Intermittent Reinforcement: Why You're Addicted
Intermittent Reinforcement: Why You're Addicted
"I know this relationship is hurting me. But I can't leave." I hear this sentence every week in my practice. And every time, the person judges themselves harshly: weak, stupid, masochistic. The truth is quite different. What holds you back is neither weakness nor stupidity. It is a powerful neurological mechanism, first described by psychologist B.F. Skinner in the 1950s: intermittent reinforcement.
The Mechanism: The Emotional Slot Machine
Skinner discovered that the most effective way to create obsessive behavior is not constant reward, but random reward. A rat that receives food every time it presses a lever eventually loses interest. A rat that receives food unpredictably presses frantically, never stopping.
In a toxic relationship, the same mechanism is at work. Moments of tenderness, attention, and love are not constant -- they are unpredictable. And it is this unpredictability that creates the addiction.
The Concrete Cycle
Then the cycle restarts. It is phases 3 and 4 -- these moments of unpredictable sweetness after suffering -- that create the addiction.
Why the Brain Is Trapped
The Dopamine of Uncertainty
Your brain releases more dopamine in response to an uncertain reward than a guaranteed one. When your partner is unpredictably kind after days of coldness, the dopamine spike is immense. This intense relief is experienced as love. In reality, it is neurochemical relief.Hope as Engine
Each moment of tenderness relaunches hope: "That's it, they've changed. This is the right time." This hope is the cycle's fuel, regularly fed by just enough good moments to remain credible.Contrast Amplifies Sensations
After three days of silent treatment and a knot in your stomach, a simple "I love you, I missed you" provokes disproportionate euphoria. The message isn't extraordinary -- the contrast with preceding suffering makes it seem extraordinary.How to Detect It in Your Messages
Emotional Roller Coasters
Reread your conversations over a month. If you observe brutal alternations between icy messages and passionate messages, the intermittence pattern is active.Counting the "Sorrys"
Count the apologies and promises of change in your partner's messages. If they're frequent but never followed by lasting change, the intermittent reinforcement mechanism is running.Your Own Behavior Reveals the Pattern
- You compulsively check your messages
- A simple heart emoji reassures you for hours after a period of coldness
- You keep the "good" messages as proof the relationship is worth it
- You minimize the bad moments
The Trap of "When It's Good, It's So Good"
This phrase is the signature of intermittent reinforcement. In a healthy relationship, good moments are not exceptional events -- they are the norm. You shouldn't have to collect them like rare treasures.
Ask yourself: "If the relationship were always like the bad moments, would I stay?" If the answer is no, then what keeps you is not love -- it is the hope of a moment of sweetness that only comes intermittently.
How to Break the Cycle
First Step: Understanding Your Dynamic
To gain perspective on your exchanges, an analysis of your conversations can reveal intermittence patterns that habit has made invisible. Import your exchanges on scan.psychologieetserenite.com for insight based on recognized clinical models.
Our psychological tests can also help identify your attachment and dependence patterns.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist
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