Relationships are complicated, but sometimes there are hidden dynamics at play that you may not notice right away. And it’s not just in your romantic relationships.
It’s called intermittent reinforcement.
Instead of rewarding behavior consistently, rewards come randomly or unpredictably over time. Your brain gets hooked because it can’t predict the next reward, so it keeps trying. If you’re thinking about gambling right now, that’s exactly what I’m talking about. It can also look like a toxic partner who only gives affection or validation once in a while, so you work harder and harder trying to get that next hit.
This is one of the strongest manipulation tactics out there.
**Why It Works **
- It creates a powerful habit loop.
- The uncertainty is the hook. You think: maybe this time I’ll get the payoff, the thank you, the love I need.
- You justify it: they’re trying, they’re getting better.
- But it’s by design. The unpredictability keeps you locked in longer than consistency ever would.
If you got consistent low effort, you’d recognize it wasn’t enough and probably leave. Intermittent reinforcement makes you tolerate more garbage than you normally would.
How It gets You
- Your nervous system starts chasing that next dopamine hit.
- Breadcrumbs of affection or attention give you spikes of dopamine, and those spikes hit harder than predictable rewards.
- Your brain flags it as important: keep chasing, keep going.
- Even when it’s not in your best interest, you stay locked in.
Examples Outside of Relationships
- Marketing: Buy nine coffees, get the tenth free. You keep coming back even if another shop is cheaper overall.
- Transactional intimacy: “Do these chores, then we’ll be intimate.” It builds quiet resentment.
- Toxic patterns: Random affection followed by heavy doses of guilt, criticism, or victim-playing. You keep chasing the nurturing version of them you love, even though it’s rare.
- Future faking: They talk about amazing future plans to keep you invested, even if it’s really just for their benefit. You hold on, thinking, they do care, and suddenly ten years are gone.
Traps That Keep You Stuck
- Dopamine loves uncertainty: Surprises hit harder than scheduled rewards.
- Unpredictability tricks your brain: You overvalue the small wins.
- Sunk cost fallacy: “I’ve already invested so much, I can’t quit now.”
- Scarcity effect: Because rewards are rare, they feel more valuable than they really are.
Over time, this becomes part of your identity chasing, proving, putting in effort just to get scraps.
Healthy Relationships Feel Different
Healthy relationships can feel “boring” at first.
- There’s consistent effort.
- There’s steady appreciation.
- There’s no gambling on whether you’ll get love or validation today.
It’s less exciting for your brain, but it’s far healthier for your life. This is also why some people bounce from one toxic relationship to another they’re addicted to the highs and lows.
The good news? Awareness can fix this. Once you see the pattern, you’ll start recognizing it not just in your relationships but maybe with your boss, your friendships, or even in marketing tactics. And once you see it, you’re less likely to fall for it again.