
The 7 Stages of a BPD Relationship Cycle: A Therapist’s Guide
The BPD relationship cycle follows a predictable seven-stage pattern — idealization, testing, devaluation, crisis, reconciliation, calm, and re-idealization — each with its own emotional signature and its own trap. The engine driving every stage is the terror of abandonment. Once you can see the architecture of this cycle, you can stop blaming yourself for the whiplash and start making a different choice.
- He’d Replayed the Last Three Breakups Looking for What He’d Done Wrong
- Stage 1: Idealization (The Savior)
- Stage 2: Anxiety and Testing (The Crack in the Pedestal)
- Stage 3: Devaluation (The Betrayer)
- Stage 4: The Push (Preemptive Abandonment)
- Stage 5: The Discard (The Breakup)
- Stage 6: The Regret and Panic
- Stage 7: The Hoover (The Return)
- Breaking the Cycle: Your Recovery
- Professional Support and Next Steps
- Frequently Asked Questions
He’d Replayed the Last Three Breakups Looking for What He’d Done Wrong
Mark was forty-two, an architect in San Francisco, and he came to therapy after his third breakup with the same woman in eighteen months. He had a yellow legal pad on his lap — dates, incidents, patterns he’d been tracking for weeks.
“I feel like I’m losing my mind,” he told me in our first session. “When we’re good, it’s the best relationship of my life. She tells me I’m the only man who has ever understood her. But then, out of nowhere, a switch flips. Last week, I was ten minutes late coming home because of traffic, and she packed a bag, told me I was a selfish narcissist who never cared about her, and left. Three days later, she was crying on my porch, begging me to take her back.”
Mark was trapped in the BPD relationship cycle — a pattern driven by two conflicting, terrifying fears: the fear of abandonment (which drives them to pull you close) and the fear of engulfment (which drives them to push you away).
Here are the seven stages of that cycle.
SPLITTING
A psychological defense mechanism in which a person is unable to hold contradictory thoughts or feelings simultaneously, leading to an all-or-nothing perception of self and others. In BPD, splitting means a partner can be idealized as a savior one day and devalued as an enemy the next — with no middle ground and no predictable trigger.
In plain terms: Think of it as a light switch, not a dimmer. There’s no “a little annoyed” or “kind of in love.” There’s worshipped or despised, hero or villain — and the switch can flip in a single afternoon.
TRAUMA BOND
A powerful emotional attachment formed through cycles of intermittent reinforcement — alternating periods of intense warmth and painful rejection. The unpredictability of the cycle actually deepens the attachment, activating the same neurochemical pathways as addiction.
In plain terms: It’s why you can’t stop thinking about someone who keeps hurting you. The high of the good periods is real — and your nervous system has learned to wait for them, compulsively, the way a gambler waits for the next win.
“you tore both wings out from the root / to make sure i could never fly anywhere ever again. / — mother & daughter.”
— Amanda Lovelace, poet
— Amanda Lovelace
Stage 1: Idealization (The Savior)
The relationship begins with intense, intoxicating idealization. The borderline partner experiences you not just as a good match, but as the ultimate answer to their chronic feelings of emptiness and pain.
In this stage, you’re placed on a pedestal. They may mirror your interests, agree with all your opinions, and tell you that you’re entirely different from anyone they’ve ever met. The emotional intimacy accelerates at a dizzying pace.
For the non-BPD partner, this stage feels incredible. You feel seen, adored, and essential. You’re not just loved; you’re worshipped.
What’s actually happening: The borderline partner has split you “all-good.” You’re the Savior. But this position is inherently unstable, because it requires you to be perfect.
Stage 2: Anxiety and Testing (The Crack in the Pedestal)
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Because you’re a human being, you will eventually fail to be perfect. You will have a bad day, you will need space, or you will disagree with them.
When this happens, the borderline partner’s core wound — the terror of abandonment — is activated. They realize that because you’re so important to them, you have the power to destroy them if you leave.
To manage this anxiety, they begin to test you. They may pick small fights, make unreasonable demands, or act out to see if you will stay. They’re looking for reassurance, but because their fear is a bottomless well, no amount of reassurance is ever enough.
What’s actually happening: The anxiety of potential abandonment is overriding the idealization. The pedestal is cracking.
Stage 3: Devaluation (The Betrayer)
When the anxiety becomes intolerable, the split occurs. The borderline partner flips you from “all-good” to “all-bad.”
You’re no longer the Savior; you’re the Betrayer. The shift is sudden, absolute, and deeply shocking to the non-BPD partner. The things they previously loved about you are now the things they despise. Your confidence is now “arrogance.” Your calmness is now “coldness.”
During devaluation, the borderline partner can be incredibly cruel. They may use your deepest vulnerabilities against you, gaslight you, and rewrite the history of the relationship to cast you as the villain.
What’s actually happening: The borderline partner can’t hold the nuance of “I love you, but I’m currently angry with you.” To protect themselves from the pain of your perceived betrayal, they must convince themselves that you’re entirely bad.
Stage 4: The Push (Preemptive Abandonment)
Driven by the absolute certainty that you’re going to abandon them (because you’re now “all-bad”), the borderline partner engages in a preemptive strike.
I’ll reject you before you can reject me.
They push you away. They may withdraw affection entirely, give you the silent treatment, or escalate the conflict to an unbearable level. They’re trying to create distance to protect themselves from the pain of the abandonment they believe is imminent.
What’s actually happening: They’re acting out their trauma. They’re recreating the abandonment they fear so they can control it.
Stage 5: The Discard (The Breakup)
In many BPD cycles, the push culminates in a discard. The borderline partner ends the relationship, often abruptly and with profound coldness.
They may immediately jump into a new relationship (a new “Savior”) to soothe the agonizing emptiness that follows the discard. To the non-BPD partner, it appears as though the borderline partner never cared about them at all.
What’s actually happening: The discard is a survival mechanism. By cutting you off completely, they temporarily neutralize the threat you pose to their nervous system.
Stage 6: The Regret and Panic
Once the perceived threat of your abandonment is gone, the borderline partner’s nervous system begins to settle. As the dysregulation fades, the “all-bad” split begins to dissolve.
They remember the good parts of the relationship. They realize what they’ve lost. The original terror of abandonment returns, but this time, it’s real: you’re actually gone.
This triggers profound panic, regret, and a desperate need to restore the attachment.
What’s actually happening: The split is reversing. You’re moving from “all-bad” back to “all-good.”
Stage 7: The Hoover (The Return)
Named after the vacuum cleaner, “hoovering” is the attempt to suck you back into the relationship.
The borderline partner reaches out. They may offer profound, tearful apologies. They may promise that they’ve changed, that they see what they did wrong, and that it will never happen again. They may use a crisis (an illness, a family emergency) to force contact.
If you accept the hoover, the relationship immediately returns to Stage 1: Idealization. The relief of the reunion is intoxicating for both partners. You believe the nightmare is over.
But because the core pathology of BPD remains untreated, the cycle will inevitably begin again.
Breaking the Cycle: Your Recovery
For Mark, the realization that he was in a predictable cycle — rather than a unique, tragic romance — was the turning point.
“I kept thinking that if I just loved her better during the devaluation phase, I could stop the discard,” he told me. “I didn’t realize the cycle was a machine. I was just a cog in it.”
You can’t stop the cycle by changing your behavior. The cycle is driven by their internal pathology, not your external actions. The only way to stop the cycle is to step out of it.
1. Recognize the Trauma Bond. The intense highs of the idealization phase and the terrifying lows of the devaluation phase create a trauma bond — an addiction to the intermittent reinforcement of the relationship. Treat your desire to return to the relationship as an addiction withdrawal, not as proof of true love.
2. Do Not Accept the Hoover. When the hoover comes (and it almost always does), hold the boundary. Don’t engage. Don’t explain why you’re not engaging. Any contact feeds the cycle.
3. Grieve the Idealization Phase. You must accept that the person from Stage 1 — the perfect Savior/Adorer dynamic — was a symptom of the disorder, not the “real” person. You’re grieving an illusion, AND that grief is entirely real.
Professional Support and Next Steps
Recovering from the BPD relationship cycle requires significant support. The cognitive dissonance, the shattered self-esteem, and the physiological addiction of the trauma bond are too heavy to carry alone.
When seeking a therapist, look for someone who understands the specific mechanics of the BPD relationship cycle, will help you rebuild your trust in your own reality, and can help you explore why your own relational template made you susceptible to the idealization phase in the first place. If you’re ready to talk to someone, you can explore therapy or connect with Annie directly.
If you’re exhausted from riding the rollercoaster, I want you to know this: You’re allowed to get off the ride. You’re allowed to choose a life that’s boring, stable, and profoundly safe.
Warmly, Annie
- Linehan, Marsha M. Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder. Guilford Press, 1993.
- Kernberg, Otto F. Borderline Conditions and Pathological Narcissism. Jason Aronson, 1975.
- Carnes, Patrick. The Betrayal Bond. Health Communications, Inc., 1997.
- van der Kolk, Bessel. The Body Keeps the Score. Viking, 2014.
- Herman, Judith. Trauma and Recovery. Basic Books, 1992.
Further Reading on Relational Trauma
Explore Annie’s clinical writing on relational trauma recovery.
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Annie Wright
LMFT · Relational Trauma Specialist · W.W. Norton Author
Helping ambitious women finally feel as good as their résumé looks.
As a licensed psychotherapist, trauma-informed executive coach, and relational trauma specialist with over 15,000 clinical hours, she guides ambitious women — including Silicon Valley leaders, physicians, and entrepreneurs — in repairing the psychological foundations beneath their impressive lives. Annie is the founder and former CEO of Evergreen Counseling, a multimillion-dollar trauma-informed therapy center she built, scaled, and successfully exited. A regular contributor to Psychology Today, her expert commentary has appeared in Forbes, Business Insider, Inc., NBC, and The Information. She is currently writing her first book with W.W. Norton.


