Thursday, 11 December 2025

The addictive trap of Retroactive Jealousy

Short introduction how retroactive jealousy (RJ) tricks you into seeking more details, and why the brain gets “addicted” to this cycle despite the pain it causes.


The Setup: The Illusion of “Closure”

Retroactive jealousy often whispers the same seductive promise: “If I just get the full picture, I’ll finally feel at peace.”

So we interrogate, search, replay, imagine. We convince ourselves that facts will calm the storm. But in reality, the act of gathering new details almost never brings closure—it just sets the stage for the next spiral.

The Brain’s Role: An Addiction to Certainty-Seeking

From a neuroscience perspective, RJ resembles addictive behavior:

Dopamine (anticipation/reward): Each new question carries the hope of satisfaction. Dopamine fires not so much when we get the answer, but when we anticipate it. That’s why we crave “just one more detail.”

Cortisol (stress/fear): The painful images and comparisons flood the nervous system with stress hormones. Paradoxically, the brain can get habituated to this stress-response loop—it becomes a “known” cycle, something the brain expects.

Reinforcement: Every time we ask and receive details, we reinforce the idea that “seeking = relief.” Even if the relief is fleeting, the brain logs the pattern and nudges us to repeat it.

The Trap of False Logic

The rationalization is always:
“I just need the facts straight.”
“If I see the full picture, I’ll be okay.”

But this is the brain’s trick. The pursuit of details is not about truth—it’s about getting the next “dose” of temporary relief. Like any addiction, the bar keeps moving, and the imagined “full picture” is never enough.

The Sweet-Bitter Cycle

In stepfamilies, retroactive jealousy often extends beyond the couple. Much like an addiction that builds tolerance, the same information no longer “works”, and the new partner begins to seek a stronger or different source.

Children, extended family members, or even casual family stories can become the next supply. A small detail, an offhand remark, or a memory shared innocently can trigger the familiar cycle: Sweet relief: a brief dopamine hit — finally, something new.  Bitter aftermath: the mind immediately fills the gaps with images, comparisons and “what ifs”. Anxiety and distress surge as cortisol floods the system.

What initially feels soothing quickly becomes painful. Yet the brain remembers the momentary relief, not the harm. This is why the cycle is so compelling.

This cannot be stressed enough: this is OCD, driven by the same chemical processes seen in addictive behaviour. Each new “dose” of information brings temporary relief, followed by despair and pain.

Stepfamilies intensify this process because the past is always present. Shared children make it easy to justify questioning as “trying to understand the family”, when in reality the brain is seeking emotional stimulation.

As with addiction, the logic feels convincing:
“If I know the full story, I’ll feel secure.”
“Once I understand everything, I can move on.”

But peace never arrives. The brain is not seeking truth; it is seeking the anticipation of relief.

This behaviour can quietly damage the family system. Children may feel pressured, boundaries become blurred, and the present relationship becomes overshadowed by a past that cannot be changed.

Breaking the cycle requires recognising it for what it is: a compulsive, chemically reinforced loop. As with addiction, relief comes not from better information, but from stopping the behaviour that sustains it. The discomfort that follows is withdrawal — temporary, but necessary.

Healing begins when the past is no longer used as emotional fuel.

Breaking the Cycle

Awareness: Recognizing the cycle as a chemical loop—not truth-seeking, but craving-seeking—is the first step.

Interrupting the behavior: Just as with addiction, abstinence from reassurance-seeking (asking about the past, googling, comparing) is key.

Redirecting dopamine: Instead of feeding it with jealousy, we can retrain the brain to seek reward from present-moment intimacy, creativity, or learning.

Compassion for the self: Understanding that this is not weakness but a hijacked brain circuit helps reduce shame and make change possible.



Conclusion: A Trick of the Mind

Retroactive jealousy is, at its core, a mind trick. It convinces us that pain is the price of peace, that more details will set us free. In truth, the cycle is addictive because it exploits our brain chemistry—dopamine urging us forward, cortisol punishing us after.

Freedom begins when we stop treating details as medicine, and start seeing them for what they are: another hit in a cycle that never ends.


Monday, 1 December 2025

Latent attachment anxiety


One of the most misunderstood aspects of separation is the belief that, if it happened “long enough” ago, you should be completely over it. Yet when you hear that your ex is dating, has moved in with a girlfriend, got engaged or is getting married, you can suddenly be flooded with emotions. It can be deeply confusing. You may find yourself wondering, What’s wrong with me? Am I immature, or even a bit crazy?
You don’t want them back. You may already be in a new relationship yourself — perhaps a happy one, maybe even remarried.
There is a common belief that once a new relationship forms after separation, the other parent should have no difficult feelings about it. If they do, it is often assumed that they must still be secretly in love with their ex, in denial, emotionally immature, or simply a bad or bitter person who doesn’t want their ex to have a life of their own.

From the outside, it’s baffling. She has been his ex for a long time now — perhaps she’s even remarried. So what’s going on? Surely she should be over it by now. If she’s still reacting, the only explanations must be that she is jealous and/or still wants him back?

Those people are wrong. It's not any of those. It's a simple neurological reaction called Latent attachment anxiety. Old attachment alarm that reactivates when a past bond is symbolically closed (e.g., ex’s remarriage)

This misconception is the root of majority of difficulties people are facing when new relationships after separation are starting to form. 

Latent attachment anxiety is subtle, but extremely powerful in explaining why even calm, “healed” adults can suddenly feel emotional turbulence when an ex remarries.

Along side of explaining the high conflict behaviour attachment anxiety explains how ex partners rational explanations (“I’m just being kind”) growing from the emotional subtext (“Please don’t leave me out”) It will demonstrate how latent attachment anxiety hides inside seemingly generous co-parenting behavior.

Let’s unpack why that mindset (“they should be over it”) is both psychologically naïve and deeply unhelpful — and what’s actually happening underneath when an ex struggles emotionally after you move on.

🧩  Time passes; Attachment doesn’t automatically expire

Divorce is not the end of an event — it’s a turning point. People are coming into this smart line with pre-built a shared identity, routines, rituals, family roles, and mutual dependencies, your nervous system has been wired around that other person they created something forever lasting - shared children, shared parenting. It's a neurological connections our “thinking brain” is trying to manage and overwrite. 

Even years later, certain cues (seeing them with someone new, hearing about a wedding, watching your child hug the new spouse) can reactivate dormant neural circuits that used to manage closeness, jealousy, safety, and belonging.

So when someone reacts strongly, it’s not because they’re being childish — it’s because their body remembers connection before their mind does.

That’s not immaturity; that’s neurology.

💔 Remarriage reopens the attachment wound

Divorce creates a wound — but often, that wound scars, not fully heals.

The remarriage of an ex acts like a symbolic knife through that scar.

It represents:

Absolute finality, nothing to hold on to. No just spend Christmas together for children as we are both single. No staying for dinner as its easier than go home and cook for one. No more making decisions on spot or spontaneously because we don't have to consider other people opinion or feelings. 

Replacement. Someone else gets what used to be mine. I am not the first person in communication line. I am not invited anymore to extended family gatherings or it's now complicated and “pre checked” with another person that they are OK with me attending. Maybe I will be phased out by the other parent extended family circle. I am not part of their story anymore.

Identity shift. I am no longer the only Mrs X there is another person who has the same title. I am not the daughter in law/son in law I used to be. My title is passed to someone else. 

Even if the person doesn’t consciously want reconciliation, the event forces the nervous system to re-mourn the old bond.

That’s not regression — it’s a new layer of grief.

It's not chosen behaviour, it's automatic reaction, a neurological reflex. 

🧠 3. “They should act like an adult” = misunderstanding of emotional maturity

Being an adult doesn’t mean being in vulnerable. It means having self-awareness about one’s humanity and emotions — not the absence of them.

Our culture often equates emotional pain with weakness, especially in divorced or separated people. The narrative goes:
“You chose this, so you can’t feel sad.”
“It’s been years — get over it.”
“You’re being dramatic; be happy for them.”

But maturity is not the suppression of feeling; it’s the integration of feeling — the ability to feel grief, jealousy, anger, or loss without letting it dominate or define behavior.

To recognise those feelings and not to hide yourself in denial. 

So when an ex feels emotional turbulence, the question shouldn’t be “Why aren’t they over it?” but rather “Can they process this safely without harming themselves or others?” That’s the real marker of adult functioning.

This is where so many new partners making a huge mistake. Mistake that is triggered by their own fear and anxiety over attachment. 

They start pushing the trigger buttons with the other parent. Inflame the discomfort, use the discomfort to manipulate the other parent to loose control over their emotions. They refuse to give them time and space to prosess their feelings. Sometimes demand meetings or communication to be shared with them or only go via them. 

They will make sure the discomfort volume is tuned to maximum. They want to see the other parent to make fool of themselves in public. (or social media) 


⚖️ Why dismissing the reaction makes things worse

When others respond to a struggling ex with “get over it,” it often shames the person for a normal emotional process, drives the pain underground (where it becomes resentment or hostility), and increases the likelihood of acting out (control, criticism, sabotage) as the only way to express hurt indirectly.

In contrast, normalizing the emotional wave doesn’t excuse bad behavior — it contains it by acknowledging it as expected and temporary. It also gives space for asking and receiving support for processing those feelings as a transition phase. 

For example:

“It’s understandable this feels strange or painful right now. Let’s give it space rather than shame.”

That one shift — from moral judgment to emotional understanding — dramatically lowers defensiveness and reactivity.

🌊 The “Second Divorce” Phenomenon

Researchers and clinicians often describe an ex’s remarriage as triggering a “second divorce.” Even if years have passed, the remarriage crystallizes the reality that the shared narrative has ended permanently.

Typical emotional responses include:

A fresh wave of grief or loneliness, disguised as “he is abandoning children and choosing his new partner and her kids over mine “

Anger disguised as “concern for the kids,” in multiple versions and areas that never been a concern before. 

Comparisons to the new partner disguised as “the new partner is trying to act like a parent, crossing boundaries “

Re-evaluation of one’s own life path (“What have I done since then?” “I am struggling and they live their best life”).

This doesn’t mean they still love their ex — it means they’re mourning the final version of the life they once imagined.

 A Compassionate Frame for Moving On

Instead of the “they should be over it” mindset, a healthier framing is: 

“This is a natural emotional ripple in a long and complex story. It doesn’t mean they’re unstable — it means something final is being integrated.”

That attitude doesn’t condone cruelty or drama — it just humanizes the transition.

Compassion and boundaries can coexist.

You can say: “I know this change is hard. I still want us to communicate kindly and consistently for the kids. I don't think you are crazy to be upset but our children need you to be able to put a brave face on.”

That small validation might defuse what might otherwise become a full-blown conflict.


🧭 The Paradox of Acceptance

Here’s the paradox:

When we allow an ex (or ourselves) to feel whatever the remarriage stirs up — without judgment — the feelings pass faster.

When we shame or suppress them (“I shouldn’t feel this way”), they linger longer or can become permanent anxious attachment. 

Emotional healing works like physical healing:
If you let the wound breathe, it closes.
If you keep it bandaged in denial or shame, it festers.
It works for everyone involved. 
The parent who remarries must understand, normalise and give time and space to the other parent. 

The new partner/spouse must understand its normal reaction and not to blame their parentner and ex for “still having feelings after all this time you been separated/divorced”. 

The parent who's ex must avoid feeling ashamed and hide behind the denial (“no, this theory is not about me, my ex did remarry a monster and everyone is against me now, I am the true victim”) 



Understanding High-Conflict Behaviour after separation

  After separation, it is not uncommon for one parent to become highly conflictual, creating disputes that appear unnecessary or disproporti...