Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

Am I Being Cookie Jarred? 10 Signs You're Someone's Backup Plan and Why Attachment Trauma Makes It So Hard to Walk Away

Am I Being Cookie Jarred? 10 Signs You're Someone's Backup Plan and Why Attachment Trauma Makes It So Hard to Walk Away

Are you being cookie-jarred in your relationship? Learn the signs of being someone's backup plan, why attachment trauma makes it difficult to leave, and how neuroscience and nervous system healing can help you build healthier relationships.

You text first almost every time. They disappear for days, then suddenly return with just enough charm to keep your hope alive. They avoid defining the relationship but insist they "really like you." You feel deeply invested, yet strangely uncertain about where you stand.

If this sounds familiar, you may be experiencing a modern dating phenomenon known as cookie jarring. Cookie jarring occurs when someone keeps another person romantically interested as a backup option while continuing to pursue other relationships or delaying genuine commitment. Like saving a cookie for later, the person remains on the shelf until they become convenient.

For many people, the obvious question is:

"Why don't I just leave?"

For those with attachment trauma, the answer is often far more complicated than willpower.

Do These Questions Sound Familiar?

    — Why do I keep hoping they'll change?

     — Why do I feel addicted to someone who gives me so little consistency?

     — Why do mixed signals make me want them more?

     — Why am I ashamed that I can't walk away?

     — Why do I feel relieved every time they text after ignoring me?

     — Why do I keep settling for breadcrumbs when I want commitment?

These experiences often have less to do with weakness and more to do with the way the nervous system has learned to seek connection.

What Is Cookie Jarring?

Cookie jarring describes maintaining someone's emotional investment without offering genuine commitment. The relationship often remains ambiguous, inconsistent, and filled with just enough attention to prevent the other person from leaving. Unlike an openly casual relationship, cookie jarring thrives on uncertainty. That uncertainty can become profoundly destabilizing.

10 Signs You Might Be Someone's Backup Plan

1. Communication Is Inconsistent

They disappear without explanation, then reappear acting as though nothing happened.

2. They Avoid Defining the Relationship

Conversations about exclusivity are redirected, postponed, or dismissed.

3. They Contact You Mainly When Convenient

Late-night messages, last-minute invitations, or reaching out after another relationship ends become the norm.

4. You Feel Chronically Confused

Healthy relationships generally produce clarity. Cookie jarring often produces persistent ambiguity.

5. Their Words and Actions Don't Match

They say they care deeply but rarely demonstrate reliability.

6. You Are Kept at Arm's Length

You know little about their long-term plans, friends, or family despite months of dating.

7. You Constantly Seek Reassurance

You spend significant emotional energy trying to determine whether they truly care.

8. You Rationalize Behavior That Hurts You

You repeatedly explain away cancellations, broken promises, or emotional distance.

9. Your Mood Depends on Their Attention

A text message creates relief. Silence creates panic.

10. You Stay Because of Potential Rather Than Reality

You remain invested in who they might become rather than who they consistently show themselves to be.

Why Cookie Jarring Feels Addictive

The answer lies partly in neuroscience. The brain's reward system responds strongly to intermittent reinforcement, a pattern in which rewards are delivered unpredictably. Occasional affection interspersed with periods of absence can produce powerful emotional conditioning. Inconsistent rewards often maintain behavior more effectively than predictable ones. This is one reason inconsistent relationships can become extraordinarily difficult to leave.

Attachment Trauma Changes the Equation

For individuals with anxious attachment or histories of emotional neglect, inconsistency may feel strangely familiar. If love during childhood was unpredictable, conditional, or emotionally unavailable, the nervous system may have learned that connection requires waiting, proving oneself, or tolerating uncertainty. As adults, familiar dynamics can feel compelling even when they are painful. The body mistakes familiarity for safety.

Shame Often Keeps People Stuck

Many people blame themselves.

"I should know better."

"Why am I settling?"

"Why can't I move on?"

Yet shame rarely creates change. Instead, it often reinforces the very attachment wounds that keep people emotionally invested. The more ashamed someone feels, the more desperately they may seek validation from the very person withholding it.

Your Nervous System May Be Seeking Resolution

When relationships remain unresolved, the brain often continues searching for closure. Each unexpected text or affectionate interaction briefly reduces distress. The nervous system interprets this relief as evidence that staying invested is worthwhile.

Unfortunately, the cycle repeats. Hope rises. Disappointment follows. Hope returns again.

Healthy Love Feels Different

Secure relationships tend to produce greater predictability than uncertainty. Partners communicate consistently. They express interest clearly. They repair misunderstandings. They make room for vulnerability without keeping one another guessing. The absence of chronic anxiety may initially feel unfamiliar to someone accustomed to inconsistency. But emotional safety is not boring. It is regulating.

How Trauma-Informed Healing Can Help

Leaving a cookie-jarring dynamic often requires more than insight. It requires helping the nervous system tolerate grief, uncertainty, and the discomfort of choosing long-term well-being over short-term relief.

Body-based therapies such as somatic therapy and Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), along with attachment-focused psychotherapy, can help individuals process unresolved relational wounds, strengthen emotional regulation, and develop healthier expectations for intimacy.

As the nervous system becomes more secure, many people notice a profound shift. They stop confusing unpredictability with passion. They become less attracted to emotional unavailability. They begin choosing consistency over chemistry, fueled by anxiety.

How Embodied Wellness and Recovery Can Help

At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we understand that struggles with dating, attachment, and relationship patterns often reflect deeper nervous system adaptations rather than poor judgment or lack of self-respect.

Our clinicians integrate somatic therapy, EMDR, neuroscience-informed psychotherapy, attachment-focused interventions, and evidence-based trauma treatment to help individuals understand why they remain attached to emotionally inconsistent partners and cultivate relationships grounded in safety, authenticity, and mutual respect. We also specialize in sexuality, intimacy, betrayal trauma, and complex relational dynamics, recognizing that lasting transformation involves both the mind and the body.

The healthiest relationships are not the ones that leave you wondering where you stand. They are the ones that allow your nervous system to stop wondering altogether.

Reach out to schedule a complimentary 20-minute consultation with our team of therapists, trauma specialists, somatic practitioners, or relationship experts, and start working towards integrative, embodied healing today. 


📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458

📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934

📩 Email us at admin@embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

🔗 Visit us at www.embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

👉 Check us out on Instagram @embodied_wellness_and_recovery

🌍 Explore our offerings at Linktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/laurendummit

References

1) Ainsworth, M. D. S., Blehar, M. C., Waters, E., & Wall, S. (1978). Patterns of attachment: A psychological study of the strange situation. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

2) Johnson, S. M. (2019). Attachment theory in practice: Emotionally focused therapy (EFT) with individuals, couples, and families. Guilford Press.

3) Porges, S. W. (2011). The polyvagal theory: Neurophysiological foundations of emotions, attachment, communication, and self-regulation. W. W. Norton & Company.

4) Schore, A. N. (2012). The science of the art of psychotherapy. W. W. Norton & Company.

5) van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The body keeps the score: Brain, mind, and body in the healing of trauma. Viking.

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Lauren Dummit-Schock Lauren Dummit-Schock

Trauma Bonding vs. Healthy Attachment: What Your Nervous System Is Trying to Tell You

Trauma Bonding vs. Healthy Attachment: What Your Nervous System Is Trying to Tell You

Learn how to tell the difference between trauma bonding and healthy attachment by tuning into somatic cues like hyperarousal, shutdown, and freeze states. Discover neuroscience-backed tools to foster secure connection and embodied safety from the experts at Embodied Wellness and Recovery.

Trauma Bonding vs. Healthy Attachment: What Your Nervous System Is Trying to Tell You

Have you ever found yourself drawn to someone who causes you emotional pain, but still feels impossibly hard to leave? Do you second-guess your gut, feel addicted to the highs and lows, or confuse intensity with intimacy?

You may be caught in a trauma bond, a neurobiological pattern that mimics love but is fueled by fear, unpredictability, and unmet childhood needs.

In contrast, healthy attachment feels safe, consistent, and steady, even if it initially feels unfamiliar or "boring." So, how can you tell the difference?

The answer lies in your body.

What Is Trauma Bonding?

Trauma bonding occurs when a person becomes emotionally attached to someone who is intermittently abusive, unavailable, or emotionally neglectful. It is rooted in the same fight, flight, freeze, or fawn responses that form during childhood in response to unmet emotional or physical needs.

Instead of feeling safe, loved, and grounded in the relationship, you may feel:

  — Constant anxiety about being abandoned
     — Addicted to the cycle of conflict and reconciliation
     — Responsible for
managing the other person’s emotions
     — Afraid of setting boundaries or expressing needs

The Neuroscience Behind Trauma Bonds

Trauma bonds often form in response to intermittent reinforcement, unpredictable cycles of reward and punishment. According to neuroscience research, this unpredictability creates dopamine spikes, reinforcing the bond even when the relationship is damaging (Frewen & Lanius, 2015).

Additionally, the body's stress response systems, specifically the sympathetic nervous system and dorsal vagal shutdown, get activated during relational distress. If you grew up in an environment where connection was inconsistent, you may unconsciously seek out what feels familiar, not what’s healthy.

Somatic Signs of Trauma Bonding

Trauma bonding is not just psychological; it’s physiological.  The body often knows the relationship isn’t safe long before the mind does.

🚩 Common Somatic Red Flags:

      — Tight chest or shallow breathing when you anticipate a message or call
      —
Hypervigilance—constantly scanning for signs they’re upset or withdrawing
     — Difficulty sleeping,
racing thoughts, or a sense of walking on eggshells
     —
Dissociation—numbing out during conflict or intimacy
     —Shutdown/freeze response after arguments or abandonment

  A compulsive need to reconnect quickly after any rupture, even at your own expense

These are signals from your autonomic nervous system, telling you that something feels unsafe or dysregulating, even if you can’t logically explain why.


What Does Healthy Attachment Feel Like in the Body?

Healthy attachment may feel unfamiliar, especially if your body is used to chaos. But it is recognizably different on a somatic level.

🌱 Somatic Signs of Secure Attachment:

      — A relaxed belly and open breath around your partner
      — The ability to pause and regulate during
conflict, without dissociating or escalating
      — Feeling
emotionally attuned, seen, and respected
      — Trust in the other person’s consistency without excessive reassurance
      — Permission to
say “no” or “I need time” without fear of abandonment
      — Experiencing
desire without obsession, intimacy without volatility

Your nervous system responds to healthy love with
regulation. Even when disagreements happen, you don’t feel like you’re fighting for your survival.

Why Trauma Bonds Can Feel Like “Love”

Many survivors confuse trauma bonding with true intimacy because the emotional rollercoaster mimics intensity. The rush of dopamine during reconciliation can feel like passion, but it’s actually your brain rewarding you for exiting a perceived danger.

Unfortunately, if your childhood template of love included abandonment, neglect, or control, your nervous system may associate insecurity with love. This is called attachment dysregulation, and it can trap you in painful relationship patterns.

Somatic Tools to Shift Toward Secure Attachment

The good news? You don’t have to force yourself to think differently. You can start by helping your body feel different.

Here are four trauma-informed, somatic tools to begin building healthier attachment:

1. Name Your State

Begin noticing whether you’re in a sympathetic (fight/flight), dorsal vagal (freeze/shutdown), or ventral vagal (regulated/connected) state. Simply naming your state increases self-awareness and builds choice into your response.

Try saying: “My heart is racing; I think I’m in fight mode. I need to slow down.”

2. Practice Pendulation

Pendulation is a somatic practice that involves gently shifting attention between areas of discomfort and those of neutrality or ease in your body. It helps your nervous system learn that it doesn’t have to get stuck in a trauma response.

Ex: Place one hand on your heart, the other on your belly. Notice which feels calmer. Breathe there for 60 seconds.

3. Create Safety Anchors

Develop daily rituals that signal “safety” to your body, such as wrapping yourself in a soft blanket, engaging in bilateral stimulation, or sitting against a wall with your feet flat on the ground.

These anchors help your nervous system associate relationship with safety, not threat.

4. Set Boundaries Somatically

Before saying “yes” or “no” in a relational interaction, tune into your body. Where do you feel expansion or constriction? Practice responding from that internal cue, not from fear of rejection.

When to Seek Support

If you’re caught in a trauma bond, it’s not a sign of weakness or failure; it’s a sign that your nervous system adapted to survive. At Embodied Wellness and Recovery, we specialize in helping individuals and couples rewire trauma-based attachment patterns through:

     — Somatic Experiencing and EMDR to reprocess early attachment wounds
    —
IFS (Parts Work) to bring compassion to inner survival strategies
    —
Couples therapy grounded in nervous system regulation and co-regulation
    —
Psychoeducation and nervous system mapping to foster autonomy and connection

You don’t have to unravel these patterns alone. With the right support, your body can learn what safe love truly feels like.

Soulmates vs. Survival Templates

Not all intense connections are soulmates. Sometimes, they’re survival templates.

If your body feels trapped in a loop of anxiety, guilt, and longing in your relationship, it may be trying to tell you that this isn’t secure attachment; it’s a trauma bond.

The path to healthy connection begins with relearning safety in your own nervous system. From that place of embodied security, your relationships can begin to transform, not through control or performance, but through presence, trust, and true intimacy.

Contact us today to schedule a free 20-minute consultation and begin your journey toward embodied connection, clarity, and confidence.

📞 Call us at (310) 651-8458

📱 Text us at (310) 210-7934

📩 Email us at admin@embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

🔗 Visit us at www.embodiedwellnessandrecovery.com

👉 Check us out on Instagram @embodied_wellness_and_recovery


References:

1. Frewen, P. A., & Lanius, R. A. (2015). Healing the Traumatized Self: Consciousness, Neuroscience, Treatment. W.W. Norton & Company.

2. Levine, P. A. (2010). In an Unspoken voice: How the body Releases Trauma and Restores Goodness. North Atlantic Books.

3. Porges, S. W. (2017). The Pocket guide to the Polyvagal Theory: The transformative power of feeling safe. W. W. Norton & Company.

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