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5 things that draw good girls to bad boys
All Woman, Features, Relationships
 on June 1, 2026

5 things that draw good girls to bad boys

Marie BERBICK-BAILEY 

ALMOST every woman knows a good girl who fell for the wrong man. She saw all the warning signs but still fell deeply for a ‘bad boy’. She was warned and perhaps she even listened to the warnings, but threw caution to the wind and went in anyway. Maybe that good girl was you, or a sister, a friend, a daughter.

Often, the man is charming, exciting, confident, unpredictable, and emotionally unavailable all at the same time. Everyone around her can see the danger, but she can’t.

The truth is, good girls are not usually attracted to bad boys because they are foolish. Many times, they are attracted because of emotional patterns, unmet needs, past experiences, and internal struggles they have not fully healed from.

A woman can love God, be intelligent, educated, and kind-hearted and still find herself repeatedly drawn to men who drain her emotionally.

Here are five things that often draw good girls to bad boys.

She wants to fix him

Some women are natural nurturers. They see brokenness and immediately feel compassion. They see chaos and think they can fix it because they’re problem solvers. While others see red flags, they see someone in need of healing and in their minds, they can do it. She’s the healer who can fix him. While others are staring at dysfunction, she sees possibility.

She convinces herself that if she loves him enough, prays hard enough, supports him enough, or stands by him long enough, he will eventually become the man she knows he could be. But one of the hardest lessons many women learn is this: You cannot heal a man who is committed to staying broken.

Love is powerful, but love alone cannot transform someone who needs serious rehabilitation. Much of what he displays was learned over many years. He has to break patterns and belief systems, and if that does not happen, there’s no fixing him.

Chaos feels familiar

Some women grew up around emotional inconsistency. Maybe love was unstable. Maybe affection came with pain, or maybe they experienced rejection, abandonment, or a cycle of unhealthy relationships.

As painful as it sounds, sometimes people are drawn to what feels familiar, even when it is unhealthy. A calm, emotionally healthy man may feel “boring” to a woman whose nervous system has become accustomed to emotional highs and lows. She has become used to drama, and that’s what a ‘bad boy’ comes with.

The bad boy keeps her anxious, guessing, and emotionally invested, and unfortunately, some women mistake emotional instability for passion. A healthy relationship should not constantly leave you confused, insecure, or emotionally exhausted.

She is captivated by charisma

Bad boys often know how to present themselves. They are usually smooth talkers—confident, charismatic, bold, and exciting. They know how to get into a woman’s head. They know exactly what to say and do to get you hooked.

For a woman who grew up reserved and desires something different, the confidence and charisma of a ‘bad boy’ can feel incredibly exciting. Connecting with him is like breaking out of a prison. But a charismatic man who lacks good character is a dangerous man. That’s who a bad boy is: a charismatic, dangerous man—dangerous to your emotions, your peace, and your stability. He will talk you into hell, so discernment matters. Being likeable does not mean a man is trustworthy. A man being exciting does not mean he will protect your heart.

A woman who is attracted to bad boys often ignores character flaws because she is captivated by charisma.

She confuses attention with love

Some good girls are attracted to bad boys because bad boys know how to ‘feed’ a starving woman, and many good girls are starving—not physically, but emotionally. They long to feel chosen, desired, seen, and valued. Some long to step outside their ‘reserved and protected’ upbringing. So when a bad boy comes along, that adrenaline-filled excitement and shower of attention makes her mistake intensity for sincerity.

He texts constantly. He says all the right things—the things that make her toes tingle. He makes her feel like the centre of his world. But what many good girls fail to realise is that many toxic relationships begin just like that—with overwhelming intensity and excitement. Then, as time goes by, the intensity fades and the blinders begin to come off because real love is not just how intensely someone pursues you in the beginning. It is how consistently they honour you over time.

Attention is easy. Commitment is rare. That’s a bad boy for you right there. He will give you attention easily but rarely commits.

She doesn’t yet know her worth

Traumatised women who’ve never really experienced love from a good man carry a deep desire to be validated. They often struggle with low self-esteem, self-doubt, and a poor image of themselves.

The excitement and intensity that a bad boy brings into her life is often something she welcomes because it takes her away from the reality of trauma that she’s used to, because sometimes the issue is not just who you are attracted to, it’s what’s inside of you that still needs healing.

The sad truth is that a woman who struggles with low self-esteem and self-doubt may tolerate emotional inconsistency, disrespect, manipulation and pain simply because she doesn’t see her value.

If she’s healed, the less attractive dysfunction becomes because she will stop chasing emotional highs and start looking for character, stability, kindness, integrity, and peace.

The goal is not simply to feel butterflies. The goal is to experience a relationship that brings peace, growth, stability, and purpose.

Because the right relationship will not constantly break you down. It will help you become the woman God created you to be.

Marie Berbick-Bailey is a certified master life coach, women’s transformational coach, ordained minister, author, motivational speaker, wife, mother and big sister dedicated to empowering women to heal, thrive, and walk in purpose. Connect with her at www.marieberbick.com, www.marieberbickcoach.com, or e-mail marieberbick@gmail.com.

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