What Obsession Reveals About Avoidant Attachment, AI, and Modern Relationships
- Danielle Roxborough

- 1 day ago
- 11 min read
By Danielle Roxborough, LMFT | Couples Therapist | Neurodivergent & Trauma-Informed Relationship Specialist

The Seduction of Connection Without Vulnerability and Avoidant Attachment
As a couples therapist, I see the impact of avoidant attachment in modern relationships every day. The movie Obsession offers a fascinating lens into how technology, emotional labor, and vulnerability intersect with avoidant attachment dynamics
There is a quiet tragedy unfolding in modern relationships.
Not because people don't want love.
Not because people don't care.
But because increasingly, we are being offered something that resembles connection without requiring the vulnerability that genuine intimacy demands.
The recent film Obsession serves as an unsettling metaphor for a growing cultural phenomenon: the desire for the rewards of connection without the discomfort of being truly known.
At its core, the story explores a tension many couples therapists witness every day: the longing for closeness paired with a fear of the very process that creates it.
Because intimacy is not something we acquire.
It is something we build.
And building requires risk.
The Modern Fantasy: The Relationship Without the Relating
Technology has transformed nearly every aspect of life.
Food arrives without cooking.
Entertainment arrives without waiting.
Validation arrives without conversation.
And increasingly, connection appears available without relationship.
The problem is that relationships are developmental processes.
Psychologically speaking, there are phases that cannot be skipped.
Trust.
Reliability.
Repair.
Conflict.
Disappointment.
Negotiation.
Mutual influence.
Vulnerability.
Secure attachment.
These stages are not inconveniences.
They are the architecture of intimacy.
Yet modern culture increasingly encourages people to bypass them.
Dating apps offer endless alternatives.
Social media creates curated versions of connection.
AI companions promise emotional responsiveness without relational demands.
The fantasy is seductive:
"What if I could have connection without uncertainty?"
"What if I could have affection without rejection?"
"What if I could feel desired without having to reveal myself?"
Unfortunately, these shortcuts don't eliminate relational work.
They eliminate relational depth.

Brené Brown Was Right: Vulnerability Is the Price of Admission
Researcher and author Brené Brown's work consistently points toward a difficult truth:
Connection and vulnerability are inseparable.
People often want love while simultaneously avoiding the conditions required for love.
We want certainty before trust.
Safety before openness.
Acceptance before authenticity.
But intimacy doesn't work that way.
Brown's research suggests that vulnerability is not weakness but courage.
It is the willingness to be seen.
To risk disappointment.
To reveal needs.
To admit fear.
To tolerate uncertainty.
The paradox is that many people desperately want connection while organizing their lives around avoiding vulnerability.
And when vulnerability is avoided, relationships begin to flatten into transactions.
Connection becomes performance.
Communication becomes management.
Partners become functions.
The relationship survives, but intimacy slowly disappears.
Avoidant Attachment in the Age of Infinite Options
One of the most fascinating themes reflected in Obsession is how contemporary culture may unintentionally reinforce avoidant attachment patterns.
Attachment theory suggests that avoidantly attached individuals often learned early in life that emotional needs were unsafe, burdensome, or unlikely to be met.
As adults, they may crave closeness while simultaneously distancing themselves from it.
This isn't a character flaw.
It's a protective adaptation.
The challenge is that modern technology often rewards avoidance.
Why tolerate conflict when you can disengage?
Why work through disappointment when alternatives are endless?
Why risk vulnerability when curated versions of connection are available on demand?
The result is a culture increasingly skilled at obtaining stimulation while becoming less practiced at sustaining intimacy.
In therapy, I often tell couples:
Conflict does not destroy connection. Avoidance does.
Healthy relationships are not built by avoiding difficult moments.
They are built by surviving them together.
The Difference Between Loving a Person and Loving an Object
One of the most powerful psychodynamic concepts relevant to Obsession is object relations theory.
Object relations theory examines how people experience others internally.
At its healthiest, psychological development allows us to recognize that the people we love are separate individuals with their own thoughts, desires, boundaries, disappointments, and needs.
In other words:
We learn to love whole people.
Not idealized versions of people.
Not projections.
Not functions.
Not objects.
Whole people.
The problem arises when a partner becomes valued primarily for what they provide rather than who they are.
Validation.
Admiration.
Comfort.
Stability.
Sex.
Caretaking.
Emotional regulation.
Domestic management.
Status.
At that point, the relationship begins shifting from mutuality toward utility.
The partner becomes less of a person and more of a resource.
This is where many relationships quietly begin to fracture.
Not because love disappears.
But because recognition disappears.
Object relations is focused on attachment, and how our first attachment object is our mother, and how that relationship determines the dynamics and future of other important relationships.
In this case, an example of Object relations would be a baby pacifying itself utilizing a pacifier in replace of a mother. For a baby, it makes sense that mother cannot be around 100% of the time, although a baby has that need. Instead, mother utilizes a pacifier to help the baby learn to self soothe, and teaches the child that mother will return once she has completed her tasks. The repeated separation, and then returning and reuniting teaches the child not to fear separation, but to expect the mother to return. The rupture is the leaving, the repair is the returning, and the dynamic creates secure attachment expectations. However, if mother does not return consistently, baby becomes anxious, and cannot trust in future relationships, that anyone will return. The rupture is not repaired, and the baby becomes "obsessed" with avoiding the pain of that rupture, protesting the rupture, or controlling for the rupture. If we look at Bear through the lens of attachment trauma and rupture and object relations, Bear may be attempting to avoid the pain of rejection (rupture), by controlling for and bypassing Nikki's freedom of choice. By removing her consent, he also removes the potential pain of the original traumatic rupture - and ironically, any chance of creating a secure intimate attachment with her which theoretically could heal some of the original pain of his past attachment trauma itself.
This kind of attachment rupture can be so traumatic, that it preoccupies a person so much so that they are not able to build an identity, as they are too consumed with the pain of the original wound, they are in survival, and cannot perceive thriving. This creates a stuckness, a what I would call, arrested development, and can result in toddlerlike- or childlike thinking, and/ or behavior when in relationships, as a result.
In terms of the movie itself, (my opinion) there are many allusions to Bear's attachment trauma- one being the home he lives in, and its time-capsule-like state. His grandmother has left the house to him, and we can assume that she has passed. He has not changed the environment, has not modernized it, and if anything has left it to delapetate. This alludes to his childlike mindset, not recognizing that to have an asset at his age is a privilege most would celebrate, if they were able to focus on the world outside of their preoccupations of pain. (assumed).
A scene that stuck with me that speaks to his attachment wounds as a preoccupation and a driver of his behavior is the scene where he enters the magic shop, initially with the intent of buying a gift for Nikki. As he explores the shop, he gets distracted by the One Wish Willow, doesn't read the warnings, but gets caught up in the novelty of such a thing. He buys it for himself, and completely forgets about the necklace he went into the shop for initially.
In my opinion, not only is this a foreshadowing for the dynamic between he and Nikki in terms of their relational dynamic, but it's also an allusion to his attachment style, and the way he relates.
He forgets all about his intentions, all about the actual human and loving gift that he is about to share with Nikki, and instead indulges his magical thinking, and makes a choice to void Nikki's gift all-together and buys himself a one-wish-willow, which has massive implications for the trajectory of the film.
A lot of times, a small trigger can end up in a reactive choice, and attachment works that same way, if we aren't responding, mindfully, then we are reacting. When we react to something that reminds us of trauma, or a core wound, we are not only blind to how we come accross, but we also run the risk of sabotaging the actual things we want and need.
Attachment trauma also comes with its own wired- in behavior, in the case of Obsession, Bear is exemplifies a kind of rejection-sensitive-dysphoria in which he cannot tolerate the space of stepping into vulnerability to share his actual feelings with Nikki. Even after he breaks the willow and makes his wish, she comes to him, and before he shares his feelings with her, he asks her to divulge how she feels first. This dynamic of emotional avoidance, in my opinion is (potentially) indicative of attachment trauma, and reads as Avoidant Attachment.
Avoidant attachment comes as a result of attachment trauma, whether by neglect, or lack of emotional feedback/ exposure, or by internalizing the message that emotional expression = rejection or lack of safety, results in an individual avoiding the vulnerability of attaching securely in relationships by avoiding times of expressing emotion, avoiding conflict, or avoiding potential rejection. The rule is, is if you avoid one emotion, you avoid all emotion, and you especially avoid intimacy, because you cannot have a romantic relationship without intimacy. So avoidance is a survival tactic, but it is not sustainable for lasting relationships that require presence, patience and intimacy.
Whether Bear was subject to trauma is implied in my opinion, but either way, I believe the movie Obsession has highlighted a certain "role," that exemplifies another presentation of avoidant attachment, which is the People Pleasing role, or the Martyr.
The "Good Guy" Problem
One of the more complex relational dynamics therapists encounter is what some clinicians informally refer to as the "good guy" identity.
This is not about men specifically.
It can occur across genders.
The pattern often looks like this:
Avoid conflict
Suppress needs
Stay agreeable
Expect appreciation
Feel resentful when needs remain unmet
Struggle to directly communicate those needs
From the outside, the person appears selfless.
Internally, however, they may feel profoundly unseen.
The challenge is that relationships cannot meet needs that are never expressed.
Many partners become trapped in a painful cycle:
"I do everything for everyone."
followed by
"No one understands what I need."
But intimacy requires disclosure.
Needs must become visible before they can become relational.
When resentment replaces vulnerability, connection begins to erode.
Emotional Labor, Fair Play, and the Invisible Work of Relationships
Historically, women have carried disproportionate amounts of invisible labor.
Not simply housework.
Relational work.
Remembering birthdays.
Managing family schedules.
Maintaining social bonds.
Tracking children's needs.
Navigating emotional dynamics.
Planning holidays.
Anticipating problems.
Smoothing conflict.
Maintaining connection.
Sociologists often refer to this as emotional labor or kin-keeping.
The Fair Play framework brought widespread attention to something many women had experienced for generations:
The invisible labor often remains invisible until it stops happening.
This isn't about blaming men.
Many men were never socialized to recognize these responsibilities because they weren't taught to see them.
Likewise, many women were socialized to perform them automatically.
The result is a relational imbalance that often remains unnamed.
The issue isn't simply workload.
It's recognition.
Because when one partner consistently carries emotional management for the relationship, they eventually become exhausted.
And exhausted partners cannot indefinitely compensate for emotional absence.
Why No One Can Hold Up a Relationship Alone
A relationship can survive temporary imbalance.
It cannot survive permanent imbalance.
One partner cannot be:
The emotional processor
The conflict manager
The social coordinator
The household manager
The attachment stabilizer
The intimacy initiator
forever.
Eventually the system collapses under its own weight.
Not because either partner is bad.
But because relationships are co-created.
Mutuality is not optional.
It is structural.
This is where Obsession becomes such a compelling metaphor.
The desire for a partner who remains available without requiring reciprocal emotional engagement reflects a fantasy that has existed for generations.
But real relationships are not built around one person's needs.
They are built around two people's humanity.
AI, Relationships, and the Future of Intimacy
As AI becomes increasingly sophisticated, couples therapists face an important cultural question:
What happens when emotional simulation becomes easier than emotional vulnerability?
The concern is not that AI will replace relationships.
The concern is that it may inadvertently train people away from the very skills relationships require.
Patience.
Repair.
Empathy.
Negotiation.
Tolerance for difference.
Frustration management.
Mutual influence.
Secure attachment develops when two separate people continually choose one another despite complexity.
Technology can replicate responsiveness.
It cannot replicate mutual growth.
And growth is where intimacy lives.
The Danger of Skipping Relational Stages
In therapy, I often see couples struggling because they unknowingly skipped developmental phases.
They moved quickly into commitment.
Quickly into cohabitation.
Quickly into parenting.
Quickly into caretaking roles.
Without building the underlying foundation.
The result often feels confusing.
"We love each other, but we're disconnected."
What is usually missing isn't love.
It's depth.
Depth comes from navigating the stages we wanted to avoid:
The hard conversations.
The ruptures.
The disappointments.
The repairs.
The negotiations.
The vulnerable disclosures.
There are no shortcuts to these experiences.
Because these experiences are the relationship.
The Real Warning Hidden Inside Obsession
The deeper warning in Obsession may not be about technology at all.
It may be about humanity.
Specifically, what happens when we begin valuing comfort over connection.
Control over vulnerability.
Fantasy over reality.
Objects over people.
Relationships thrive when partners remain curious about one another.
When they tolerate complexity.
When they recognize that intimacy is not something owed.
It is something continually created.
The future challenge for couples may not be learning how to connect.
It may be learning how to remain human enough to do it.
And that work—messy, imperfect, vulnerable, brave work—is still the only path that has ever led to genuine intimacy.
Real love is doing the work to hold up the relationship, mutually, it's active. That is why my practice is called Love Is A Verb Counseling.
Looking for Couples Therapy in California?
If you and your partner feel stuck in cycles of disconnection, resentment, emotional labor imbalance, attachment injuries, neurodivergent relationship challenges, or communication breakdowns, couples therapy can help you rebuild connection through evidence-based approaches.
Danielle Roxborough, LMFT is a California couples therapist specializing in:
Gottman Method Couples Therapy
Neurodivergent Couples Therapy
ADHD Relationships
Trauma-Informed Couples Counseling
Attachment-Based Therapy
Fair Play Relationship Dynamics
Blended Family Challenges
Emotional Intimacy and Communication
Serving couples throughout California via in person sessions and telehealth.
Love Is a Verb Counseling: Helping couples move from disconnection to deeper connection through deliberate, courageous communication.



