Your Avoidant Ex NEEDS You (What Happens When You Walk Away)
Most people will tell you that avoidant exes don’t care.
That your ex has already replaced you, forgotten you, and is sleeping like a baby while you’re falling apart.
They’re wrong.
I’ve spent years getting inside the heads of avoidants, and here’s the truth they will never admit to your face: Your absence isn’t a gift to them. It’s their nightmare.
Right now, they’re wearing a mask. They’re acting cold, distant, and ‘fine.’ But beneath that mask, they’re spiralling.
By walking away, you haven’t just left them alone… you’ve forced them to stare into a mirror and realize exactly how empty their life is without you.
Today, I’m going to show you the script flip that happens the moment you stop chasing. I’m going to show you why the person who acted like you were ‘suffocating’ them is about to realize they can’t breathe without you.
The Invisible Script
To understand why they pulled away, we have to look at the invisible script—the subconscious blueprint that has been sabotaging your connection from day one.
So let’s take it back to when you were dating. On some level, you saw this other person as the answer to your prayers. They’re attractive, confident, interesting…they have all the qualities you’re looking for in a partner…except there was one problem.
They always kept you at a distance. When you tried to connect, when you asked for more, when you got close and let your guard down… things would fall apart.
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They would go cold, pull away, refuse intimacy and leave you feeling more alone than ever.
You thought they pushed you away because they didn’t love you as much as you loved them. It was like you were missing something…something that would make them feel comfortable and safe.
You thought, if only you could make them let their guard down and connect to you, things would be perfect.
Connecting with them would prove that you were worthy of their love.
You tried to win their affection. By being open and attentive, by showing them that you’re there for them no matter what, eventually they’d feel safe enough to really give you a chance.
But that never worked. And that’s because you were making big assumptions about what an avoidant wants, and so you ended up acting in ways that actually pushed them away, led to the breakup, and, even now, is keeping you trapped in this toxic cycle of distance with your ex.
The Truth About What An Avoidant Feels
You might think because they push you away, that your absence is what the avoidant really wants. You were fun for a while, but when you started having needs, you became annoying and you weren’t worth the trouble.
They wish you’d just go away so they could forget you and move on.
But that’s not the case at all. Your avoidant ex actually needs you much more than you’ll ever admit. They may have called you needy but this was only to keep you at arm’s length.
They wanted distance, but they didn’t want you gone and they still don’t.
In reality, they need your attention. Because at their core, avoidants are deeply lonely. They push everyone away because they find intimacy terrifying. They’re scared to be needed.
To show their emotions and to do any of the things required to really connect with other people and this leaves them feeling like they’re alone, never really part of anything.
RELATED: Avoidant Exes Regret The Breakup When You Tell Them This
So your attention is incredibly comforting to them. It makes them feel like they’re desired…like they matter…like they have value.
That’s because you’re not just someone they love, or their needy ex. You’re the MIRROR in which they see the best version of themselves reflected…they see how you feel about them, the way you look at them like they’re the most valuable thing in the world.
By removing yourself from the situation you shatter that mirror, leaving them to face the one thing they fear most…themselves.
They run from intimacy, closeness, and connection. But what avoidants are really running from is being known.
They don’t want you to get too close and really understand them, because—deep down—they fear what you might find.
What if you get too close and realize that they’re not actually as cool-headed, as in control, as self-sufficient as they want to appear?
They think that if you see them clearly, you’ll hate what you see and you’ll reject them.
That would validate their worst fears: that the reason they’re so detached is because of some deep personal flaw at the core of who they are.
So even now, after all the shit you’ve been through, even after the breakup, you still provide that attention that they crave so much.
And at the same time, by keeping you at a distance, they get to avoid the intimacy that scares them and they get to maintain the feeling that they’re in control.
To you, intimacy is safety. But to an avoidant, intimacy is a demand. It’s suffocation.
So while you were trying to show them your love—by chasing after them, asking for reassurance and trying to pull them closer—they experienced the exact opposite.
They felt this love as a threat, a heavy weight, a constant, nagging demand to change…to be more.
It made them think “I’m not who they want me to be.”
They want to accept that closeness but, to them, it feels like judgement.
This is what I call The Avoidant’s Paradox. They want this closeness as much as you do…if not more.
But because of how they interpret the natural steps leading up to intimacy, it feels impossible for them to accept.
Think of it like teaching a dog to play fetch. They run up to you, tail wagging, carrying the ball in their mouth.
They clearly want you to throw it but the second you reach out to take it, they refuse to let go.
If you grab the ball and pull, it turns into a tug-of-war. They clamp their jaws down tighter.
They don’t realize that by holding on so hard, they’re preventing the very thing they want: for the game to continue.
This is exactly how your avoidant ex operates. They want the connection, but they are terrified of the “hand” reaching for the ball.
To them, you reaching out feels like a threat to their control.
So, how do you get them to drop the ball? You stop pulling. You let go, you turn around, and you walk away.
Only when the tug-of-war ends does the dog realize that if they want the game to happen, they have to be the one to bring the ball back to you.
Your Feelings Are Keeping You Stuck
So why is it that your ex sees your love as a threat to their autonomy and their safety? Well let’s return to the invisible script because that has a lot to do with it.
Of course, we don’t need to get into the ways that avoidance forms in childhood and causes people to associate vulnerability with danger.
Instead, let’s talk about your role in all this. So you love this person very much. And you assumed their avoidance meant that they didn’t feel the same way.
So you’ve been chasing not just your ex, but the validation that their acceptance would give you. You believe—on some level—that you’re not enough. That their love will complete you and prove that you are worthy of happiness.
Whether you’re aware of this or not, that’s putting a lot of unnecessary pressure on your ex, on yourself, and on the relationship.
So while a lot of their fear of intimacy may be based on their own issues, a certain amount of it IS tied into how you’re treating them because of the assumptions you’re making on a subconscious level.
Assumptions about your own worth, your own loveability.
You’re letting the way they’ve acted in self defense inform how you feel about yourself. It’s a sort of hidden low self esteem: an inner belief that you’re somehow lacking.
If you want your ex to come back, this is the first lesson that you need to internalize…you are worthy of love.
The mistakes you might make, your occasional neediness, your overzealousness in matters of the heart: these don’t mean you’re less desirable.
They mean you’re a person with a big heart and that’s something people love about you, including your ex even if they don’t show it.
So if you can accept your own flaws and love yourself anyway, this is going to be the first step in taking the pressure off your ex and interacting with them in a more honest, open way that they won’t find so threatening.
And soon you’ll realize that the best way to do that—to choose yourself—-is to walk away.
Playing The Blame Game
Right now, in your ex’s mind, you are the problem. You overwhelm them with your needs, your emotions, your desire to connect with them in every possible way. It makes them feel inadequate, like they can never do enough…BE enough.
And in your mind, your ex is the problem. They take you for granted.
They don’t appreciate you enough. They treat your love like some burden, something to be managed rather than a gift that they should accept with no reservation.
But the truth is that you’re both wrong. The real problem is the script that you’ve written together.
They only run from you because you chase them. You only chase them because they run.
It’s a cycle that they feed into every time they take too long to respond to a text. It’s one that you reinforce every time you act needy.
The real truth here is that it’s no one’s fault. It’s become bigger than the two of you. Now I’m sure that many of you are angry at me for suggesting this.
You’re saying that your ex has done this and that to you and all you ever wanted was for them to love you and treat you with respect.
And I’m sure this is true. But it’s also true that the invisible script you both follow has started to run out of control and cause you both to act in ways that make you unhappy.
And until you recognize this truth, it doesn’t matter who’s really at fault…you’re never going to break the cycle.
And again, the only way to break with this script and start writing your own story is to walk away from the whole situation.
Stop chasing them. Stop hounding them for attention. Walk away from the breakup, from the relationship and from a future with your ex, at least for now.
What Happens When You Walk Away
So let’s talk about what your ex is going to go through when you decide to go silent, and how it will lead them back to you.
The Relief Mirage
When you finally walk away, your ex doesn’t immediately fall into a pit of despair. In fact, what happens first is the most dangerous part of the process for your own mental health: The Relief Mirage.
To your ex, your love didn’t feel like a gift; it felt like a mounting debt they couldn’t pay.
Every text you sent and every “we need to talk” conversation was a reminder of their own inadequacy.
So, when you go silent, they feel an enormous weight lift off their shoulders. They finally feel like they can breathe. They might go out more, post happy photos, or act like you never existed.
But don’t let the “mirage” fool you. This isn’t a permanent state of happiness—it’s a temporary spike in cortisol-free living. They aren’t over you; they’re just deactivating.
But because they are avoidant, they rely on your pursuit to feel valuable. You were the one providing the “dopamine hits” of validation. Now that you’re gone, that relief starts to sour.
The Invisible Script Flip
Once the silence settles in, the silence stops being “peaceful” and starts being “deafening.” They realize that without your attention, they are left alone with the one person they’ve spent their entire lives running from: themselves.
The pedestal they put themselves on starts to crumble. They begin to wonder why you stopped.
They wonder if you found someone better. And for the first time, the person who was “suffocating” becomes the only person who can make them feel whole again.
At the same time, their perception of you begins to shift dramatically. The “drama” and the “neediness” they complained about start to fade into the background.
Instead, they begin to obsess over the good times—replaying old conversations and remembering the moments where you made them feel safe.
They’ll realize that the love you offered wasn’t a burden; it was the only thing making their life worth living.
It’s not that they’ve forgotten the bad parts, but the way they see them changes.
They’ll start to realize that your frustration wasn’t a flaw—it was a natural reaction to their withdrawal. They’ll stop seeing you as the “problem” and start seeing themselves as the one who let something amazing slip away.
And this is where the dopamine works in your favor. When that chemical crashes, the human brain looks for a problem to solve. Right now? You are that problem.
They’ll start asking “Why aren’t they calling? Did I push too hard? What can I do to get them back?”
This won’t happen overnight. It starts as an itch they can’t scratch, and grows until they can’t think of anything else but you.
Because you chose yourself—and because you walked away—the old, toxic script is dead. If they want a future with you, they’ll have to come crawling back and earn it.
And because you rejected them, because you CHOSE yourself, the invisible script that the two of you have been following, it’s never going to be able to come back. Because this time, they’ll HAVE to choose you if they want to have a future together.
So no matter how things develop this time around, you’ll both remember that there was a time when they came crawling back and begged you for another chance.
And that will temper their desire to pull away from you again, and it will show you how much they value you, and so you won’t feel the desire to keep chasing after them.


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