The fear of rejection is the root of sabotaging behavior. This intense worry about being unwanted often leads people to take one of two paths: staying out of the dating pool completely or unconsciously self-sabotaging or pushing away the partners they're hoping to attract.


The Sabotaging Tendency Quiz: designed to help you identify tendencies of self-sabotage.

Take the Quiz


Where Does This Fear Come From?

Your fear of being rejected is usually not about one bad date; it's a deep-seated worry from the past.

  • Early Hurts: If you were often criticized, ignored, or made to feel inadequate as a kid, you may have developed a core belief that you are simply unlovable.

  • Past Breakups: A bad breakup, a betrayal, or a history of one-sided love can teach your brain a defensive lesson: "If I open up, I will get hurt again."

Low Self-Worth: If you don't truly believe you are valuable, you assume your partner will eventually see your "flaws" and leave. The fear isn't just that they might reject you, but that they should reject you.


How Fear Makes You Sabotage Your Love Life

When this fear is running the show, it doesn't just hide—it forces you to act in ways that ruin relationships.


6 Steps to Stop the Fear of Success in Relationships

You can manage this fear so it no longer controls your actions. The key is to build confidence in yourself, not just in your partner.

  1. Spot Your Negative Thoughts: Learn to identify the inner voice that says, "I'm not good enough" or "They'll find someone better." Recognize these as old, learned "scripts," not actual facts.

  2. Separate Your Value from Their Choice: Understand that if a person leaves a relationship, it is about their needs and choices, not a final judgment on your worth. Your value is fixed; it doesn't depend on someone else's approval.

  3. Practice Being Vulnerable: Start sharing your real opinions, needs, or fears in small, safe ways. When your partner responds well, you slowly teach your brain that vulnerability is safe, not dangerous.

  4. See Rejection as Redirection: Reframe "being rejected." Instead of seeing it as a personal failure, view it as information that this specific person or dynamic was simply not the right fit for your life.

  5. Build Your Life Outside the Relationship: Invest in your hobbies, friends, and career. When you have a strong, secure identity outside of a relationship, you take the intense pressure off your partner to validate your entire existence.

  6. Get Professional Help: If this fear is ruining your life, a therapist can help you dismantle those deep-seated core beliefs and teach you healthier ways to cope.

True connection requires courage. You have to be brave enough to accept the chance of being hurt, knowing that even if rejection happens, you have the inner strength to heal and move forward.


Take the Sabotaging Behavior Quiz:

The Sabotaging Behavior Quiz is designed to help you identify the tendency to sabotage your relationships.

Take the Quiz

The Babe Staff

The Babe Staff is dedicated to helping people learn, grow, and experience better relationships.

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Don’t take it Personally: Disconnecting Rejection from your Personal Value

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Why You Have Trust Issues and How to Deal With Them