I always recognize women with certain kinds of emotional wounds.
It’s never been intentional. It’s not even conscious. But some wounded part of my heart seems to silently spot the wounds in another, as though certain people are marked with an invisible tag — one which can’t be seen with physical eyes.
It’s only from this tiny group of women who share this invisible tag that I somehow choose someone with whom to fall in love. In this way, I’m unconsciously confessing my emotional wounds — and the woman who falls in love me with me is confessing her own woundedness, too.
It was years ago when a psychologist pointed this out to me. I had been going through a great period of self-discovery — about my childhood wounds and my adult failures to heal them — when I found myself in therapy about a relationship that had ended in a confusing way.
The psychologist acknowledged that she didn’t know the woman, but she said she could assure me that my ex had her own issues which were the equal of my own. She told me that I wouldn’t have fallen in love with this ex-girlfriend if I hadn’t been deeply wounded — and she said that the woman wouldn’t have fallen in love with me if she hadn’t had matching wounds of her own.
This past week, I heard someone express the idea in a far simpler way.
“Wounds attract wounds.”

Freedom of the press is for everyone, not just those recognized by feds
The free market: It’s not just for greedy, rich white capitalists
Arming teachers for safety likely to create gang that can’t shoot straight
Hey, you! If you’re in New Jersey, you help pay for ‘Jersey Shore’
Normal days often turn to terror when you live with a narcissist
How can I make sense of a world that’s fundamentally nonsensical?
Ruthless impersonal judgment is typical tool of cultural conformity