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20 Signs You Might Be an Emotional Masochist

Updated on October 25, 2025 by TMM Staff · Dating & Confidence

A man grabbing a road while standing.
©Natalia Blauth/Unsplash.com

Emotional masochists are people who are at ease in misery and are interested in deliberately engaging in adverse behaviors. These people tend to have a self-destructive personality, leading to them having lives being highlighted by emotional pain and discomfort. But the real problem is the detrimental effect that they have on those near to them. Being an emotional masochist doesn’t mean that these people enjoy pain in a dramatic or metaphorical sense. It actually implies that they revel in pain on the psychological level. The truly baffling part is that these people have developed a tendency for such pain and derive comfort, safety, and even a sense of identity from it. There are subtle signs that reveal when a person is an emotional masochist. If you want to learn about these signs, then read on.

Table of Contents

Toggle
  • Mistaking Intensity for Intimacy
  • Going Back to People Who Hurt You
  • You Tend to Apologize Excessively
  • You Desire Validation from People Who aren’t Forthcoming with It
  • You Keep Reminiscing about Painful Memories Repeatedly
  • You Attract People Who are Emotionally Withdrawn
  • You Conflate Strength with Suffering
  • You Sabotage Healthy Relationships
  • You can’t Tolerate Being Happy for Extended Periods
  • You Downplay Your Suffering
  • You Love the Emotionally Charged Songs or Movies
  • You Want to Fix People
  • You Confuse Rejection with Challenge
  • You are Contrite when Things Go Right
  • You have Trouble Setting Boundaries.
  • You Become Attached Too Quickly
  • You Think Heartbreaks Make You Special
  • You Feel Hollow without Emotional Chaos
  • You Mistake Self-Pity for Self-Awareness
  • You Label Self-Abandonment as Love
  • Final Thoughts

Mistaking Intensity for Intimacy

A man and a woman embracing each other.
©Andrej Lišakov/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who conflates intimacy with intensity. You consider drama to be a vividly palpable scale for expressing intimacy. This is chaos and not chemistry, but you can’t seem to get the hang of this fact. For you, it feels vibrant and alive, while you find calm to be boring.

Going Back to People Who Hurt You

A woman nagging a man while he uses a laptop.
©Andrej Lišakov/unsplash.com

You realize that these are the ones who hurt you and can be detrimental to your peace. But something about them and the pain that they inflict feels incredibly attractive to you. It isn’t love that drives you, but rather the pain that they impart.

You Tend to Apologize Excessively

A man sitting on a couch talking to a woman.
©Blake Cheek/Unsplash.com

You are prone to apologizing profusely, even when you are not to blame. It is a way via which you subconsciously hamper yourself from attaining peace or protecting your self-dignity and worth.

You Desire Validation from People Who aren’t Forthcoming with It

A woman with clown makeup holding a red rose.
©Dollar Gill/Unsplash.com

You diligently strive to prove your worth to people who are immensely hard to please. You crave validation from them, and they are never generous when it comes to giving it. For you, praise from them is like a life force; you can’t subsist without it.

You Keep Reminiscing about Painful Memories Repeatedly

Man kneeling down near seashore.
©Ben White/Unsplash.com

Even in solitude, you keep replaying the painful and hurtful moments of your life. You derive pleasure or some kind of twisted satisfaction from this reminiscing. There is no meaning to be found here, and no matter how much you remember, you won’t control the outcome.

You Attract People Who are Emotionally Withdrawn

A man apologizing to his wife after a quarrel.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

You are drawn towards people who are emotionally detached and can’t impart love or support to you in this regard. They can and will hurt you, but you don’t care because deep in your psyche, you have created this perspective that love should be agonizing and cause you pain.

You Conflate Strength with Suffering

A man in a jacket posing with a bare chest.
©Salvador Gómez Arellano/Unsplash.com

You think that having a high tolerance of pain without objection is a sign of strength or nobility. That is anything but the truth. Most of the time, this is just you neglecting yourself, which you have mistaken or misconstrued as resilience.

You Sabotage Healthy Relationships

A sad woman talking to her boyfriend.
©Blake Cheek/Unsplash.com

You are likely to experience discomfort and unease when a healthy functioning person enters your life. You don’t like it when they treat you with respect and kindness. So, you push them away by picking fights over trivial matters and generally pulling away from them.

You can’t Tolerate Being Happy for Extended Periods

A man standing in dark
©Andrej Lišakov/Unsplash.com

You start to get anxious and suspicious when things start going your way for too long. You inadvertently wait for, no expect, something to go terribly wrong. That is because you are pessimistic by nature and want things to go wrong, as they always have in the past. You just can’t handle extended periods of happiness or peace.

You Downplay Your Suffering

A sad man standing in a grass field.
©J’Waye Covington/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who minimizes his pain and downplays it. This is a way for you to invalidate your suffering and belittle your worth as a person.

You Love the Emotionally Charged Songs or Movies

A man with a beard and headphones sitting outdoors.
©Vitaly Gariev/Unsplash.com

You are fixated on movies and songs that embody emotionally charged lyrics and music. They provide your brain with the nostalgic pangs of heartbreak that you so desperately crave.

You Want to Fix People

A man fixing the dress of his bride.
©Shoham Avisrur/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who probably has a savior complex. You fall for emotionally broken people whom you believe you can fix. However, this is a mentally and emotionally exhausting endeavor, and you are far too eager and pleased to engage in it. You want to be broken, and this complex affords you a golden chance at becoming so.

You Confuse Rejection with Challenge

A man looking aside thoughtfully.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who enhances the frequency and intensity of attempts to win over a person if the latter repudiates your advances. You begin confusing rejection for challenge and strive even harder to continue the chase. That is because it is the incessant, intense pursuit that has now become the prize for you.

You are Contrite when Things Go Right

A man looking guilty while sitting in the dark with his eyes closed.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who feels guilty when things, like love, career, peace, and so on, finally work out and go right. You feel like you don’t deserve this, and naturally, you start looking for ways to sabotage it.

You have Trouble Setting Boundaries.

A couple sitting on a vintage red chair.
©Getty Images/Unsplash.com

You can’t seem to set boundaries or say no to something that infringes on them. You find refusal to be a cruel concept and are prone to self-sacrifice. That is because you falsely equate it to kindness.

You Become Attached Too Quickly

A man and a woman standing next to each other.
©Suhendro Purnomo/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who dives head over heels into a relationship far too early. You also form intense attachments too early. This can result in rejection, and even then, the intense pain you experience feels so good and satisfying.

You Think Heartbreaks Make You Special

A man and woman with tattoos on their back.
©Andrej Lišakov/Unsplash.com

You are prone to romanticizing your heartbreaks as if they are a component of your soul and personality. You consider yourself special for having survived so many of them, while in reality, this just means you love pain and can’t seem to hold onto a healthy relationship for your life.

You Feel Hollow without Emotional Chaos

A grayscale image of a man covering his face with both hands
©Mitchell Griest/Unsplash.com

You are the person who loves being in the midst of emotional chaos and drama and misses them intensely in moments of peace. The latter feels strange, unsettling, and too calm for your tastes.

You Mistake Self-Pity for Self-Awareness

A sad man in the lap of a woman.
©Pablo Merchán Montes/Unsplash.com

You are the kind of person who continuously ruminates over pain but never seeks to break the patterns that led to it. Experiencing this pain, savoring it, is something that drives you and keeps you from trying to fix it.

You Label Self-Abandonment as Love

A man whispers to the woman sitting with him on the bed.
©Vitaly Gariev/Unsplash.com

You might call it love, but it is nothing more than self-deprecation and abandonment. You constantly forgive, endure, and stay with a person who doesn’t deserve it. That simply implies that you are the kind of person who seeks to love without loving yourself, and that in itself is contradictory and profoundly ironic.

Final Thoughts

A man standing near a photo of a woman.
©Klara Kulikova/Unsplash

You aren’t irrevocably broken or irredeemable, just simply misguided. You have begun to confuse pain for peace and designated it as your comfort zone. You need to realize that this is unhealthy and that love is supposed to feel calm and satisfying. It shouldn’t hurt and not hurl you into unmitigated chaos or drama. You should strive to mend your ways and position yourself on the path to healing.

Dating & Confidence

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About TMM Staff

The Modest Man staff writers are experts in men's lifestyle who love teaching guys how to live their best lives.

If an article is published under TMM Staff, that means multiple writers worked on it. For example, sometimes several of us have experience with a certain brand, so we collaborate to publish a more thorough review.

Or, if an article was originally written by one person, but then it was updated by someone else, we'll re-publish it under TMM Staff.

Remember: all of our articles (including those below) are written by real people with decades of combined experience in men's fashion and lifestyle topics.

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