11 Text Messages Revealing a Compulsive Need for Approval & Validation
Compulsive Validation: 11 Types of Messages Revealing a Compulsive Need for Approval
Compulsive approval-seeking often manifests as incessant text messages, where one solicits their partner's opinion, affection, or confirmation. Far from being trivial, this behavior betrays deep insecurity and can ultimately weaken the relationship by creating an imbalance and emotional dependency. Identifying these markers is the first step towards a healthier relational balance.
Quick Overview
The need for validation, when it becomes compulsive, is an incessant quest for external reassurance to fill an internal void. In message exchanges, it translates into a series of requests, questions, or indirect formulations aimed at obtaining approval, a compliment, or confirmation of being loved and desired. It's not validation itself that is problematic, but its repetitive and urgent nature, which often reveals low self-esteem and emotional dependency. As Young's work on early maladaptive schemas highlights, schemas such as "emotional deprivation" or "defectiveness/shame" can underlie this behavior, pushing the individual to seek externally what they cannot provide internally.
Linguistic Markers in Messages
Here are 11 types of messages that may indicate compulsive approval-seeking:
Interpretation
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These linguistic markers are windows into deep psychological dynamics. They often reveal fragile self-esteem, where personal worth is primarily derived from external approval rather than an internal source. This behavior frequently stems from insecure attachment patterns, such as anxious-preoccupied attachment, where the person constantly fears abandonment and seeks to merge with the other for reassurance, as explored by Bowlby's work, with recent syntheses (2022) continuing to highlight the impact of early experiences on adult relationships.
The compulsive need for validation can also be fueled by negative core beliefs about oneself, such as "I am not good enough," "I am unlovable," or "I will be abandoned." These beliefs, often inherited from childhood or past relationships, push the individual to seek constant proof to the contrary from their partner. Unfortunately, this incessant quest can paradoxically exhaust the partner and create distance, reinforcing the initial fears. As Gottman's research (2023) shows, communication where one partner constantly demands reassurance can quickly lead to a feeling of overwhelm and emotional disconnection in the couple. The receiving partner may feel more like a parent or therapist than an equal, which harms the intimacy and authenticity of the relationship.
What to Do
If you recognize yourself in these patterns or if your partner exhibits this behavior, it is essential to act with kindness and determination.
For the person seeking validation:The path to a balanced relationship and solid self-esteem is a process that requires time and effort. But it is an investment worth making for your personal growth and the health of your relationship.
AND YOU?
Where do you stand? Take the test: Self-Esteem
A self-assessment test to better understand where you stand.
30 questions · 15 min · PDF report from €1.99
Take the test →SCANMYLOVE
What do their messages really say?
Decode the subtext of your conversations: intentions, ambivalence, signs of interest or avoidance.
Analyze my conversation →Related FAQ
Q1: What is the difference between a healthy and a compulsive need for validation? A healthy need for validation is occasional, linked to specific situations (e.g., after a performance, a doubt) and is balanced by internal self-esteem. The compulsive need is constant, irrepressible, and the person never feels "enough" reassured, even after receiving positive affirmations. It becomes an emotional dependency. Q2: How can I help my partner without getting exhausted? The key is to openly communicate your boundaries. You can express your love and support, but explain that you cannot be the sole source of reassurance. Encourage them to develop their own internal resources and seek professional support if necessary. Q3: Is the need for validation always a sign of low self-esteem? Yes, very often. The compulsive need for validation is intrinsically linked to a difficulty in recognizing one's own worth. The individual seeks externally what they have not been able to build internally: solid confidence in their abilities and their right to be loved. Q4: How do I know if I am seeking too much validation? If you constantly feel anxious about your partner's thoughts, if you send messages to check their feelings, if you struggle to make decisions without their approval, or if their silence disproportionately distresses you, it is likely that you have an excessive need for validation. Reflect on the frequency and intensity of these thoughts and actions. Q5: What are the long-term consequences for the couple? In the long term, an unaddressed need for validation can create a power imbalance, frustration, exhaustion for the solicited partner, and a loss of intimacy. The relationship risks transforming into a parent-child dynamic rather than an egalitarian partnership, leading to resentment and, potentially, to breakup. Q6: How can CBT therapies help? Cognitive Behavioral Therapies (CBT) are very effective in addressing the need for validation. They help identify negative automatic thoughts and dysfunctional thought patterns that fuel insecurity. Through concrete techniques, CBT allows for restructuring these thoughts, developing more adaptive behaviors, and building lasting self-esteem based on internal evidence rather than external approval.To assess other aspects of your psychology, feel free to consult our psychological tests. If you wish for personalized support, I invite you to visit my practice or my website: psychologieetserenite.com.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes
About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.
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