Scott Stevens

Scott Stevens

Want to know more about Scott Stevens? Get his official bio, social pages and articles on New Country 107.9 YYD!Full Bio

 

Red Flags You’re Being Love Bombed This Valentine’s Day

First off... what is Love Bombing? Love bombing is a manipulative technique involving excessive affection, gifts, and attention early in a relationship to create intense, rapid emotional dependence. Used by abusers to gain control, this behavior often shifts to isolation and toxicity once the victim is hooked. It feels like intense romance, but aims for power.

So... The key Aspects of Love Bombing: Love is in the air this time of year and couples often exchange lavish gifts, share intense declarations of their feelings and give lots of attention to each other for Valentine’s Day. While these are usually seen as romantic gestures, experts warn they could actually be signs of controlling behavior. In fact, divorce coach Nawal Houghton says February is a peak time for what she calls “too-good-to-be-true” toxic relationships.

Love bombing is one of the biggest warning signs of them and according to Houghton, Valentine’s Day can be the perfect cover for it because over-the-top romance is expected for the holiday. Love bombing is when someone goes all out with attention, affection and big romantic gestures, like extravagant gifts, declarations of love and constant attention, but it’s not to build a genuine connection, it’s to fast-track attachment and control. While it “feels intoxicating at first,” this expert says it’s “about power, not partnership.”

Valentine’s Day can make love bombing harder to spot, but Houghton says these are some signs you’re being love bombed:

  • It feels too intense too soon - Like if they’re talking about “forever” before they really know you.
  • Grand gestures replace real connection - They’re all about lavish gifts, but there’s no emotional consistency from day to day.
  • Pressure to commit quickly - They push being exclusive or emotional dependence early on.
  • Hot and cold behavior - One day it’s overwhelming affection, the next they’re withdrawn or critical.
  • Control disguised as care - Their jealousy and guilt-tripping is spun as “I just love you so much.”
  • Still not sure if it’s real love or love bombing? “Real passion grows steadily and feels emotionally safe,” Houghton explains. “Real love shouldn't make you feel smaller, anxious or unsure of yourself even on the most romantic day of the year."

Source: Independent

Scott's Thoughts:

  • Why did they give something toxic a name like love bombing that sounds like something good?
  • If it sounds too good to be true, it likely is.
  • But if you have it bad for someone, and they seem to have it bad for you, is it really always a bad thing?

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content