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Attachment

How Different Attachment Styles Show Up in Relationships -- And How Therapy Can Help

June 2, 2025

We all carry patterns into our relationships -- some we are aware of, and others we are still figuring out as we go. Maybe it feels like you are always the one who cares too much, or not enough. Maybe closeness feels overwhelming -- or you find yourself longing for it too much. Understanding your attachment style through attachment styles therapy can bring awareness to these patterns and open the door to real change.

What Are Attachment Styles?

Attachment styles are patterns in how we connect, cope, and seek closeness -- developed through our earliest bonds with caregivers. Psychological research, particularly by John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth, outlines four main attachment styles:

Secure: Trusts connection; feels comfortable with both intimacy and independence.
Anxious (Preoccupied): Craves closeness and often fears rejection or abandonment.
Avoidant (Dismissive): Values independence and may struggle to rely on others or open up emotionally.
Disorganized (Fearful-Avoidant): A mix of anxious and avoidant tendencies, often tied to relational trauma or unpredictability in early caregiving.

These styles are not fixed identities. They are adaptive patterns that helped us survive early environments -- and they can evolve.

How Do Attachment Styles Show Up in Adult Relationships?

Attachment dynamics can shape how we respond to conflict, ask for support, navigate intimacy and space, cope with emotional discomfort, and trust or mistrust others. Someone with anxious tendencies might overthink every text message or fear being "too much." Someone with avoidant tendencies might shut down when things feel too emotionally intense. Someone with disorganized patterns might alternate between craving closeness and pushing it away.

How Attachment Therapy Miami Beach Can Help

At Soulstice Miami, we offer therapy for attachment-related challenges through a trauma-informed lens -- using EMDR and an integrated blend of trauma-informed interventions. We do not pathologize your patterns -- we understand where they came from. We work with the nervous system, not just the mind. We focus on creating a secure relational space where healing can begin.

Through therapy, you can identify and understand your attachment style, make sense of how early experiences shaped your current patterns, and develop new, more secure ways of relating -- to yourself and others.

Healing Happens in Relationship

Therapy is more than talking. It is about experiencing safety, attunement, and emotional repair in real time -- so your body and brain can learn that connection can feel safe. Over time, therapy becomes a space where you get to show up exactly as you are, you are met with presence and steadiness, you learn that your needs do not make you "too much," and you can be seen in your messiest moments and still be held with care.

Understanding your attachment style is not about labeling yourself -- or blaming yourself or your past. It is about reclaiming your ability to choose how you want to connect now. Whether you are navigating difficulties with intimacy, breakups, emotional triggers, or relationship patterns that feel hard to shift, therapy can help you move forward with more clarity, intention, and connection.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked

01.

What are attachment styles?

Attachment styles describe common patterns in how people seek closeness, handle distance, respond to conflict, and protect themselves in relationships. They are not fixed labels, but useful maps for understanding relational patterns.

02.

Can your attachment style change?

Yes. Attachment patterns can shift through consistent secure relationships, self-awareness, nervous system work, and therapy. Change usually happens gradually, through repeated experiences of safety, repair, and clearer self-trust.

03.

How do attachment styles show up in relationships?

They can show up in texting patterns, conflict, jealousy, reassurance seeking, emotional shutdown, avoidance, people-pleasing, or fear of abandonment. The details vary, but the core question is often how safe closeness feels.

04.

How can therapy help with attachment patterns?

Therapy helps you recognize your pattern in real time, understand where it came from, regulate the body response underneath it, and practice more secure ways of relating without abandoning your needs.

Ready to explore your attachment patterns? In-person and virtual sessions available in Miami Beach.

Reach Out Today

Free • No commitment • 15 minutes