
Overcome the Fear of Abandonment in a Relationship
Before I became a Dating Coach, I was the queen of dead-end relationships. You know the type…intense connections that burn bright but fizzle fast, leaving you wondering what went wrong. Date after date, relationship after relationship, I kept hitting the same wall. The faces changed, but the story remained the same.
I couldn’t understand why my relationships kept falling apart. I’d start dating someone new, pour my whole heart in, try to be perfect, and then watch it crumble – again and again.
The common advice I kept hearing? “You just haven’t found the right person yet!” But after my fifth heartbreak in four years, I had to face a difficult truth: the common denominator in all my failed relationships was me.
This wasn’t about blaming myself. It was about recognizing that I was showing up from a place of fear rather than authenticity. I was chasing validation instead of connection. I was so afraid of being left that I never stopped to ask if these relationships were even right for me in the first place.
Everything changed when I stopped running from relationship to relationship and turned inward. I realized I needed to heal my abandonment wounds before I could truly connect with someone else.
So I did the work. And yes, it was messy, uncomfortable, soul-searching work. Today, I want to share the exact steps that helped me transform my relationship with myself and eventually find a love that felt emotionally safe.
Step 1: Identify Your Non-Negotiables
For years, I didn’t know what I truly needed in a relationship because I was too focused on being wanted. Coupled with not having the best role models who showed me what unconditional love was, I’d compromise on important values just to keep someone interested.
I had to get crystal clear about my non-negotiables, aka deal-breakers. These were not superficial preferences like height or income, but the core values that make a relationship last for the long haul. Respect. Emotional availability. Consistent communication. Aligned life goals.
When I finally created this internal compass, dating became simpler. I stopped wasting time on connections that couldn’t fulfill my most important needs.
Step 2: Feel Your Feelings (So You Can Set Boundaries)
Oh, this was a tough one for me! I used to swallow my discomfort and ignore red flags because I was terrified that expressing my needs would drive someone away.
I had to learn that my feelings weren’t just valid. They were vital information. That knot in my stomach when someone repeatedly canceled plans? Not anxiety to suppress, but my internal warning system letting me know my needs weren’t being met.
When I started honoring my emotions instead of hiding them, I could communicate boundaries clearly: “I need more consistency to feel secure in this connection.” Sometimes, this meant people walked away, and that was actually a blessing.
Having a hard time keeping your head on straight while dating? I made this video to help you stop obsessing over a new relationship. (Article continued below)
Step 3: Reframe “Rejection” as Redirection
This shift changed everything. When someone couldn’t meet my needs or chose to end things, I used to spiral into feeling unwanted and unworthy. I’d start fawning (people-pleasing) over the person, hoping they would eventually see my worth. It was a sure way of making the rejection last longer. And trust me, it was painful.
When I finally recognized that compatibility wasn’t about worthiness. It changed everything for me. Two perfectly wonderful people can still be wrong for each other. When someone couldn’t give me what I needed, it wasn’t rejection…it was valuable information that we weren’t the right fit.
This perspective freed me from taking other people’s choices personally. Instead of asking, “What’s wrong with me?” I started asking, “Is this the right relationship for me?”
Step 4: Practice Vulnerable Truth-Telling
Vulnerability didn’t come naturally to me. I had to literally practice saying scary truths out loud. First to my mirror, then to trusted friends, and finally to my actual dates.
I used to hide parts of myself I thought were “too much.” My anxieties, my past, my deepest fears and desires. I’d present a carefully curated version of Amie, the “chill girl” who was easy to love. Always afraid to ruffle the feathers.
But do you know what that brought me? A ton of inauthentic connections. No one could get deep enough with me, and I never could be seen as my genuine self. I had to learn to speak my truth with my dates: “I’m scared of getting hurt again; that is why I almost got cold feet and canceled our date.” “I want a committed relationship.” “I need time to build trust.”
The right people didn’t run from my honesty; in actuality, when I shared these statements with the right person, not only did he become closer to me because of it, but he also became my husband.
Step 5: Become the Chooser (The 90-Day Rule)
For so many years, I chased. I would learn everything about the partner I wanted to win over. I’d morph into everything he wanted. It was exhausting. Learning how to be the chooser was an absolute game-changer for me; I had to shift from being the chosen to being more intentional about why I chose to be with this partner.
I implemented my 90-day rule: taking at least three months to mindfully observe if someone’s actions aligned with their words before fully investing my heart. Was I meeting the real person or just their “representative”?
This wasn’t about playing games. It was about slowing down enough to see clearly. It was about dating with intention rather than desperation.
During this time, I watched for consistency, observed how they handled conflict and paid attention to how I felt in their presence. Did I feel anxious or at peace? Did I feel valued or uncertain?
Everything You Want Is on the Other Side of Fear
When I healed my abandonment wounds and implemented these practices, dating transformed from a source of anxiety to an opportunity for growth, I stopped chasing love and started attracting it instead.
The beautiful irony? When I became secure enough to walk away from connections that didn’t serve me, I finally created space for one that did.
My relationship today isn’t perfect, but it’s healthy, secure, and deeply fulfilling. Not because I found someone who would never leave but because I found myself first.
If you’re struggling with abandonment fears, please know you’re not alone. These wounds often run deep, sometimes back to childhood, but healing is possible.
Start with one small step today if you want to learn how to break the cycle of entering dead-end relationships and want support on becoming a Conscious Dater. I’m here to help. Schedule a Free Relationship Readiness Review with me here.
Remember, you’ve got this, and the love you create from a healed place will last a lifetime and save your heart from unnecessary heartache. Your self-discovery will be worth every step of the journey.