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TL;DR : Emotional dependency is a dysfunctional relational pattern rooted in attachment theory, where individuals become excessively reliant on a partner's attention and validation for their well-being, often confusing it with deep love. Originating from insecure attachment styles developed in early childhood, emotional dependency manifests through anxiety-driven behaviors such as constant phone checking, catastrophic thinking about perceived rejection, and fear of abandonment. The condition is characterized by cognitive distortions including all-or-nothing thinking and personalization, fueled by maladaptive schemas like abandonment fears and emotional deprivation beliefs. A 30-question assessment evaluates five key dimensions: abandonment fear, need for approval, difficulty with solitude, self-sacrifice, and identity fusion, providing individualized profiles rather than simple scores. Combined with attachment style testing and analysis of messaging patterns, these tools offer objective diagnosis of relational dynamics. Research shows emotional dependency responds well to structured therapeutic approaches like cognitive-behavioral therapy and schema therapy, making early identification and intervention essential for improving relationship health and personal autonomy.
Émotional Dependency: The Silent Struggle
You check your phone every five minutes. When the other person doesn't respond, your mind races: they don't love me anymore, I did something wrong, it's over. You know this reaction is disproportionate, but you can't control it. You feel like your well-being depends entirely on the attention the other person gives you.
Émotional dependency affects a considerable number of people, but it remains difficult to identify from within. We confuse it with passionate love, with sensitivity, with being "someone who loves deeply." In reality, emotional dependency is a dysfunctional relational pattern that generates chronic suffering and which, paradoxically, endangers the very relationships it desperately seeks to preserve.
What Is Émotional Dependency?
Émotional dependency has its roots in John Bowlby's attachment theory (1969). According to this model, our earliest relationships with our attachment figures (parents, caregivers) program a relational style that follows us into adulthood. Secure attachment produces the capacity to be in relationship without losing yourself in the other person. Insecure attachment, on the other hand, can generate either an anxious style (excessive need for proximity and reassurance) or an avoidant style (fear of intimacy).
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Jeffrey Young, founder of schema therapy, identified several early maladaptive schemas that fuel emotional dependency: the abandonment schema ("people I love always leave"), the emotional deprivation schema ("my emotional needs will never be met"), and the subjugation schema ("I must submit to the other's desires to be loved").
In CBT, emotional dependency manifests through characteristic cognitive distortions: all-or-nothing thinking ("if you leave me, my life is over"), personalization ("their mood must depend on what I did"), and catastrophizing ("two hours of silence = they're cheating on me"). As we explain in our article emotional dependency: recognize, understand, break free, these schemas are not inevitable.
The Test Available on Our Platform
To precisely evaluate your level of emotional dependency, we offer a dedicated 30-question test on our platform. This test explores five core clinical dimensions: fear of abandonment, need for approval, difficulty being alone, self-sacrifice, and identity fusion.
Each dimension is evaluated separately, allowing you to understand how your dependency manifests specifically. Some people score high on fear of abandonment but low on self-sacrifice; others present the opposite profile. This granularity is essential for guiding relevant therapeutic work.
Additionally, our attachment style test helps you identify your profile according to the Bartholomew and Horowitz classification (1991): secure, anxious-preoccupied, dismissive-avoidant, or fearful-avoidant. As detailed in our article on anxious and avoidant attachment styles, knowing your style is the first step toward transforming your relational patterns. Both tests are free, anonymous, and your data remains on your device.
What Your Results Reveal
Your report doesn't simply assign you a global score. It breaks down your profile into dimensions and places each on a continuum ranging from "healthy autonomy" to "disabling dependency." You'll understand which early schemas are most active in you and which cognitive distortions fuel your dependency.
The report also offers concrete strategies drawn from CBT and schema therapy. If your score is high, it's not a final verdict: emotional dependency responds very well to structured therapeutic approaches. Our article on emotional dependency scores details the self-assessment methodology and interpretation thresholds.
Your Messages Say Even More
The way you communicate in writing directly reflects your attachment schemas. The length of your messages compared to the other person's, the frequency of your follow-ups when they don't respond, your tendency to apologize when you've done nothing wrong: these markers are measurable and revealing.
Our partner platform ScanMyLove offers an analysis of emotional dependency in messages. By uploading your conversation, you'll get an objective diagnosis of your relationship's balance as it manifests in your daily exchanges. Combined with your test results, this gives you a complete and factual picture of how you function in relationships.
Take the emotional dependency test → Discover your attachment style → Analyze your messages with ScanMyLove →
Watch: Go Further
To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
Why We Pick Difficult Partners - The School of LifeThe School of Life
FAQ
How reliable is this are you addicted to relationships? take our 5-min test?
Discover if you're addicted to relationships. This assessment is built on clinically validated scales used in CBT practice. While it doesn't replace a professional diagnosis, it provides a reliable first indicator and a starting point for a productive conversation with a therapist.What should I do if my score indicates a problem?
A concerning score suggests a consultation with a CBT practitioner or clinical psychologist may be beneficial. Evidence-based protocols exist for most of these difficulties, typically producing meaningful improvement in 8 to 16 sessions.Can I track my progress by retaking this test over time?
Yes — retesting every 4 to 8 weeks is a useful way to monitor change, especially during therapy. Your therapist may use similar standardized measures (like GAD-7, PHQ-9, or Beck scales) to track progress objectively and adjust the treatment plan accordingly.
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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