Emotional Dependency: 10 Signs You're Addicted to Someone

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
5 min read

This article is available in French only.
TL;DR : Emotional dependency is a relational addiction where one person cannot function without another, fundamentally different from genuine love which allows for independent existence. Ten key signs include panic when alone, mood entirely dependent on a partner's behavior, sacrificing personal needs and identity, excessive jealousy, constant need for reassurance, inability to leave toxic relationships, and repetitive harmful patterns across relationships. This dependency typically stems from childhood abandonment schemas and anxious attachment styles where individuals seek in adulthood the security they never received early in life. Breaking free requires recognizing the pattern without self-judgment, gradually rebuilding individual identity through reconnecting with friends and personal interests, tolerating discomfort during solitude through gradual exposure, restructuring core beliefs about survival and self-worth, and developing inner security through practices like meditation and self-compassion. The fundamental distinction lies in motivation: love is a choice made from inner stability, while dependency is a necessity born from inner lack and fear of abandonment.

You can't spend an evening alone without anxiety. Your mood depends entirely on your partner's attitude. You've given up your friends, your passions, your own identity to lose yourself in the relationship. Émotional dependency is not love: it's a relational addiction that keeps you in a state of permanent vulnerability.

The 10 Signs of Émotional Dependency

  • Panic fear of being alone: being alone feels unbearable, not just unpleasant
  • Your mood entirely dependent on the other person: a smile from your partner lifts you up, their silence devastates you
  • Systematic sacrifice of your own needs: you say yes when you mean no, to avoid displeasing them
  • All-consuming jealousy: every interaction your partner has with others feels like a threat to you
  • Constant need for reassurance: "Do you love me?", "Are you going to leave me?"
  • Loss of identity within the relationship: you no longer know what you like, what you want outside of the couple
  • Tolerance of the unacceptable: you accept behaviors from your partner that you would refuse from a friend
  • Inability to leave a toxic relationship: even when you're suffering, leaving feels worse than staying
  • Obsessive thoughts: your partner occupies your mind constantly, at the expense of everything else
  • Repetition of patterns: you recreate the same relationship dynamic from relationship to relationship
  • Émotional Dependency vs. Deep Love

    • Love: I love you AND I can live without you
    • Dependency: I CANNOT live without you, so I love you
    The fundamental difference: in love, the bond is a choice; in dependency, it's a necessity.

    The Origins: Abandonment Schema and Anxious Attachment

    Émotional dependency is linked to early schemas (Young): abandonment, emotional deprivation, dependence/incompetence. The child who didn't receive a secure foundation desperately seeks in adulthood the security they never had.

    Breaking Free: 5 CBT Steps

    1. Recognize the Pattern

    Becoming aware is already therapeutic. Name what's happening without judging yourself.

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    2. Rebuild Your Individual Identity

    Reconnect with your own interests, your friends, your activities. Gradually recreate a space that belongs to you.

    3. Tolerate the Discomfort of Solitude

    Gradual exposure: first spend 30 minutes alone, then an hour, then an evening. The discomfort decreases with practice.

    4. Restructure Your Beliefs

    "I can't survive alone" → "It's uncomfortable, but I survive every time."

    5. Develop Inner Security

    Security cannot depend solely on the other person. Meditation, self-compassion, journaling: these practices strengthen your inner foundation.

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    Conclusion

    Émotional dependency is not a proof of love: it's the sign of an unmet need trying to satisfy itself through another person. Freeing yourself from it doesn't mean stopping loving: it means learning to love from a place of inner security, not from a place of lack.

    Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist

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    Watch: Go Further

    To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:

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    FAQ

    When does behavior cross the line into Practical psychology?

    Recognize 10 signs of emotional dependency and addiction in relationships. The defining criterion isn't frequency but loss of control — continuing despite clear negative consequences and genuine inability to stop even when you sincerely intend to.

    What evidence-based treatments work best for Practical psychology?

    CBT is the gold standard treatment for behavioral addictions, with meta-analyses showing moderate to large effect sizes. It combines functional analysis of triggers, cognitive restructuring, and relapse prevention skills. For substance addictions, medication-assisted treatment provides significant additional benefit.

    Is complete recovery from Practical psychology possible, or is it always a matter of lifelong management?

    For behavioral addictions, full remission with controlled use is achievable for many people. For substances with strong physical dependence, long-term management is often more realistic. Either way, the CBT tools learned in therapy — identifying triggers, restructuring thoughts, using alternative coping — remain available indefinitely.

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    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.

    📚 16 published books📝 1000+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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    Emotional Dependency: 10 Signs You're Addicted to Someone | CBT Therapist Nantes | Psychologie et Sérénité