Why Longing Feels Live Love

Why Longing Feels Live Love

From ISSUE by Jan-Willem Dikkers

June 2, 2026 · 18 min

About this episode

The episode explores the psychological differences between longing and intimacy, highlighting the risks of pursuing unattainable love versus fostering genuine connections.

We examine the psychological distinction between longing and intimacy , explaining why the intense ache of pursuit is often mistaken for genuine love. While longing is organized around absence and the projection of meaning onto unavailable partners, intimacy is built on the sustained presence and mutual vulnerability of two available people. We argue that many people prefer the drama of longing because it feels familiar or protects them from the risks of truly being seen. Ultimately, the capacity for real connection depends on an internal sense of lovability and the ability to inhabit oneself securely. Transitioning from reaching for love to receiving it requires a nervous system capable of choosing stability over the high-stakes cycles of desire. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jwdikkers.substack.com

People in this episode

Host: Jan-Willem Dikkers

Topics covered

  • longing
  • intimacy
  • psychology
  • love
  • vulnerability
  • self-acceptance

Keywords

  • longing
  • intimacy
  • psychological distinction
  • love
  • vulnerability
  • connection
  • nervous system
  • self-lovability

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