Are you ‘puffer-fishing’? The new dating trend revealing why most of Gen Z might be single
Saloni Jha | May 18, 2026, 11:01 IST
Puffer-fishing is the dating habit where people pull away the second things get serious, and Gen Z knows it all too well.
Image credit : ChatGPT | So if every relationship in your life keeps ending the second it gets serious, maybe it is not bad luck.
Congratulations, you might be scaring off your own love life. As modern dating has officially reached the stage where people can like someone, miss them, stalk their stories daily… and still emotionally disappear the second things become real.
And apparently, there is now a name for that behaviour: puffer-fishing.
![X | A healthy relationship is not built through mind games, mixed signals or pretending not to care.]()
No, it has nothing to do with actual fish. Unfortunately.
Puffer-fishing is basically when someone starts pushing a person away the moment emotional intimacy enters the chat. One minute they are replying instantly, planning future dates and acting obsessed with you. The next? Suddenly they “need space”, become confusingly distant or start acting emotionally unavailable for absolutely no reason.
Classic.
![X | Puffer-fishing is basically when someone starts pushing a person away the moment emotional intimacy enters the chat.]()
The strange part is that most puffer-fishers are not trying to be villains. A lot of them genuinely want love and connection — they just panic when it actually starts happening.
Instead of enjoying emotional closeness, their brain treats intimacy like a threat. So they instinctively create distance to feel safe again. That can look like mixed signals, random cold behaviour, avoiding commitment or acting detached right when the relationship begins getting serious.
![X | The harsh truth is that love cannot survive inside emotional defence mode forever.]()
Basically: “I like you… but please do not perceive me too deeply.”
And honestly, in a generation raised on situationships, ghosting and emotional burnout, this behaviour has become weirdly common.
Puffer-fishing may temporarily protect people from heartbreak, rejection or vulnerability, but it also sabotages healthy relationships before they even begin.
Because at some point, constantly pulling away stops being self-protection and starts becoming emotional self-destruction with cute Instagram stories on top.
Real connection requires discomfort sometimes. It requires being honest, emotionally available and resisting the urge to vanish every time feelings become too real.
The harsh truth is that love cannot survive inside emotional defence mode forever.
A healthy relationship is not built through mind games, mixed signals or pretending not to care. It is built when people allow themselves to be fully seen, awkwardness, fears and all.
So if every relationship in your life keeps ending the second it gets serious, maybe it is not bad luck.
Maybe you are just puffer-fishing your way out of intimacy.
And apparently, there is now a name for that behaviour: puffer-fishing.
What is the new dating trend puffer-fishing?
Puffer-fishing is basically when someone starts pushing a person away the moment emotional intimacy enters the chat. One minute they are replying instantly, planning future dates and acting obsessed with you. The next? Suddenly they “need space”, become confusingly distant or start acting emotionally unavailable for absolutely no reason.
Classic.
Image credit : X | Puffer-fishing is basically when someone starts pushing a person away the moment emotional intimacy enters the chat.
Why Gen Z keeps doing this
Instead of enjoying emotional closeness, their brain treats intimacy like a threat. So they instinctively create distance to feel safe again. That can look like mixed signals, random cold behaviour, avoiding commitment or acting detached right when the relationship begins getting serious.
Basically: “I like you… but please do not perceive me too deeply.”
And honestly, in a generation raised on situationships, ghosting and emotional burnout, this behaviour has become weirdly common.
The problem? You cannot build love while running from it
Because at some point, constantly pulling away stops being self-protection and starts becoming emotional self-destruction with cute Instagram stories on top.
Real connection requires discomfort sometimes. It requires being honest, emotionally available and resisting the urge to vanish every time feelings become too real.
Vulnerability is unfortunately part of the plot
A healthy relationship is not built through mind games, mixed signals or pretending not to care. It is built when people allow themselves to be fully seen, awkwardness, fears and all.
So if every relationship in your life keeps ending the second it gets serious, maybe it is not bad luck.
Maybe you are just puffer-fishing your way out of intimacy.
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