said when he
was a child, he would just blow up and freak out sometimes.
Then when we started dating, because her father was very unpredictable, her ex boyfriend is
very unpredictable, her relationship blueprint that she thought was that love from a male
had to be crazy chaos and turmoil and kind of like walking on eggshells.
And I'm just not really like that.
Compared to them, I'm just really boring.
Like I never really have been crazy ups, crazy downs.
I've been very chill.
I've never really understood since childhood.
I remember like thinking about fighting and being like, I don't understand the point of
fighting.
Like, why can't two people just talk to each other and come to some sort of resolve?
And I remember she said something to me at one point in time,
like I didn't love her because I didn't want to fight.
And I remember I was like, that doesn't make any sense to me.
And in my head, it made no sense.
But in her head, it was like,
love is supposed to be crazy highs and crazy lows.
And over time, she started noticing
that what she was wanting from me
was to be like her father and also her ex-boyfriend
and to blow up because that's what she learned love was
when her love blueprint was when she was a child.
And that's what most people do.
We just don't fall in love with a person.
We fall in love with the patterns that remind us
of the ones who taught us what love is.
Make sense?
And so, the thing about it is you have to also understand is that your nervous system
loves what is familiar.
Even if it's chaos, your nervous system loves what is familiar.
And the truth is your brain isn't really necessarily wired to seek what's healthy.
It's wired to seek what's healthy. It's wired to seek what is familiar.
So if you grew up with emotional inconsistency
or having to earn your parents' love or conditional love
or criticism and neglect or hyper responsibility
for other people's feelings,
then love might feel like chasing and pleasing and fixing and proving
yourself and earning your worth.
So that quote unquote chemistry that you feel is oftentimes your nervous system recognizing
a pattern in somebody else that it recognizes from your childhood, not necessarily your
soul recognizing a soulmate.
So it's pretty wild.
And when you look at neuroscience, Dr. Stephen Porges, and he actually created this thing
called the polyvagal theory.
And the nervous system, what he says, is constantly scanning for cues in your area of safety and
of threat. But when early attachment was unsafe or chaotic or unpredictable, we develop basically faulty
templates for safety.
So we literally confuse like intensity with intimacy.
And parents teach us what intimacy is and they teach us what love is.
Once again, whether they realize it or not,
because we want as children more than anything else to just be attached.
We care about the parental attachment more than anything else.
And so we learn about intimacy and love, not necessarily just about what they say, but
also what we see and how they act.
If you've ever heard your friends say something like, I just can't leave them even though
I know they're not good for me. It's not weakness not weakness within that person. What it is, is it's a trauma bond. It's it's their
trauma from their childhood and then bonding with that thing. And a trauma bond is basically just a
powerful emotional attachment. And it's formed through cycles of abuse. And now when I say abuse,
it doesn't mean like physical or verbal or emotional abuse
that is, you know, something that somebody tries to do to another person.
It can be those for sure, but it could also just be neglect.
It could be, you know, emotional volatility.
It could be any of those things that are just rooted in childhood.
And so these highs and these lows flood your system with cortisol and dopamine, and it creates like this for some people an addictive roller coaster.
And so it's not really love at that point. It's more of survival.
And Dr. Patrick Carnes, who's a trauma and addiction expert, defines trauma bonding as this.
It's the misuse of fear and excitement and sexual feelings to entangle another person.
And so the translation between this is, and to give you what that means is, we bond with the
very dynamics that once harmed us because our system never learned what stable, consistent love
actually feels like. And so I hope this is making sense to you
because it's really, really profound and really deep
and we'll talk about how to heal through this,
but I want you to really start to notice yourself
and other people in your own personal patterns
as we start to dive into this.
And so, you know, like let's make it real.
Let's say that, picture this, you're on a date, right?
And things feel electric, they feel great,
you're like, this person's amazing.
You're hanging on to every word,
and you start to realize, like, an hour,
two hours in the day, you're like,
man, I really like this person.
And maybe you go out and you get drinks after,
and you start to notice yourself
liking them so much that you're almost
kind of changing yourself.
Maybe you're tiptoeing around what you think you should or shouldn't say, you're questioning
yourself too much, maybe you're shrinking in some sort of way, maybe you feel like you're
trying to prove yourself or like earn love from this person.
And these are all things that are just like you had at home.
And the person across on the other side of the table, they're unknowingly in your mind
cast as the parent that you can never quite reach.
Like the one whose loved you wanted, but you had to earn in some sort of way.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
And so one way of identifying this, the question I love is when you were a child, whose love
did you crave the most as a child?
And some people will be like, oh my God, well, my mother was so loving and she was so amazing.
So maybe hers.
And I was like, well, you know, let's talk about your father.
What did you, did you ever crave your father's love?
Well, actually, I did crave my father's love.
Well, who did you have to be in order to get his love?
Well, I had to be the good kid or I had to, you know, get good grades or I had to do this or this
And so that's usually like the one I'm talking about at that point
Like the one that the parent that you had to change yourself for now once you understand like this isn't your fault
It's your inner child
basically trying to resolve unfinished business with people who are just in grown up bodies,
you know?
And so, Dr. Susan Anderson calls this the abandonment blueprint.
And it is a subconscious script that we develop in childhood.
And it gets reactivated in adult love.
And until healed, it drives us to seek out similar pain just to prove that we can
survive it in some sort of way and to go towards what feels familiar. In my mind, in the way that
I like to think about it is I personally believe, yes, everything that I just said in all of the
research and the science, but I also believe it's kind of the way the universe comes to us over and over and over again and says, hey, hey, hey, listen,
that thing isn't in you, isn't healed. So I'm going to keep you stuck in this pattern until you
heal it and until you break it. And that's why you can feel like I keep it. I'm stuck in this
pattern. I can't get out of it. I can't get out of it. It's like the universe is like, hey dude, I'm trying to bring you the situation
so that you can heal through this.
Versus like, oh, I need to break up with this person.
And you can do another relationship
and it's the exact same person.
And so how do you break the pattern?
Well, here is really where the healing starts.
It's not by shaming yourself and shaming your choices
and oh my God, I can't believe that I did that
it's about bringing awareness to the pattern and to to consciously start to choose differently and
When I say consciously start to choose differently
I mean with loving compassion for yourself
Not by being an asshole to yourself because you're unconsciously going into these patterns that you just became aware of 12 minutes ago
Right. And so the first thing that I want you to do and I'll take you through a step-by-step process,
is to notice what feels familiar. And so start asking your questions to yourself like,
if you're in a relationship with somebody or you have, like if I'm talking about something
they've started to stir up things and memories of past relationships, just ask yourself and journal through it,
who does this person remind me of emotionally?
What role do I fall into around them?
Am I the fixer, the pleaser, the chaser, the avoider?
Do I feel like I have to prove my worth?
Or do I feel like I'm being seen
as who I truly am in my true self?
And awareness is always pretty much the first step
and the first act of power every time
that I bring some step-by-step process up.
Okay, the second thing is to learn to reparent yourself.
So you're not just healing from your ex,
you're healing from unmet childhood needs.
And so reparenting yourself is about giving yourself the validation that you craved as
a child or adolescent or teenager.
It's about the boundaries that you never learned.
It's about safety for your nervous system and the safety that it's still searching for at 27,
42 years old.
And it's something that happened to you
when you were three years old.
So that's number two.
Number three is to redefine what love feels like.
And the key word there is feels.
This is a really interesting phrase that I wrote down
and I think that it's gonna hit home with a lot of people
and it might make, it might pique some interest, right?
Healthy love for a lot of people is often boring at first.
Think about that for a second.
Healthy love and attachment to another person
is often boring at first.
And that's because the drama and the inconsistency
that you've trained your body to crave,
that adrenaline, the cortisol, it's not there.
And so you're like, this is kind of boring.
Like I thought relationships were supposed to be nuts
and crazy and fun.
And you know what I'm talking about, right?
You've either done this yourself
or you've had a friend that's done this
is somebody says like, oh my God, he's just such an amazing guy.
There's literally nothing wrong with him.
He's sweet.
He treats me right, but he's just kind of boring.
It's like, oh, there it is.
That's what we're talking about.
Or like a guy dates a girl and he's like, oh my God, she's great.
She does everything for me.
She treats me so well, but honestly, she's just too much.
She's too caring.
She does, you know, X, Y, Z for me,
and it's just too much, right?
That's what I mean by that.
Sometimes it's because they don't match
your love blueprint from childhood
that you had to learn or that you did learn
from your parents that love should be fighting.
Love should be chaotic. Love is something that love should be fighting, love should be chaotic, love is
something that you need to earn, whatever it might be, right?
And so you want to try these reframes like peace isn't boring.
You know, really what it is, is it's your nervous system that's healing.
Kindness isn't weakness.
It's a secure attachment to another person.
Slowness isn't a red flag, it's some form of regulation.
And so that's number three is to make sure to do that.
And number four is to choose partners who coheal with you.
And so I want you to understand this, no one in this world will ever be perfect.
So when you get into a relationship with somebody, you're also getting into a relationship with
somebody who is exactly the same that I'm talking about.
They are seeking out their parents in some sort of way in this relationship.
And so you don't have to be fully healed to love or to be loved.
But what I would recommend, especially for people that are single out there, is you need
someone who is self-aware enough to own their own stuff, to hold space for you, your stuff,
for you to be able to hold space for theirs,
and for you two to be able to heal together
and build emotional safety together,
which is, in my personal opinion,
what the deepest form of love is,
is creating a place that has so much emotional safety
that the two of you can heal your unhealed trauma together.
And so you have to understand
you're not broken in any sort of way,
you're just patterned.
And so if you've ever wondered
why you date the same person in different bodies,
it's because you're actually seeking out what is familiar.
So if you've felt like you might be addicted to the pain
or passion or whatever it is, you're not crazy,
you're not weak, you're not any of those things,
you're just falling for some sort of pattern.
And now that you are aware of this,
you can start to choose something new.
And so, you know, love isn't about recreating your childhood,
it's about repairing your childhood
through a amazing, beautiful adult relationship.
And you now as an adult, fully aware, conscious, courageous,
whole, can be the person who just decides, you know what, I'm going to break this cycle
and I'm going to figure out what type of person I want to date and what type of person is going to
be best for me and not just fall into old patterns. And so an assignment that I'm going to give you
that I think will really help you out is to journal this question and just see what comes out for you, right?
What did love feel like growing up?
And just love with my mom, love with my dad, journal it out, put all of the truth down.
And then ask yourself the question, what do I want it to feel like now?
And then from there, you can start to notice your patterns and what aspects of it you need
to change.
So, that's what I got for you for today's episode.
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Make it your mission to make somebody else's day better.
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