You know that person who’s never single? The one who seems to have a new partner lined up before the old relationship is even officially over? There’s a term for that now: monkey-barring. Also called monkey-branching, it refers to the practice of holding onto your current relationship while reaching for the next one—never letting go of one branch until you’ve got a firm grip on another. It’s not just about moving on quickly after a breakup. It’s about the overlap, the planning, the emotional (and sometimes physical) investment in someone new while still technically committed to someone else. And while it might look like confidence or desirability from the outside, what it actually reveals about a person runs much deeper.
1. They’re Terrified Of Being Alone

At the core of monkey-barring is usually a deep fear of solitude. The idea of being single—even briefly—feels unbearable to someone who swings from relationship to relationship. It’s not that they love being in relationships so much as they can’t tolerate being outside of one. The partner matters less than the position of “having a partner.”
This fear often masquerades as something else: pickiness, high standards, or simply being someone who “loves love.” But the reality is that singlehood represents something terrifying to them—whether that’s loneliness, worthlessness, or confronting parts of themselves they’d rather avoid.
2. They Use Relationships as Emotional Regulation

For some people, romantic relationships serve as a primary way to manage their emotions. When they’re stressed, anxious, or feeling low, the attention and validation of a partner soothes them. Therapists note that people with anxious attachment styles often seek reassurance and validation through new romantic interests as a way to manage insecurity or bolster their sense of self-worth—and monkey-barring ensures that source of regulation never runs dry.
This creates a dependency that looks like love but functions more like medication. The relationship isn’t about connection—it’s about maintaining emotional equilibrium. When the current partner stops providing that regulation effectively, a new source needs to be secured.
3. They Avoid The Pain Of Endings

Breakups hurt. The grief, the loneliness, the uncertainty of starting over—it’s genuinely difficult. Monkey-barring allows someone to skip all of that. By lining up the next relationship before ending the current one, they fast-forward through the pain and land directly in the excitement of something new.
But avoiding pain doesn’t make it disappear; it accumulates. People who never sit with the discomfort of endings often carry unprocessed grief from relationship to relationship, wondering why the same patterns keep repeating, even though the partners keep changing.
4. They Have A Fragile Sense Of Self

People who monkey-bar often struggle to know who they are outside of a relationship. Their identity becomes so intertwined with being someone’s partner that singlehood feels like an identity crisis. Psychologists point out that people with low self-esteem may seek validation and attention from new partners to boost their confidence—jumping from one relationship to another temporarily inflates their self-worth while keeping them in control of when to stay and when to move on.
This fragile sense of self makes them highly adaptable in relationships—they become what each partner needs—but it also means they never develop a solid foundation of their own. They’re always borrowing someone else’s.
5. They’re Uncomfortable With Emotional Honesty

Ending a relationship requires difficult conversations. It means telling someone that things aren’t working, facing their pain, and sitting in the discomfort of being the one who caused it. Monkey-barring sidesteps all of that. The relationship ends not through honest communication but through gradual withdrawal and replacement.
This avoidance of emotional honesty often extends beyond breakups. People who monkey-bar frequently struggle with direct communication throughout relationships, preferring to hint, withdraw, or act out rather than say what they actually feel.
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6. They May Have Attachment Issues

Attachment styles formed in childhood often predict adult relationship patterns. People who monkey-bar frequently have anxious or avoidant attachment styles that make secure, stable relationships difficult. According to relationship therapists, individuals who engage in monkey-branching behaviors often experience attachment issues, self-esteem challenges, and difficulty with commitment—constantly seeking reassurance while simultaneously keeping one foot out the door.
These attachment patterns aren’t character flaws—they’re usually adaptations to early experiences. But without awareness and work, they lead to the same dynamics playing out with different partners over and over again.
7. They Struggle With Commitment

True commitment means choosing someone even when the relationship gets hard, even when someone more exciting comes along, even when you’re not getting everything you want. Monkey-barring is the opposite of this. It’s keeping options open, maintaining escape routes, and treating relationships as provisional rather than chosen. Experts describe this as an avoidance of long-term dedication—exploring new connections without fully investing in the existing relationship.
This doesn’t mean people who monkey-bar can’t commit on paper—they may move in together, get engaged, even get married. But the internal commitment, the closing of other doors, often never fully happens.
8. They Confuse Intensity With Intimacy

New relationships are exciting. There’s novelty, discovery, the rush of early attraction. People who monkey-bar often become addicted to this intensity, mistaking it for a deep connection. When the excitement fades, and real intimacy requires showing up consistently for an imperfect person, they start looking for the next hit.
This confusion leads to a pattern of relationships that start hot and end cold, with the person convinced they just haven’t found “the one” yet. In reality, they keep leaving at exactly the point where real intimacy would begin.
9. They’re Often Compartmentalizers

Successfully monkey-barring requires the ability to keep emotional worlds separate. The person has to maintain enough presence in the current relationship to keep it functional while simultaneously building something with someone new. This kind of compartmentalization takes psychological effort and a certain detachment from the reality of what they’re doing.
People who can do this effectively often seem remarkably calm during relationship transitions that would devastate others. They’ve already processed the ending internally—or more accurately, they’ve already moved their emotional investment elsewhere.
10. They Create A Pattern That Follows Them

Here’s the thing about monkey-barring: the new partner knows, on some level, how this relationship started. They watched someone leave a relationship for them, which means they know that person is capable of doing exactly that. This creates an undercurrent of insecurity that often poisons the new relationship from the start.
Relationships that begin through overlap tend to carry that instability forward. The same behaviors that ended the last relationship usually show up in the next one, creating a cycle that only breaks when the person stops swinging and does the internal work.
11. They Often Regret It Later

The immediate payoff of monkey-barring is clear: no lonely gap, no painful rebuilding, no uncomfortable single period. But the long-term costs often catch up. Guilt about how the previous relationship ended, recognition that they never gave it a real chance, awareness that they keep repeating the same patterns—these realizations tend to surface eventually.
Some people who monkey-bar spend years chasing something they could have had if they’d stayed and worked through difficulties. Others realize they’ve never actually been alone long enough to figure out what they actually want. The avoidance that felt like self-protection turns out to have cost them something important.
12. They Can Change—But It Takes Work

None of this is destiny. People who recognize monkey-barring patterns in themselves can absolutely develop healthier relationship habits. But it requires being willing to do the thing they’ve been avoiding: sit with discomfort, be alone, face the fears that drive the behavior in the first place.
Therapy helps. Self-awareness helps. Choosing to end a relationship cleanly before starting something new—and then actually being single for a while—helps. The pattern breaks when someone decides that the short-term pain of being alone is worth the long-term gain of building something real.
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