/
© 2026 RiffOn. All rights reserved.

Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

  1. Modern Wisdom
  2. #1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People
#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom · Nov 15, 2025

Heal attachment wounds by understanding why we confuse familiarity with safety and intensity with intimacy to build truly secure relationships.

Rewarded Loneliness: Independence as a Protective Shield

Society rewards hyper-independence, but it's often a coping mechanism to avoid relational vulnerability. This external validation creates a vicious cycle, leading to external success but profound internal disconnection and loneliness, as the behavior is both protective and culturally applauded.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

Healing Wounds With "Disconfirming Experiences"

To heal a relational wound, one must revisit the original feeling within a new, safe relationship. The healing occurs when this context provides a "disconfirming experience"—a different, positive outcome that meets the original unmet need and neurologically rewrites the pattern.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

High Tolerance for Familiar Mistreatment

An individual's capacity to endure mistreatment is paradoxically higher if that mistreatment is familiar from childhood. A person with a secure past would recognize it as wrong and leave, whereas someone repeating a pattern will stay and keep trying to "fix" it because the dynamic feels normal.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

Rupture and Repair Builds Deeper Intimacy Than a Lack of Conflict

Conflict avoidance is not a sign of a healthy relationship. True intimacy is built through cycles of 'rupture and repair,' where disagreements are used as opportunities for deeper understanding. A relationship without conflict may be fragile, as its ability to repair has never been tested.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

A "Left-Shifted" Society Creates an Epidemic of Loneliness

Western culture promotes a "left-shifted" brain state, prioritizing productivity and survival (left hemisphere). This state of constant sympathetic activation disconnects us from our bodies, emotions, and relational capacity (right hemisphere), directly causing our modern epidemic of loneliness.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

The Chemistry Illusion: Mistaking Intensity for Intimacy

Intense, chaotic, or euphoric feelings in a new relationship are often misinterpreted as deep "chemistry" or love. In reality, this intensity can be a sign that one's nervous system recognizes a familiar, and potentially unhealthy, dynamic from the past. True, safe intimacy is often calmer and less dramatic.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

The Paradox of Male Healing: Vulnerability vs. Masculinity

Healing relational trauma requires vulnerability, yet traditional masculinity prizes emotional control. This creates a painful paradox for men, where the very act required for healing feels like it threatens their identity and risks emasculation in their partner's eyes, making avoidance feel safer.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

The Nervous System's Dangerous Confusion: Familiarity vs. Safety

Our nervous system is wired to gravitate towards familiar patterns, confusing them with safety. This is why people unconsciously recreate painful or traumatic childhood dynamics in adult relationships. It is a biological pull toward the known, not a conscious desire for pain, making it a cosmically unfair default setting.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago

The Discomfort of Safety: Why Calm Love Feels Vulnerable

For someone accustomed to relational chaos, a genuinely safe and present partner can feel deeply uncomfortable. True safety requires vulnerability, which can trigger protective mechanisms in someone who has used intensity and workaholism to avoid their inner world. Calmness can feel foreign and threatening.

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People thumbnail

#1020 - Jessica Baum - Why We Fall for the Wrong People

Modern Wisdom·5 months ago