'Why Didn't You Leave?' Is the Wrong Question
When we watch a friend, family member, or colleague unable to escape an abusive relationship, we ask: 'Why don't you just leave?' That question — however well-meant — is itself a second wound. Staying isn't a lack of love, weak will, or low self-esteem. It is a neurobiological bond, theorized by U.S. psychiatrist Patrick J. Carnes in his 1997 book The Betrayal Bond: Breaking Free of Exploitive Relationships as the 'betrayal bond' or 'trauma bond.'
This essay does not say 'leave.' It explains why leaving is neurologically so hard. As trauma authority Judith Herman writes in Trauma and Recovery (1992), understanding the pattern is the first step toward change.
Carnes 1997 — The Betrayal Bond
Carnes, a psychiatrist with three decades treating sex addiction and trauma recovery, observed patients returning endlessly to people who were obviously destroying them. Abusive parents, violent partners, exploitive religious leaders, fraudulent business partners — different targets, identical mechanism. The strongest bonds form when the very person inflicting harm is also the sole source of comfort.
Carnes named seven hallmarks of trauma bonds.
| # | Carnes' Seven Hallmarks | Clinical example |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Presence of fear | 'I'll kill myself if you leave' threats |
| 2 | History of trauma | Childhood abuse or neglect |
| 3 | Power differential | Economic, workplace, or immigration dependence |
| 4 | Intermittent reinforcement | Rage today, 'I love you more than anyone' in three days |
| 5 | Social isolation | Pressure to distance from friends/family |
| 6 | Betrayal | A trusted person breaks promises or confidences |
| 7 | Sense of inability to leave | The conviction 'I cannot survive without them' |
Not all seven need be present, but three or more in combination produce a strong trauma bond, per Carnes' clinical reports.
Neuroscience — Why It Feels Like Addiction
B.F. Skinner's classic finding: intermittent reinforcement produces far more persistent behavior than continuous reinforcement. It's the slot-machine principle. A vending machine that always pays out is easy to abandon; a slot machine that occasionally jackpots is gripping for life.
Abusive relationships have precisely the slot-machine structure. Ninety percent of the time is coldness, criticism, or neglect; the 10% of 'tender moments' creates a dopamine reward, and the brain endures the rest waiting for the next tenderness. Helen Fisher's 2016 fMRI work on the recently rejected found their brains lit up regions identical to cocaine withdrawal (ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens). 'The pain of heartbreak' is not a metaphor; it is a neural fact.
Two hormones get dysregulated. Cortisol (stress) stays chronically elevated, degrading judgment (prefrontal hypofunction). Oxytocin (attachment) gets bound to the abuser — make-up sex or nights crying together flood oxytocin, and the brain mis-learns the abuser as 'safe base.'
Dutton & Painter 1981 — First Academic Naming
UBC psychologists Donald Dutton and Susan Painter introduced 'traumatic bonding' into the scholarly literature in their 1981 Victimology paper, expanded in 1993 in Violence and Victims. Their thesis: two conditions combined — a power imbalance and intermittent abuse — produce the strongest emotional bond in the abused party.
The Dutton–Painter model is not 'the victim is weak.' It is structural conditions create the bond. The same person does not tolerate abuse where power is equal; where it is steeply unequal (minor–adult, subordinate–boss, immigrant–native, follower–guru) they cannot leave.
Walker 1979 — Three-Phase Cycle of Violence
Clinical psychologist Lenore Walker, in The Battered Woman (1979), described domestic violence's three-phase cycle.
- Tension building: minor criticism, irritability, control accumulate. The victim feels they're 'walking on eggshells.'
- Acute battering: verbal abuse, violence, rape. Brief but intense.
- Loving contrition / honeymoon: the abuser cries, apologizes, gives gifts, promises 'never again.' The victim believes 'this is who they really are.'
As the cycle repeats, honeymoons shorten and violence escalates.
'Stockholm Syndrome' — A Misused Media Term
'Stockholm Syndrome' arose when Swedish psychiatrist Nils Bejerot used it in 1973 press coverage of a Stockholm bank robbery where hostages showed sympathy for their captors. For fifty years film, news, and drama have used it as a catch-all for 'victim loves abuser.'
Academic review is critical. Namnyak et al. (2008) in Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica concluded the diagnostic criteria are not consensual and empirical data are scarce. Adorjan et al. (2012) in Sociological Quarterly argued the term is largely a 'media-and-law-enforcement myth.' 'Stockholm Syndrome' appears in neither the DSM-5 nor ICD-11.
Key distinction: 'trauma bonding' has clinically agreed mechanisms; 'Stockholm Syndrome' is loose and often portrays victims as 'irrational.' Use 'trauma bond' or 'betrayal bond.'
The Korean Reality — 17,538 Dating-Violence Reports and 1366
Korean National Police Agency statistics report 17,538 dating-violence cases in 2022 (filings; actual incidence is far higher). Domestic-violence cases run over 200,000 per year.
Crisis resources:
- Women's Emergency Hotline 1366 — 24/7, nationwide, free. Violence response, counseling, shelter referral.
- Domestic/Sexual Violence Counseling Centers nationwide via 1366.
- Sunflower Centers — integrated medical, legal, psychological support for sexual violence.
- Police 112; HR or grievance offices in workplaces or schools.
You can call even if 'it hasn't reached violence yet' or 'I have no evidence.' 1366 helps with information and safety planning first.
Recovery — Herman 1992's Three Stages
Harvard psychiatrist Judith Herman's Trauma and Recovery (1992) lays out a three-stage model that applies to trauma-bond recovery.
Stage 1: Safety
Physical and psychological safety first. Distance from the abuser, secure housing, first steps toward economic independence, one or two trustworthy supporters. You don't need to excavate 'what happened' deeply here. Stabilization first.
Stage 2: Remembrance and Mourning
Once safe, with a trauma-trained clinician, narrate the events and grieve what was lost (time, self-esteem, other relationships, your former self). EMDR, trauma-focused CBT, and somatic experiencing are used. Bessel van der Kolk's The Body Keeps the Score (2014) emphasizes trauma is not 'a memory' but 'a state etched in the body' — integrate the body, not just words.
Stage 3: Reconnection
Build a new self and new relationships. Move from 'victim' to 'survivor' to 'someone living an ordinary life.' Some survivors enter advocacy; others quietly rebuild. Both are valid.
Healthy Bond vs Trauma Bond
To avoid confusion: healthy love is intense too, and breakups hurt anyone. The difference is pattern.
- Healthy: stable amid conflict; criticism doesn't attack personhood; leaving feels safe; friends/family relationships maintained; self-worth grows.
- Trauma bond: 'without them I'm finished' panic; good moments are followed by larger punishment; threats when you mention leaving; progressive isolation; self-worth erodes.
A Closing Word
Telling someone in a trauma bond to 'just leave' is like telling a person with a broken leg to run a marathon. First safety, then treatment, then time. To anyone who has already left — it was not weakness. Your brain was caught in a situation it was designed exactly to endure. Getting out was an enormous achievement.
In crisis in Korea: Women's Emergency Hotline 1366, 24/7, nationwide.