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6 Signs Of Love Bombing And How To Protect Your Heart

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Before becoming a dating coach and a happily married woman, I was someone who gave people too many chances in dating, as I always saw the best in people. I’d make excuses for red flags I clearly saw and convince myself that someone’s intense behavior was just passion, not problematic.

I fell for love bombing more times than I care to admit. And here’s the kicker: I got so addicted to that high-intensity, whirlwind romance that when someone genuinely cared about me and wanted to take things at a healthy pace, I’d get bored. Can you believe that? I mistook drama for love and stability for disinterest.

If you’re nodding along right now, you’re not alone. Falling for love bombing is incredibly common, and it’s designed to be addictive.

What Exactly Is Love Bombing?

Love bombing is a manipulation tactic where someone overwhelms you with excessive attention, affection, and grand gestures early in a relationship. It’s not genuine love. It’s a calculated move to gain control and create emotional dependency. The person doing it floods you with chemicals and hormones to make you feel like you’ve found “the one,” until they suddenly stop. Then you find yourself going through withdrawals and trying to relive that high again.

Here are some signs to help you protect yourself from the love bomber.

1. It’s Too Much, Too Fast

The best feeling in the world is when the person you’re into makes you feel like a complete priority. Buying lavish gifts after the first date. They’re talking about your future together after three dates. They’ve already planned your summer vacation, and you’ve known each other for two weeks.

This was my biggest weakness. I remember one guy who, on our second date, started talking about what our kids would look like and where we’d honeymoon. Instead of feeling alarmed, my mistake was I felt chosen. Special. Like I was so amazing that he couldn’t help but picture our whole life together.

But here’s the thing, love bombing isn’t about you being so incredible that they can’t contain themselves. It’s about them creating a fantasy so compelling that you’ll overlook the fact that they don’t actually know anything about you yet. How can someone love you before they know your funny quirks, what you’re like when you’re at your worst, or how you handle conflict?

Love bombers rush timelines because they need you emotionally invested before you have time to see through their act. They’ll talk about moving in together, meeting parents, or an exclusive commitment while you’re still figuring out if you even have the same values.

2. Constant Communication Overload

Your phone is buzzing all day, every day. Good morning texts, lunch check-ins, afternoon updates, evening calls, and goodnight messages. If you don’t respond within an hour, they’re asking if you’re okay or if they did something wrong.

I used to think this was romantic. The constant attention made me feel so wanted and important. One guy I dated would text me literally every hour he was awake. If I was in a meeting and couldn’t respond for two hours, I’d come back to seven messages asking if I was mad at him, if he said something wrong, or if I was losing interest.

At first, I loved feeling like such a priority. But what I didn’t realize was that this wasn’t about love it was about control and anxiety. He wasn’t texting because he adored me so much he couldn’t help himself. He was texting because he needed constant reassurance that I wasn’t going anywhere.

This behavior serves two purposes for love bombers: it keeps you thinking about them constantly (you can’t live your life without interruption), and it establishes a pattern where your responsiveness becomes a measure of your feelings. Soon, you feel guilty for not responding immediately because you don’t want to “hurt their feelings.”

3. They Want to Be Your Everything (And Want You to Be Theirs)

Suddenly, they’re your best friend, your partner, your entertainment, and your emotional support all rolled into one. They want to be included in everything and seem hurt when you spend time with friends or family.

This was probably the most damaging pattern I fell into. I thought it was romantic when someone wanted to spend every free moment with me. When they’d say things like “I just want to be with you all the time” or “Why do you need anyone else when you have me?” I interpreted it as deep love.

But what I was actually experiencing was isolation disguised as devotion. Love bombers want to become your entire world because it gives them complete control over your reality. When you’re getting all your social needs met by one person, you lose perspective. You stop bouncing ideas off friends, you stop getting reality checks from family, and you stop maintaining the relationships that could help you see red flags.

I remember one relationship where I gradually stopped making plans with anyone else because every time I made plans, he would start a fight with me and make me feel guilty for having relationships outside of ours. I used to say things like, “If you love me so much, why do you have to hang out with anyone else? Shouldn’t I be enough?”. But slowly, I started realizing I was being separated from my support system.

The most manipulative part is how they make you feel guilty for wanting other relationships. They’ll act hurt or rejected when you choose to see friends, making you feel like you’re being mean or ungrateful.

Want to know the difference between love bombing vs. genuine interest? I share 4 signs in this video!

4. Intense Emotional Declarations

“I’ve never felt this way before,” “You’re so different from everyone else,” “I think you might be my soulmate,” and “Where have you been all my life?” all within the first few months.

These declarations used to make me feel like I’d won the lottery. Finally, someone who recognized how special I was! Someone who could see past my flaws to the amazing person underneath! I ate it up every single time.

But here’s what I learned: anyone who declares you their soulmate before they REALLY know you! Is loving the fantasy they’ve created, not the complex, real person you actually are.

Love bombers use these intense declarations to make you feel uniquely special and chosen. They’ll often compare you to every other person they’ve dated, telling you how different and wonderful you are. But think about itif they’re willing to declare you the love of their life after three weeks, what does that say about their judgment? What does that say about how they’ve treated people in their past?

These declarations are also a form of pressure. When someone tells you they’ve never felt this way before, you feel obligated to feel the same way back. When they say you’re their soulmate, disagreeing feels cruel.

They’re not sharing genuine feelings. They’re creating expectations and putting you in a position where you feel like you have to reciprocate their intensity.

I also noticed that love bombers often have a very romanticized view of love that’s based on movies and novels rather than reality. They’re looking for that earth-shattering, all-consuming passion that makes for good entertainment but terrible real-life relationships.

5. They Mirror Everything You Do

Suddenly, they love hiking (you mentioned it once), they’re also close with their family (like you), and wow, they’ve always wanted to learn Italian too! It’s like you’re dating your clone.

This one is sneaky because it feels so good to find someone who “gets” you. I remember thinking I’d found my perfect match when every conversation revealed another thing we had in common. Same favorite movies, same values, same life goals it felt like fate.

But what I was actually experiencing was strategic mirroring. Love bombers become chameleons, adopting your interests, values, and personality traits to make you feel like you’ve found your other half. They don’t have strong identities of their own, so they borrow yours.

The scary part is how good they get at this. They’ll remember offhand comments you made about loving sunrise hikes and suddenly they’re sending you photos of their morning trail runs. You mention that family is important to you, and they start talking about how much they value their relationships with their siblings. You say you’re thinking about learning a new language, and surprise, they’ve been wanting to do the same thing!

What makes this particularly manipulative is that it creates a false sense of compatibility and destiny. You start thinking “What are the odds that we’d have so much in common?” The odds are actually pretty high when one person is deliberately copying the other.

I learned to spot this when I realized that these “perfect matches” never had strong opinions that differed from mine. They never challenged me to see things differently or introduced me to new perspectives. Everything was just too convenient, too perfect, too similar.

6. It Feels Almost Too Good to Be True

That little voice in your head keeps whispering, “This is amazing, but something feels off.” Trust that voice. Love bombing is meant to feel intoxicating, and your intuition is picking up on the manipulation.

This is the sign I ignored the most, and it cost me dearly. I would literally have thoughts like “This feels too fast” or “Something doesn’t add up” and then I’d immediately dismiss them. I’d tell myself I was self-sabotaging because I wasn’t used to being treated well.

But here’s what I know now: your intuition is incredibly smart. It picks up on micro-expressions, inconsistencies, and energy that your conscious mind might miss. When something feels too good to be true, it’s usually because it is.

Love bombing creates an artificial high that your nervous system recognizes as unsustainable. That nagging feeling isn’t anxiety about being happy it’s your intuition recognizing that this level of intensity isn’t natural or healthy. Real love doesn’t feel like a drug; it feels like coming to a safe home.

I remember the exact moment I learned to trust this feeling. I was dating someone who was checking every box. Saying all the right things, planning amazing dates, showering me with attention. But I felt anxious all the time because he would give me all this attention, then disappear. Then show up again, when I was angry with another love bombing session would begin until I forgave him.  

The hot and cold dance went on for several months until I finally recognized that my anxiety was my inner alarm system detecting danger.

Why We Fall for It (And Why I Did, Repeatedly)

Here’s what I learned the hard way: love bombing works because it targets our deepest desires. We all want to feel special, chosen, and cherished. When someone makes us feel like we’re the center of their universe, it’s intoxicating.

I got so used to this intensity that healthy relationships felt boring by comparison. When someone would text me normally (not every hour), take time to plan dates thoughtfully (instead of spontaneous grand gestures), and want to actually get to know me before professing their love, I’d think they weren’t that interested.

I had confused the short bursts of intensity with passion; I now realize it was never real love.

How to Protect Yourself

Slow down (give it at least 90 – days). I know it’s hard when everything feels magical, but real love doesn’t have an expiration date. If it’s meant to be, it’ll still be wonderful in three months when you’ve taken time to actually know each other. Remember, you are meeting the sales representative in the beginning. Who are they when they aren’t trying to impress you?

Keep your support system. Don’t abandon your friends and family for someone new, no matter how amazing they seem. Your people know you and can often spot red flags you’re too smitten to see.

Trust your gut. If something feels off, don’t ignore it. Our intuition is incredibly powerful, especially when someone is trying to manipulate us.

Look for consistency over intensity. Someone who shows up reliably, keeps their word, and treats you well consistently is worth a thousand grand gestures from someone who’s unpredictable.

If you’re ready to break the cycle and build the healthy relationship you deserve, I offer a Free Relationship Readiness Review. Book your session here and I will help you identify your patterns and create a clear path forward.

The post 6 Signs of Love Bombing and How to Protect Your Heart appeared first on Amie Leadingham - Amie the Dating Coach | Master Certified Relationship Coach | Online Dating Expert | Author .