Stop Trying to Trap Him—Here's What Works Instead

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
13 min read

This article is available in French only.
By Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist in Nantes

This article will probably surprise you. If you landed here searching for "how to make a man addicted," you probably expected a list of techniques: playing hard to get, creating mystery, rationing your messages, alternating hot and cold. The internet is full of them. Magazines publish them. Dating coaches make them their business model.

The problem is, these techniques work. They work in the sense that they produce an observable result: the targeted person thinks about you constantly, becomes anxious when you don't respond, feels a compulsive need to see you. Mission accomplished?

No. Because what's just been described isn't love. It's addiction. And there's a fundamental difference between a man who chooses you and a man who is addicted to you.

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"Addicted": Language That Should Alert You

Let's take the word seriously. Addicted. Semantically linked to addiction. We're addicted to nicotine, to a video game, to a substance. Being addicted means being unable to do without something despite negative consequences. It's a loss of control, not a free choice.

When someone types "how to make a man addicted" into a search engine, there's usually a legitimate desire behind that query: to be loved, to be chosen, to be important to someone.

That desire is profoundly human. But the vocabulary used to express it reveals a problematic belief: that love must be obtained through strategy, and that the goal is to create dependency in the other person.

In cognitive behavioral therapy, we pay close attention to words. Not out of linguistic pedantry, but because words reveal underlying thought patterns. "Making someone addicted" assumes that love is something you provoke in another person through manipulation. That's a control pattern, not a love pattern.

What "Addiction Techniques" Actually Do

The most common advice in the dating world — presented as seduction techniques — is actually well-documented psychological manipulation mechanisms. Let's examine them through a clinical lens.

Calculated Intermittence

The technique: Sometimes respond immediately, sometimes after several hours. Be very present one day, distant the next. Create unpredictability. What it actually does: Intermittence activates the intermittent reinforcement system, the same mechanism that makes slot machines addictive. The targeted person's brain releases dopamine not when they receive a reward, but when they hope for an uncertain reward.

The man doesn't fall in love. He becomes anxious. His attachment system activates, and he confuses that activation with love. This is exactly the mechanism described in our article on confusing anxiety with love.

Artificial Scarcity

The technique: Deliberately limit your availability, even when you're free. Don't accept an invitation before the third refusal. Make them think you have an overbooked schedule. What it actually does: This exploits the scarcity bias: what's rare is perceived as precious. The man invests more not because the woman has more value, but because his brain reacts to the perception of scarcity.

This mechanism creates an artificial perceived value that collapses the moment scarcity ends — that is, when the relationship stabilizes and presence becomes regular.

Triangulation

The technique: Subtly mention other suitors, like photos of other men visibly, create an impression of competition. What it actually does: Triangulation activates jealousy and fear of loss. The man doesn't attach through love; he clings through fear of losing you. In clinical practice, triangulation is identified as a manipulation technique commonly used by narcissistic personalities. When it's promoted as a seduction strategy, we're normalizing pathological behavior.

Hot and Cold Alternation

The technique: Alternate intense proximity with cold distance. Be passionate one evening and inaccessible the next. Create emotional highs and lows. What it actually does: This is the définition of love bombing followed by withdrawal, a cycle psychologists identify as one of the most reliable markers of abusive relationships. The targeted person ends up living for the "highs" and rationalizing the "lows." It's not seduction; it's conditioning.

Manipulation Creates Dependency, Not Attachment

The distinction between dependency and healthy attachment is one of the major contributions of attachment theory to clinical psychology.

Dependency

  • Is based on insecurity: "I need you because without you, I don't feel safe."
  • Generates anxiety: rumination, constant checking, hypervigilance.
  • Decreases autonomy: the person organizes their life around the other.
  • Is fragile: it depends on maintaining insecurity. If security develops, intensity decreases, and the person "loses interest" — exactly like an addict when the substance becomes easily available.
  • Creates suffering: moments of séparation are experienced as threats, not natural breaks.

Healthy Attachment

  • Is based on security: "I choose to be with you because that's where I feel good."
  • Generates trust: the person doesn't need to constantly verify the relationship's status.
  • Preserves autonomy: each partner maintains their own life, friends, projects.
  • Is durable: it strengthens over time and stability, rather than weakening.
  • Creates serenity: moments of séparation are tolerated without excessive anxiety.
When you "make someone addicted," you create the first dynamic. When you build a healthy relationship, you create the second. The first is spectacular and ephemeral. The second is quiet and lasting.

What You REALLY Want: A Man Who CHOOSES

Behind the query "how to make a man addicted," there's almost always a deeper, healthier desire: to be with a man who is fully present, who chooses the relationship knowingly, who stays not because he can't leave, but because he doesn't want to.

The difference is crucial.

An addicted man stays out of compulsion. A man who chooses stays out of décision. The first is a prisoner. The second is free — and it's this freedom that gives value to his presence.

The paradox of manipulation techniques is that they produce exactly the opposite of what's desired. You want an engaged man, and you get an anxious one. You want stability, and you create unpredictability. You want to be loved for who you are, and you present a strategic version of yourself.

The 5 Real Levers of Healthy and Lasting Attachment

If manipulation techniques are toxic shortcuts, what are the real levers? The psychology of attachment and research on lasting couples provide clear answers.

1. Be Yourself — Really

This sounds clichéd, but it's a first-rate therapeutic lever. "Being yourself" doesn't mean exposing your worst flaws on the first date. It means not constructing a character.

When you play a strategic role (the mysterious, unavailable, inaccessible woman), you attract someone attracted to the role, not the person. The day the role becomes tiresome to maintain — and that day always comes — the gap between the projected image and reality creates a shock the relationship usually doesn't survive.

Authenticity acts as a natural filter: it repels incompatible people (which is good) and attracts those compatible with who you actually are (which is the point).

In practice: Express your opinions, tastes, and boundaries from the first interactions. Not as a test, but as information. "I love hiking, I don't watch television, Sundays are reserved for my family." The person who stays after this information is someone interested in you, not in an image.

2. Have Your Own Life

John Gottman's research on lasting couples shows that partners who maintain a rich individual identity — friends, passions, personal projects — have more stable and satisfying relationships than those who merge.

This isn't a scarcity strategy. It's a psychological reality: a person with a rich life outside the relationship is more interesting, more balanced, and less likely to fall into emotional dependency. The other isn't the sole source of happiness, but a complement to an already satisfying life.

In practice: Maintain your activities, friendships, and projects, even when a budding relationship makes you want to drop everything to spend time with them. Not to "play hard to get," but because these elements are part of who you are.

3. Create Émotional Safety

This might be the most counter-intuitive lever. Dating culture valorizes mystery, unpredictability, "keep them guessing." Yet scientific data shows the opposite: security creates profound and lasting attachment, not insecurity.

Émotional security is built through predictability, consistency, and reliability. Saying what you think, doing what you say, being present when you said you would be. It's not glamorous. It's extraordinarily effective.

When someone feels emotionally safe with another, their nervous system relaxes, oxytocin is released, and deep attachment forms gradually. This type of attachment doesn't collapse at the first silence. It strengthens over time.

In practice: Respond to messages in a reasonable timeframe (not strategically). Honor your commitments. Express your intentions clearly. "I'm having a good time with you and I want to keep seeing you" is infinitely more powerful than three days of calculated silence.

4. Respect the Other's Pace

One of the most common mistakes, equally among men and women, is wanting to accelerate the process. Define the relationship after two dates. Plan the future after two weeks. Say "I love you" before the feeling has time to mature.

Rushing doesn't accelerate attachment. It activates the other's défense mechanisms. When someone moves faster than the other is comfortable with, two reactions are possible: flight (typical of avoidant attachment) or submission (typical of emotional dependency). Neither leads to a balanced relationship.

In practice: Observe the other's comfort and discomfort signals. If they pull back after a particularly intimate evening, it's not necessarily rejection — maybe they need time to process the experience. Leaving space for the other to move at their own pace is an act of respect and relational maturity.

5. Let the Other Invest

This lever is often misunderstood. It's not about "letting them chase you" as dating guides advise. It's about creating space where the other can contribute actively to the relationship.

Social psychology describes the Benjamin Franklin effect: we don't attach to people we do things for, but to people who let us contribute. When someone invests time, energy, and attention in a relationship, they increase its value in their own eyes.

Concretely, this means accepting the other's gestures (an invitation, a favor, an attention) rather than systematically refusing out of pride or fear of owing something. It also means not taking charge of everything: let them organize a date, suggest an activity, solve a logistical problem.

In practice: When a man offers to pick you up, accept. When he offers to cook, say yes. When he suggests a plan, follow it. This isn't passivity; it's allowing the other to actively participate in building the bond.

Love Bombing: When "Addicted" Rhymes With "Danger"

It's impossible to discuss "making someone addicted" without mentioning love bombing, which is its extreme and pathological version.

Love bombing is a strategy, often unconscious, used by narcissistic and manipulative personalities. It consists of bombarding the other with attention, compliments, declarations, and gifts in the first weeks of the relationship, to create rapid and intense emotional dependency.

Love bombing works because it responds to a fundamental human need for recognition and love. Receiving such intense, flattering, constant attention is intoxicating.

The problem is that this intensity isn't sustainable — and it isn't designed to be. It's designed to create a dependency bond strong enough for the person to stay when the behavior changes.

And the behavior always changes. After love bombing comes withdrawal: compliments decrease, availability drops, criticism appears.

The person who was "love bombed" ends up chasing the intensity of the beginning, convinced that if they do the right things, the "real" partner will return. That "real" partner never existed. It was a character.

Techniques for "making someone addicted" and love bombing use the same psychological mechanisms. The difference is one of degree, not nature. This is why it's important to question the approach as a whole, rather than simply moderating it.

What Research Says About Couples That Last

The work of the Gottman Institute, based on over 40 years of longitudinal research, identifies factors that predict long-term couple stability and satisfaction. None of these factors involve strategy or manipulation.

Couples that last:
Really know each other (tastes, fears, dreams, family history)

Express appreciation more than criticism (ratio of 5 positive interactions for every 1 negative)

Turn toward each other rather than away during moments of daily connection

Manage conflict with respect, even when disagreement is profound

Share a common meaning system (values, projects, life vision)

None of these skills are acquired through manipulation. They're cultivated through authenticity, presence, and work on yourself.

Key Takeaways

  • "Addicted" is the vocabulary of addiction, not love. Making someone dependent isn't the same as fostering healthy attachment.
  • The most widespread seduction techniques (intermittence, scarcity, triangulation) exploit psychological mechanisms of dependency, not love.
  • Manipulation creates insecurity. Insecurity produces anxiety. Anxiety is confused with passion. It's a toxic cycle that collapses over time.
  • What you really want is a man who chooses to be present — freely, knowingly, lastingly.
  • The five levers of healthy attachment: be yourself, have your own life, create emotional safety, respect the other's pace, let the other invest.
  • Love bombing is the extreme version of "making someone addicted." The same mechanisms are at work, in different degrees.

And Now?

If this article sparked reflection, it's probably because something resonates with your personal experience. Maybe you've already used these techniques, or maybe you've been on the receiving end. Either way, understanding the mechanisms at play is the first step toward healthier relationships.

The Love Coach Program is designed to support those who want to transform their approach to romantic relationships: moving from strategy to authenticity, from control to trust, from dependency to mutual choice. It draws on CBT tools and attachment theory to offer concrete and lasting change.

The right question isn't "how to make a man addicted." It's "how to become a person a healthy man wants to build something with." And the answer, as disorienting as it may be, begins with yourself.


Internal Links:

Confusing Anxiety With Love: When Butterflies Are a Trap

Red Flags to Spot in the First Month of a Relationship

Anxious-Avoidant Couple: Understanding and Escaping the Trap

Toxic Behaviors Normalized by Dating Apps

Émotional Dependency: Understanding and Freeing Yourself

Love Coach Program

Also Read

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Watch: Go Further

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Stop Trying to Trap Him—Here's What Works Instead | Psychologie et Sérénité