

Why We Repeat the Same Pain!
A psychoanalytic reflection on repetition compulsion
​
There are moments in therapy when a patient, weary-eyed and ashamed, asks:
“Why does this keep happening to me?”
They speak of the same arguments, the same ache in love, the same withdrawal when closeness comes near.
They know better now—but still, they find themselves here again.
And it’s not because they want to suffer.
It’s because the soul is still searching for something.
Repetition: Freud’s First Whisper
Freud called this mysterious phenomenon repetition compulsion—the strange, often painful tendency to reenact past experiences, especially those bound in trauma or loss.
In Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920), he observed how some individuals return, again and again, to circumstances that hurt them, as if drawn by an invisible thread.
“The patient does not remember anything of what he has forgotten and repressed; he acts it out.” — Freud
But he also saw that this repetition wasn’t random. It was an unconscious attempt to master what could not be felt fully the first time. A replay of the wound, in search of a different ending.
The Lens of Today: What We Now Understand
Modern psychoanalysis has deepened this idea.
-
Object Relations Theory teaches us that we internalize early relational patterns—often painful or inconsistent ones—and unconsciously seek them again, hoping this time they’ll change.
We don’t repeat because we enjoy the outcome. We repeat because it feels familiar… like home. -
Attachment Theory reminds us that early bonds become emotional blueprints. We seek the same kinds of closeness—even if they leave us abandoned or afraid—because our nervous system calls that “love.”
-
Trauma Studies now tell us that repetition can be a reenactment of unprocessed experience. The body, the psyche, the unconscious—they try again and again, knocking at the door of consciousness, saying:
“Feel this now. It wasn’t safe to feel it then.”
In the Therapy Room: A Sacred Pattern
In my work with patients, repetition is not pathology. It’s symbolic speech.
It shows up in the texture of relationships, in dreams, in transference.
It lives in the patient who becomes angry with me for “not being there”—just as they felt abandoned as a child.
It emerges in the one who chooses emotionally unavailable partners, again and again—each time hoping this one will stay.
These moments are not mistakes.
They are the unconscious trying to finish the story.
And when we notice them—gently, without shame—we create space for something new.
Not a correction.
Not a fix.
But a witnessing.
And from that, a soft beginning of transformation.
A Gentle Ending: From Repetition to Recognition
​
We do not grow out of our patterns by force.
We grow by recognizing them—by slowly bringing light into the rooms we’ve kept shut.
To the one reading this, who is tired of circling the same pain:
It is not weakness that brings you back.
It is longing.
It is hope.
It is the deeper self, asking to be seen in a way it never was.
And when it is seen—truly seen—the pattern softens.
The ache finds a voice.
And life, in its quiet way, begins again.
