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What Is Your Attachment Style? Understand How We Connect, Relate, and Heal

Our attachment style shapes the way we love, feel safe and grow. Whether you identify as a person who is able to securely attach to others or if you carry the wounds of anxious, avoidant, or fearful attachment, knowing your attachment style opens pathways to healing and healthy relationships.

The Four Primary Attachment Styles

Secure Attachment Style

Secure attachment begins with present caregiving. The consistent presence, emotional availability, and acceptance of our parents or caregivers makes all of the difference. When children grow up knowing they matter and can rely on another, they develop a “secure base” to explore life, manage stress, and return with comfort. As adults, securely attached individuals tend to:

  • Trust easily
  • Communicate their needs clearly
  • Feel emotionally regulated under pressure
  • Sustain healthy intimacy without fear of abandonment

Yet even those grounded in secure attachment may encounter challenges in relationships. Life is filled with times of stress, loss, and miscommunication. Healing has more to do with choosing to stay connected, feel nurtured and be compassionate.

Anxious Attachment Style

Individuals with anxious or preoccupied attachment style, feel a sense of uncertainty; “Will they stay? Do they care enough?” This wound often stems from inconsistent and unpredictable love and support during childhood. Anxious attachment is marked by emotional hypersensitivity and self-doubt.

Adults with this style may:

  • Seek constant validation
  • React strongly to perceived distance
  • Fear rejection
  • Yearn for reassurance
  • Experience turbulent relationships driven by unspoken emotional needs

Healing begins when individuals learn to self-soothe, reparent their inner child, regulate their nervous system, heal trauma and experience consistency in supportive relationships.

Avoidant Attachment Style

The avoidant or dismissive style has independence as a shield. This comes from environments that discouraged emotional reliance or even punished vulnerability. This style has built a wall of self-reliance around them that says: “I got this. I don’t need you.” Internally confident but interpersonally detached, individuals may:

  • Withdraw in stress
  • Devalue intimacy
  • Deny emotional discomfort or dependency

While this fosters resilience, it also blocks deep connection and emotional healing. Healing for this attachment style involves softening rigid self-reliance and learning to allow others in. Body-centered practices, somatic therapies, trauma informed therapy and compassionate self-awareness allow the wounds to heal and connection to begin.

Fearful‑Avoidant (Disorganized) Attachment Style

Perhaps the most complex, fearful-avoidant attachment combines a deep yearning with anxiety and fear. It often looks like a dance of approach and retreat or a push and pull in relationships. Trauma from chaotic caregiving or a highly unpredictable childhood leads to a profound mistrust of others and even one’s own feelings.

Individuals with fearful-avoidant style may have:

  • Desire for intimacy paired with distrust
  • Suppressed emotions
  • Inner conflict between self-belief and self-doubt

Healing here requires coregulation and trustworthy attunement. The experience of safety and consistency in relationships are paramount.

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Become Securely Attached: Healing attachment wounds

Attachment styles are not set in stone they can evolve as we evolve. With awareness and support, we can heal old patterns and move toward more secure, connected relationships. A key part of this healing journey involves exploring the roots of our attachment style, understanding any unresolved attachment wounds, healing trauma and learning how to cultivate healthy, supportive connections with others.

About the Authors

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Hilary Stokes Phd

Dr. Hilary Stokes is a licensed psychotherapist in private practice in San Diego, California. Dr. Hilary received her PhD in psychology with a specialty in transpersonal psychology from San Diego University for Integrative Studies, a master’s degree in social work from San Diego State University and a master’s degree in Sport Psychology from San Jose State University. In addition to her ….

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Kim Ward Phd

Dr. Kim Ward received her PhD in psychology with a specialty in transpersonal psychology from San Diego University for Integrative Studies. She also holds a master’s degree in transpersonal psychology from John F. Kennedy University in Orinda, California. Dr. Kim is a certified trauma-informed coach and life coach in private practice in San Diego, California. In…

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