156. Dating with an anxious attachment style ft. Thais Gibson - podcast episode cover

156. Dating with an anxious attachment style ft. Thais Gibson

Dec 29, 202349 min
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Episode description

Dating with an anxious attachment style comes with a number of challenges: struggling to feel secure, requiring constant reassurance, mistrust, a fear of abandonment, feeling unworthy of love or difficulty setting boundaries. But your attachment style is not a life sentence, it is something you can challenge and heal by embracing vulnerability, healthy love, boundary setting and applying the love you crave from others to yourself. We are joined by the wonderful Thais Gibson, an author, speaker, leader in the personal development field and founder of The Personal Development School as we break down what it means to date and love as someone who is anxiously attached. 

Find Thais here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHQ4lSaKRap5HyrpitrTOhQ 

The attachment quiz we spoke of: https://attachment.personaldevelopmentschool.com/quiz 

Follow us on Instagram: @thatpsychologypodcast 

For business enquiries: [email protected] 

 

 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Hello everybody, and welcome back to the Psychology of Your Twenties, the podcast where we talk through some of the big life changes and transitions of our twenties and what they mean for our psychology. Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. Welcome back to the podcast. The new listeners or listeners wherever you are in the world, it is so great to have you here. Back for another episode as we

break down the psychology of our twenties. A question I get a lot on the podcast is how to date as someone who is anxiously attached, How to date as someone who has a lot of anxiety and kind of worry to do with romantic attachment, to do with intimacy, to do with connection. Think that it is a lot more common in this day and age than we perhaps acknowledge.

So I thought today, what a great opportunity to break down what attachment theory is, some of the misconceptions about it, and then focus in on those of us who are dating with an anxious attachment style, what that looks like in a relationship, and how we can kind of move past these tendencies. Of course, we had to bring on a guest, Hyae Gibson, who knows so much more about this than I do. She is incredible. Welcome to the show.

I'm so excited. So for those of you who don't know, Tays has this incredible YouTube channel which I'm going to refer to first where and a lot of other things as well. But the YouTube channel was really how I kind of like began to consume your wisdom and your work where you break down a lot to do with attachment theory and dating not just in our twenties but at all ages. But can you give the listeners kind of a little bit of a little bit of a blurb of who you are.

Speaker 2

Yes. So basically I run a business called the Personal Development School. We put all sorts of content on YouTube. I am like obsessed with attachment style of people. I just love human behavior. I love talking about dating and

relationships has been a huge passion of mine. And I actually ran a client based practice for about ten years and just had a very long wait list of like two years or so, and so it was like, Okay, that's not really the best solution, So how do I kind of reach more people in a way that makes sense. So we eventually put a whole bunch of different online

courses together have the Personal Development School. I've written a couple books and basically put up free content on YouTube all the time, like almost every day, lots of information, and there's a big focus specifically around dating, attachment theory, the subconscious mind, and like really how to change our attachment style.

Speaker 1

Because I think attachment style is this thing that maybe you're thinking about it, but it really is kind of in the backdrop of a lot of our decisions and a lot of our actions, particularly when it comes to love, but any kind of relationship. So making people more consciously aware of it is so so valuable because I think attachment theory is one of those phenomena where, once you understand it, so much about your life begins to make

sense so much about your life. It's like suddenly crystal clear. Are you able to like briefly break down what attachment theory is for people who might not have an understanding.

Speaker 2

Absolutely, So, first of all, I think what everybody needs to know is that every single person has what we call an attachment style. So attachment theory is basically the work of John Boll. We originally done and he talked about how our relationship in terms of how we learn love and can action. In other words, how we learn to attach to our caregivers in childhood basically become the set of rules that we think for our adult lives in terms of what love is supposed to look like.

So we sort of take these rules, these ideas, but how we're supposed to attach to others, what connections supposed to look like, and we essentially start living our adult romantic relationships by those rules. But I found when I first went back into attachment theory there were a couple of things missing. Number one was this idea of, okay, well, what if we don't have a healthy set of rules, right,

what if we have an insecure attachment style? There really wasn't much an information on how we can change to become securely attached. And the second thing is, you know, there's not a ton of information about how each of the different attachment styles interact with one another. And that's like really mind blowing, Like when you said a moment ago that if we have, you know, the awareness of what each of the attachment styles are, suddenly everything kind

of makes sense. You know, before we understand that every single person has an attachment style, and this is a subconscious set of rules we have for love. Often what we don't realize is happening is it's almost like we're sitting down, and if you can imagine as an analogy, we sit down, we try to play a board game with somebody, but they have a different set of rules for how the game is supposed to be played, Like

you have the rules for scrabble. I have the rules for monopoly, like it's gonna be k And so when we finally can realize, oh, we just have different rule books and oh, now I know what your rule book is, I can read it. Oh you know my rule book, we can find a way to work things out and to create something new and something amazing. But without that, we usually personalize everything so much and we take on

all this confusion. So because of that, there's four major attachment styles that everybody really needs to know and understand, and every single person has one of these four styles. So the first style is statistically the style that does the best in relationships has the easiest time. They are

called the secure attachment style. Securely attached people essentially get a lot of really healthy parenting in childhood, so they get a few key really crucial components number one is they learn that if they cry or express emotion, their parent uses something called approach oriented behavior basically goes towards them, wants to understand what's going on, tries to meet their needs.

Number two. Because they try to meet their needs, they feel the child feels safe relying on other people and expressing their feeling and expressing their needs to others, and they learn to trust. Number three and number four. Because of all of this, they feel this deeper sense of self worth, like I'm just loved for who I am. My needs are worthy of being met by others, just because, you know, not because I earned it, not because I'm good enough or did something for it, but just because

I exist. And so securely attached children grow up to be adults with a really healthy rule book. They they think, Hey, I can meet other people's needs, I can listen to their emotions, I can express my own, I can express my own needs. Healthy boundaries are okay, I'm worthy of love for who I am. I don't have to earn it all the time. And so securely attached individuals. Statistically, according to the last like Real big survey of research about twenty years ago, was make up about fifty percent

of people. Research more recently, in smaller sample sizes seems to show that number is declining quite rapidly, closer to about thirty percent of people are securely attached, and they statistically do the best in relationships. But again that's roughly maybe thirty percent or thirty percent of people overall that are secure attachment styles. So then we have the other three. On one side, there's the anxious preoccupied, the anxiously attached style you can think of it as, and essentially the

anxious attachment style. What they do is in their childhood they have a lot of love and care, but a lot of inconsistency around it. So a really common example would be that, like, both parents are very loving, but they work a lot, and so the child has a lot of love, but the parents are constantly coming and going, that maybe the child staying with the grandparents who they're not as close with, and so the child keeps having love that's given and then taken away, love that's given

and then taken away. And what's really interesting about that is how the subconscious mind gets programmed is through repetition and emotion. So if you have this repeated experience of love being given and then love being taken. It actually conditions into the subconscious mind of fear of abandonment, and so anxiously attached individuals as adults really fear abandonment, really fear being alone, fear being not good enough or excluded or disliked, and they really try as a cobe mechanism

to maintain proximity to the people that they love. They try to hold on really tight, and sometimes that can make them a little bit clinging in relationships. And then on the far other end of the continuum, we have

dismissive avoidant attachment style, who's pretty much the opposite. They grow up with some form of childhood emotional neglect, and what that means is that essentially, even if like food is on the table, even if it's not like overt neglect, it's more like under the radar neglect, we'll see that the dismissive avoidance essentially like because children are wired for connection, for atonement, if a child growing up who's yearning for

that connection, that presence from their caregivers doesn't have it, they just go, Okay, well, it hurts to be this vulnerable and to feel like my needs won't get me, So I'm going to adapt to this by just denying that I need connection from other people. And so dismissive

avoidance push all their feelings down. They actually get conditioned to think because of their feelings not being made space for, they get conditioned to think that feelings are weak, useless, negative in some way, so they deny and reject that part of themselves. They think that part of themselves is almost like defective in a way, and they shove it down. And because of that, as adults, they're terrified of getting

too close to people. They're terrified of like opening up, getting too close, feeling like they did as a child, feeling weak and vulnerable with our emotional needs couldn't get met, And so as adults they often like cut relationships out when things get real. They'll tend to be afraid of commitment, or just when things are getting too close, they'll run

the other direction. So that's our dismissive avoidance. And then, very last, but not least, this is the least common attachment style, but I think it is statistically more common than people probably realize, is the fearful avoidant. So the fearful avoidant grows up in a household where there's basically extreme conditions. So let's say, for example, that there's tons of fighting in the house, right, so you never know what you're gonna get you come home. Sometimes it's peace,

sometimes it's chaos. Sometimes Mom is in a good mood. Sometimes that's in a terrible mood. Sometimes it's flipped or Another really common example for what creates a fearful avoidant attachment style is that we might have a parent, for example, who's an alcoholic. So let's just say like one day Mom is drinking child, the mom comes home, child teeth. Mom, she's in a good mood, she's had a few drinks,

she's super loving and in a great mood. Then another day Mom comes home, she's had a way too many drinks and she's an angry drunk. Today. Another day mom's so boring up, she feels guilty, she's being kind. Another day mom's sobering up, she's going through withdrawal, she's in a terrible mood. So fearful avoids grow up in this space where number one, they get conflicting ideas about love, something that sometimes has really nice experiences sometimes has really

terrifying experiences. So they want love, but they are afraid of it at the same time. And also they feel like they never know what they're going to get, so they're super hyper vigilant, always walking on eggshells. They kind of struggle to trust in relationships, and they're very hot and cold. It's like, come get close to me, Come get close. You get close, and it's like, no, I

change my mind, get away. And so they're very hot and cold, and they actually share attributes of both the anxious and avoidant side, but they go back and forth between those sides on a really, really frequent basis.

Speaker 1

That is such a good summary. I'm like listening to that, and the point you made about parents who like work a lot is so valuable because I think often we just tend to imagine that it's extreme trauma that creates anything but a secure attachment style, but it really is just any kind of inconsistencies, as you said in the love and the compassion and the support that we're shown. I want to ask you something here that it has

been on my mind like a lot. Is it just childhood experiences that create your attachment style or can of equally be molded by early relationship experiences or even free like recent relationship.

Speaker 2

Experiences amazing question. So we're not born with an attachment style. It forms over time based on the conditions were repeatedly exposed to. So because as children we basically like we're sort of in what we can call a hyper scartestable state, meaning that we are like really sponging up all of our programs in childhood, we're very impressionable. A lot of our programming runs deep, So our childhood attachment style is formed at a very early age and it often sticks

with us for quite some time. But anything we are repeatedly exposed to for long enough that causes a big impact. Again, that like repetition and emotion is what program is a subconscious mind, then it can absolutely reprogram our attachment style. So for example, somebody could be secure see their parents go through a really awful divorce at fifteen, and that could make them fearful avoidant or anxious. Or another example is you could be anxiously attached, get into a relationship

with a narcissist. At the end of that relationship, you're now a fearful avoidant because there's a lot more substantial chaos and trauma. So our attachment cell can absolutely change, but you can think of the prerequisite as being it's less likely to be one experience that changes it, but more for your attachment style to change, there has to be a lot of repeated exposure to something different.

Speaker 1

That's really important to note. It's the repetition that really counts. It's not like you've had you've been ghosted one time by someone on a dating app, and suddenly you're like an anxious avoidant, like it's a it's a repeat kind of experience. So I really want to focus on the anxious attachment style here, because, as you said, we have secure that's the most common. Anxious is the second most common, and it's increasing in prevalence in probably a lot in

this current generation. I have two questions for you. A why do you think that is? And B what does that What kind of consequences does that have for how we approach dating?

Speaker 2

Really read question? So I think there's two. There's a couple of reasons, right. I think one of the biggest ones, just quite honestly, is like kind of cultural at this point, and a lot of the Western world at least, but you know, really the vast majority of the world as a whole Unfortunately, there's a lot of pressure, right, so we don't have what we had twenty years ago, thirty years ago, forty years ago, where we had one parent

able to stay home. And one of the biggest impactors for what creates somebody's attachment style is the amount of presence they have. And I don't mean like gifts. I mean like the amount of attunement the person, the parent

being physically present. And you know, because we have usually both parents working in a household nowadays, a lot of that kind of you know, even if the parents and caregivers are loving, often children have to go to daycare young and you know that's not me saying anything towards parents, like usually because of societal pressures, like literally there's no choice. But you can see how that context is sort of

being set. The stage is being set to create more anxiously attached children because they don't have as much connection and care coming from their parents in the same way, because it's literally not possible for the vast majority of people. And I think what happens is because of that, what you'll see is anxiously attached individual. It's like they really one of their biggest challenges that they'll have with dating is that they don't properly vet what they want because

they get too busy people pleasing. So when I would have clients who would come to me from different attachment styles back when I was running my practice, I would often have dismissive avoidance. They would sit down and they would be like, too picky, you know, as soon as they saw one flaw, they'd run in the other direction and dating. And then we'd have anxiously attached individuals who

are not picky enough. They're not like getting clear on what they're looking for, what they really want in a relationship, what their standards are. So rather than properly vetting somebody when they were dating, they would find somebody who's interested in them as long as I thought that person was

moderately attractive and they moderately got along with them. They would then spend that whole first dating stage of the relationship trying to win the person over through people pleasing, through you know, sort of putting on their best behavior all the time, rather than by being like, is this

person actually a good fit for me? And rather than expressing their needs and talking about their boundaries and seeing if that someone's a good fit into their lives as well, and there's a huge impact in dating that way, because then we're not picking the right potential partners. And also, people statistically are less attracted to people pleasers than they are to people who have a strong sense of self,

and so we may not realize that. I think anxious, preoccupied individuals kind of think that like if I'm people pleasing and I'm more agreeable and I say yes to everything that they oh, then we get along and then everything's easy and then I'll be liked and accepted and I'll win them over. But actually it usually works against them if they don't have this appropriate set of standards

for themselves. They say what's okay with them and what's not okay with them, and if they're not backing themselves, statistically, people are actually less attracted to that.

Speaker 1

Overall, that makes a lot of sense. I think it's it makes sense, but it's also so unfair because if you think about the people who people please like, often it does come from a very deep like childhood abandonment wound or a guilt wound, where yeah, well you feel like I need to make everybody else happy because otherwise I am unsafe and because otherwise I do not get

the connection and the attachment that I crave. So when it comes to these kind of like people pleasing tendencies, you firstly mentioned that sometimes it results in us choosing partners who might actually in the long term not be right for us, might not actually be a good match. What does it then look like when we get into the relationship past the first you know, honeymoon period where everyone's on their best behavior, everyone's trying to win the

other person over. When you get deeper into the relationship, assuming this person is actually right for you, what kind of starts to show up in our behavior?

Speaker 2

Amazing questions. These are fantastic questions. So before I dive into that was just for a moment, I want to say one other thing, because you've said something really powerful, which is that when you know it's sort of unfair, because when somebody is like trying to people please, it's

coming from this deep childhood trauma. Is actually what it is like, this abandonment wound of feeling afraid of being out on their own and then being unsafe or being disliked or rejected, And when anxious individuals are actually feeling anxiously attached, like when that anxious attachment and they're needing to call or text or maintain proximity when they're feeling

like that. I think something that's understated is that that's actually a trauma response for somebody that's actually them when you feel that panic in your body and your conscious mind knows better like don't call them again, or give them space, or or you have to put your phone in the other room and shut it off, or you know these kinds of things, and yet you can't help it and eventually do make that phone call again or eventually do reach back out. That's actually trauma response, And

so there is something disheartening about that. And at the same time, I think it's really important to look at the sort of silver lining of it too, which is that exactly what you need to do to be successful in dating is also exactly what you need to do to heal yourself and to feel better actually heal from

those childhood wounds. So with the acknowledgment of that stuff, and I'm sure we can get into all that stuff in a little bit like what that looks like, but just with the acknowledgment of, like, this really sucks that I have these wounds and they're painful at the same time, noticing them and acknowledging them and being able to work through them in your dating life will also help you feel so much more secure and confident and at peace within yourself. So it's very healing. So there's it's like

a crisis and an opportunity, if that makes sense. So so going back to what you were talking about, basically, an anxious attachment style and a relationship has a few core things, so they will tend to in that dating stage specifically start you know, people pleasing, trying to win the person over, and if anybody who's listening is not familiar, we actually have six stages of a relationship, so we start off with a dating stage, which is actually meant

to be the vetting stage. Then we go into the honeymoon stage of a relationship and that's that like honeymoon period, but the mask is usually still on during that period. After that, when people start getting more comfortable, they start dropping the mask and that becomes the power struggle stage.

Every relationship has one, and the more you are people pleasing and not being yourself in the dating and honeymoon stage, the harder the power struggle stage will be and then after the power struggle stage, if we make it through the rights of passage, which are really about being vulnerable and learning to show ourselves and share ourselves with our partners, then we get into the stability stage. Then that's followed by the commitment stage, where we start talking about really

long term commitments marriage, children, living together, et cetera. And then we get to the bliss stage, which is like the honeymoon stage, but where you actually deeply know each other. So what happens for a lot of anxious attachments to your earlier point is that we can get into a place where it's like you're so busy trying to win the person over and be on your best behavior that you don't ever share who you really are, what your real needs are in a relationship. And if you do

share them, you share them retroactively. So rather than saying like, hey, I could use some support, can you do the dishes, it's like, hey, I hold that in I don't ever ask for the support, And then finally one day I'm like, you never do the dishes, And then you know it's that doesn't land with somebody that we care about because they just feel criticized because anxiously attach people even though we think that they're so emotionally available. People pleasing is

not an emotionally available thing. People pleasing is I'm hiding right, I'm not truly being myself. I'm not sharing myself with you out of a fear of rejection. And so that's gonna cost me something in the power struggle stage. And so what ends up taking place is is an anxious attachment style. They usually, you know, sort of date, so they they're so good at trying to win people over in the dating and honeymoon stage, and then when the power struggle comes on, they really see a lot of

turbulence in their relationships at that point. And what they'll start to see is that they feel really unseen by their partners, unheard, like their needs don't matter. Sometimes they can feel resentful because they're usually like pouring into the relationship with somebody and then feeling like they're not getting their needs met back. Then that can cause them to be slightly critical in their communication, which then often causes the other person to just shut down and meet their

needs even less than they already are. And then we'll often see anxious, preoccupied attachment styles have a lot of fears come up when they see their partner pull back and then try to sort of maintain that proximity, try to get closer, and often we can get stuck in these cycles where we keep trying to get closer, the person poles away, keep trying to get closer, the person poles away, and it can be really painful for the

anxiously attached style, especially in the power struggle stage of relationships.

Speaker 1

So in the power struggle stage, what are we like most likely to see because I've not heard about this before. I knew about obviously the honeymoon stage in the bliss stage, but I never I've never heard about this power struggle moment.

Speaker 2

So the power struggle stage statistically is the stage where most people break up in relationships, and it is one of the most challenging stages. But again I really find it to be it's like the same thing, right, It's like a crisis in an opportunity. It's really hard, and it also presents the most opportunity for building really deep

roots in a relationship. So in the power struggle, one of the rights of passage to make it out of the power struggle is being vulnerable with our partners, really letting somebody see us, like what our real fears are,

what our concerns are for anxious preoccupies. That involves things like, you know, sharing that sometimes they need reassurance or sometimes they need certainty, you know, letting their partner know if you cancel plans, I'm okay with the plans canceled sometimes, but try to rebook them or tell me when we're going to meet next, or you know, so them asking for Hey, I can be flexible, but I still need you to see that these are my needs and these

are the things that are important to me. So it really requires a lot of expression vulnerably about their needs, about their fears. And what that opportunity becomes is when I lower my mask and I start sharing who I am with you without conditions, I now present the opportunity to be loved in a more unconditional way. Because when I'm only sharing who I am with conditions, you can only love me conditionally. That's all I make space for.

And so what's going to end up happening is I'm going to constantly, if I was anxiously attached, feel this sense of like you don't see me you don't hear me, you don't really care about me, and it'll feel defeating and saddening. But if instead we can drop the mask, we can share in a healthy way, be more vulnerable, gain that acceptance from our partner, and also have our

partner do the same thing. That's where we now build real roots in a relationship where we can really deep in love and what it means to be loved, and that sets us up for success in the future stages. So it's tricky, and we'll generally see the most fighting in the power struggle stage, the most bickering arguments, push pull kind of behaviors, but if we can do it properly, we also see tremendous success coming out on the other side.

Speaker 1

It's so fascinating to hear you say that, because I think I'm applying that to my own relationship. And we were speaking about this before we started recording, about how I think he used to be someone who is very anxiously attached, and then I met someone who really challenged me and in the best ways possible, and like challenged me with healthy love such that the little tendencies that I'd built up, the defensive mechanisms like they just didn't work anymore. I used to always have this sense of

like it was almost like a game, right. I was like, I don't want you to leave me. Oh, I don't want you to not reply to my messages, so I'm not going to reply to yours. And he was like, no, we're not playing those games anymore. Why are you feeling

so anxious about this? Like, let's have a discussion. And it was so hard, Like it was actually really difficult in that stage to force myself to be vulnerable and to be like, I'm experiencing a lot of anxiety right now that you're going to walk away, that you're going to leave me. That small thing where you didn't hug me when you first walked through the door, that was really it was a really huge alarm bell for me.

And it was so like they said, difficult, But I always think that vulnerability is met with huge emotional personal social relationship reward, because you showing up as yourself and you're being like, I'm going to do the hard thing here. I'm going to be incredibly open with this person, knowing that they could say the wrong thing, but taking that risk anyways. And I do always think that you come out the other side with a lot a better understanding at least of who that person is.

Speaker 2

And you know it's real, Like the fear is real when you have those conversations, like I can remember the first time I was a fearful avoidant attachment, so that I can remember the first time I shared about having a fear in a relationship about But it was with my now husband, but at the time we were going through like sort of our own power struggle and I had to open up and share that I had this

fear of something sort of similar. Mine was like more about like betrayal, and and it was funny because it was not really based on anything at the time except my own stories about something. But I remember being so terrified, thinking, oh my gosh, I can't believe I'm sharing this with somebody in scared of feeling weak or rejected or too vulnerable.

But it's like the change when we learn to do that work is so beautiful, because you know, if we're in a relationship where someone with somebody we vetted a little bit and who's a good fit, people respond way more than I think we imagine. Because as a child, if you couldn't get your needs met. That's all your programming. You're like, oh, well, then my needs will not be met. So I have to keep people pleasing or I have to keep holding back and not saying anything. And so

we assume that onto our partners. We tend to project that onto our present if that was our experience as children, But as an adult, it's actually very different, right. We can communicate differently, We can share things more, we have emotional literacy, we can talk things out in a different way that we didn't have access to as a child. So we get to heal all of these different underlying programs.

And when we communicate our needs, we actually give ourselves the opportunity to have people show up for us and I can share from my experience. I'm curious about yours. But for me, one of the most beautiful things I learned is that when I actually shared about my needs and I actually took the courage and and the risk of being vulnerable, I actually felt so much more loved by all the people in my life because they really did shop and they weren't perfect, and if they weren't perfect,

they could go back and have a conversation again. But like I couldn't believe how much I actually felt like I could receive love from other people when I did that, And I'm curious to hear if you felt that as.

Speaker 1

Well, one hundred percent, and not just in terms of my partner, Like I remember having like this conversation with him where I was like, these are my fears and then looking at him afterwards and being like, oh, right, so like this is what the next stage about love looks like, and being like, I am so in love

with you right now because you met me here. And it was also something that I started doing with my friends, so I had a lot of anxiety around friendships fizzling out, this preoccupation with this idea that my friends really didn't like me, they didn't want to be around me, like and or. I would just experience a lot of loneliness, even when it was unjustified. And I remember there was

like this light bulb moment. And it may seem so common sense to people listening to this, you're already applying these tactics, but I just like messaged my friend and was like, I am just feeling really low right now. And it's not that I'm feeling like everything in my life is great, but I just really need connection from you, and I just really need you to call me and just like give me a bit of reassurance. And she did it, and she was like, Yeah, let's do something

this weekend, let's go to the beach. And it was this weird thing where you're exactly right. As a child, you don't know how to ask for that. You can't be like, hey, mom, can you stop working late? Because I've identified that I'm on the way to beginning like anxiously attached, like you're sometimes non verbal, like that's not

a way that you can operate. But then as you become an adult, it's like, wow, it's so crazy to realize that, especially as someone who maybe was anxious or any of those number of insecure attachment styles, just speaking your needs a lot of the time means that they will be met.

Speaker 2

It's so beautiful. And I just love like talking about things like this because it's so powerful, Like, you know, having also witnessed that firsthand with so many like friendships, family relationships, like how much we actually allow ourselves to be loved by people we care about so much when we do those things and it's like such a rewarding experience and for people who like maybe think of this, like, what if the person doesn't show up, Well, that might happen,

But then those people aren't really meant to be in your inner circle anyways. You know, those people aren't meant to withstand the test of time in your life. And it's worth building relationships with people that are. It's worth going through figuring those things out so that you can have people around you who really do show up for you, who really do care about you. And I think as an anxious attachments out, it's good to also practice showing up for ourselves, Like you know, there's that part as

well of self soothing. But I cannot stress enough how beautiful it is to practice that vulnerability piece.

Speaker 1

Absolutely, we're going to take a quick break and when we come back, we're going to discuss the interactions between the anxious attachment style and the avoidant attachment style. We will be back with you very shortly. Something that I have learnt recently is that the anxious attachment style is often attracted to the avoidant attachment style, whether that is fearful or dismissive. Why is that? Because that feels so counterintuitive.

Surely the anxiously attached person would be most attracted to someone who was secure, but you were telling me that is not often the case.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it's an amazing question. So here's what happens. So when we think of our attachment style, I want us to first think of the difference between like conscious and subconscious. So conscious mind, I'm sure everybody's had this experience in

some way where they're like their mind knows better. They're going I know this is not the right fit for me, or I know I should leave this relationship that's not working, or I know that this person's like not the guy I should be dating, or not the woman that I should be, you know, and yet we repeat patterns. Well, that's the difference between our conscious and subconscious. Conscious minds can logically analyze and see things, but our subconscious is

the one running the show. The subconscious is actually responsible for ninety five to ninety seven percent of our beliefs, our thoughts, our decisions, our emotions, our actions. So what happens is when we think of our attachment style, I like to get everybody in the habit of thinking of it as like the subconscious set of rules that you have about love. And when we look at tackling the subconscious. One thing that's really valuable to realize is that our

subconscious mind's biggest priority is survival. So what this means is that anything that feels familiar feels safe and thus increases the chances that we're going to survive, and that's

what the subconscious is seeking the most. So what's funny is that what our subconscious comfort zone is, that sort of zone that our subconscious keeps wanting to keep us in and stay in, is actually that as an anxiously attached person, the relationship you have to yourself is to constantly dismiss and avoid your own feelings, needs and desires in favor of pleasing other people, which means your subconscious comfort zone, the zone that you're used to operating in

all day long, is to put your needs last, feelings last, not really care about your own boundaries, not worry too much about you being a priority, and so that's that zone of familiarity and safety to your subconscious mind. So when we're starting to invest in people or we're dating people, guess what one of the biggest factors is that drives attraction.

If somebody represents the subconscious comfort zone and the relationship we have to ourselves, which means that often anxiously attach people even though they might see somebody be dismissive not make an effort pull away. The anxious attachment style often goes that doesn't feel good or that's not healthy, and yet their subconscious is like, and we love them. We really are so interested, you know, they're on our mind twenty four to seven. And so it's because that subconscious

comfort is a big factor that drives attraction. So that's really why the sense of happening. And obviously both the fearful avoidant attachment style and dismissive avoidant they both tend to sort of push people away and kind of be a little bit dismissive or avoidant, which really feels familiar and like we have the butterflies that go off, which may actually be more like red flags that are being waved, but the subconscious mind doesn't know any better.

Speaker 1

Well, it's that age old sense. And I say this all the time. Sometimes our brains our bodies confuse anxiety with excitement and with the spark and with passion, when that is sometimes not true and just your brain trying to interpret a situation is more positive and is more beneficial.

So this, this is really fascinating to me because obviously, what a dismissive and avoidant, fearful avoidant, and an anxiously attached person wants out of a relationship is different because what they yet, because what they're looking for in relationship is different. What they want from the relationship is different. Why is that so destructive for the anxiously attached in particular?

Speaker 2

Yeah, because exactly what they have is their subconscious comfort zone in relationship to self, which is causing them so much pain, is exactly what they end up attracting in relationships or being attracted to in other So one of the biggest things is that as anxious preoccupies, if anybody who is ap could sort of take a look, they would see that as an anxious person, anxious preoccupied person.

The things that they do to themselves that hurt themselves the most is that they don't speak up for their needs. They put themselves on the back burner. They pretend like things are okay with them when they're not. You know, I think of like somebody's sitting there and somebody's hurting them and they're like, it's fine, it's not a big deal.

Because they're always prioritizing other people and getting that approval and that connection, but it's always at the expense of self abandonment, right, So part of what happens is how we keep our subconscious wounds alive from childhood because we have to ask ourselves the question, like, if our wounds happened. Let's say somebody's in their twenties listening to this on your podcast, and this happened their abandonment wounds started when they were five, how are they still here? The past is,

you know, fifteen years gone, twenty years gone. Well, what's actually happening is that we actually can't keep wounds alive unless we're constantly opening the wound and you know, sort of peeling off the scab on a regular basis. So the wounds stay alive for an anxious, preoccupied person because

they keep abandoning themselves first. And so as long as that cycle of self abandonment, putting themselves last, not sharing their boundaries, not speaking up for their needs, as long as they keep that alive in the relationship to themselves, that's still going to be what they're attracted to in others. And then when somebody else does that back to them, it hurts one hundred times more because there's a wound

there that hasn't had the chance to heal. So for somebody secure to experience that they don't have these preexisting wounds, it's not as big of a deal somebody anxious who has these preexisting wounds. When somebody touches it, it hurts so much more. And that's part of where that problem needs to really be solved for a root level.

Speaker 1

It also sounds like such a cycle right where it's like, if the only love that you've ever come to expect and accept is this kind of blueprint, Obviously you're not going to know any different. You have no idea of what love, healthy love, secure love actually feels like, So you're going to just repeat behaviors that put you in the same situation again and again and again. So how can we actually move past our anxiously attached tendencies? Like a question that I really had for you coming into

this was is our attachment style forever? Is it predictive? Or are there things that we can do about it?

Speaker 2

Yeah, it's an amazing question and such an important one. So the answer it always gives to people is like, first of all, you're not born with the attachment style. It's conditioned into you, and it's really through repetition and emotion, that sort of key thing we keep talking about, and we can recondition it through repetition less emotions. So there's a few things that we can do and anxious attachment styles, there's a few core things that are really good starting places.

One is you have to learn what your needs are and you have to start advocating for them, because if you try to advocate for your needs when they don't get met, you advocate for them in a way where you're also less likely to be heard. So if you advocate for your needs, you're like, you never give me certainty, you never spend enough time with me. People just hear criticism, and then it's tragic because then somebody gets even less

needs met and it becomes aus vicious cycle. So one of the first things and what anxious attachment styles tend to need the most in their relationships is certainty, consistency, Transparency is very important, a sense of safety, reassurance, validation, presence again not gifts, but like actual attunements, somebody giving their ability to be present to the person they love,

and a lot of encouragement from their partners. Like those eight things tend to be really top to your needs for anxious attachment styles to feel like they can really feel safe in a relationship, rest, decompress. But we also have to as anxious attachment styles, part of self soothing and not feeling when you feel that sense of panic as an anxious attachment style where you're like, oh my gosh, and that panic's alive in your body and you're having

that kind of trauma response. Part of how you learn to self soothe so that it doesn't always have to be calling again or things like that, is to learn to give those needs in the relationship to yourself through

repetition and emotion. So if an anxious attachment style learns their needs, knows that those are their top eight needs, starts giving those to themselves repetitively on a daily basis, like validating their wins each day, creating a sense of certainty by asking the right questions, but then also brings those needs into their relationships with others and let them be known, asks for them, practices that vulnerability. That's a first huge place for anxious attachments to start healing. And

a second place. It's really profound for anxious attachment styles is sometimes aps tend to get into a space where they'll go into enmeshment and codependency, meaning when they get into a relationship, they will make that person the center of their universe. And it doesn't mean that somebody can't be like this massive, huge, beautiful, amazing person in your life, because they absolutely can and they should be. But anxious attachment cells sometimes will start chipping away at the other

areas of life. So, for example, when they're in a romantic relationship, they'll spend less time focusing on friends, family, their career, their finances, their physical health, their mental emotional health. Like, there's so many areas of life that are really valuable, but sometimes anxious preoccupies will kind of like put them on the back burner when they get into a relationship. The more that you give yourself away, the more that you stop focusing in a sort of balanced way across

those different areas of life. Like you put your career goals on hold, you're just prioritizing your relationship. You spend all your budget going out to buy new clothes and impress the person you're dating, or spend money on a fancy dinners, you know, the more that you give yourself up without like actually considering how those choices are affecting you at your core and not seeing yourself it's also

a person equal to the other person. The more you will then subconsciously put stress on the relationship because it's like that person becomes your whole world because you're ignoring the other parts of your world. So another really important part of healing for anxious attachment cells is to make sure that you're making space and time for the other areas of your life that fill you up, that will actually help you stay really grounded and centered and present.

And then I would say a third thing that tends to be really valuable is I call this just questioning your stories. It's a form of reprogramming. If we do it repetitively, it's very, very valuable. But as an anxious attachment cell, you know, as somebody who's lived through this, I was fearful avoidance. I had the anxious side. And it sounds like you've lived through this. Is it's so easy, Like somebody doesn't call you back, and where does your mind go. It's like, oh my gosh, they're leaving me,

they're not coming back, they're losing interest. You know, we jump to conclusions based on our own pre existing core wounds. But if we can really sit in that story and we can question it, we can say, Okay, they didn't call me back and it means they're leaving me right now? Is that really true? Can I one hundred percent know

that that's true? And we can just take the wind out of the sales of like that story that wants to take us a million miles an hour down to like all the worst case scenarios that are going to happen when we can hold those narratives in the light, or sometimes we go they didn't call me back, they got in a car accident, all these bad things are happening,

Like we can really project all these scary scenarios. When we can learn to witness those thoughts and just question them and not jump too far into them, we can also self soothe in a powerful way. And if we do that repetitively, a lot of those stories stop showing back up, because repetition and emotion is actually pro reprogramming that from being that comfort zone of what we're used to thinking. So I'd say those are three really really powerful places to start.

Speaker 1

I love those tips. And further to the last one as well, just ask, just be like, hi, you didn't just ask them. It's so it's so funny that like it's it seems so like I think for anyone who is like securely attached, they'd be like, hey, why didn't you reply to me like I'm annoyed? But for anyone else, they'd be like, how what do you mean? I can say that, isn't that just going to drive them away further?

But it's like, no, you can just ask. And the other thing that I would actually add to that is sometimes when we I think, when we haven't had the love that we think we deserve, when love has been like in a deficit and we've had really like the supply has been low. Right, not to use like an economics term, but when we feel like love has been in a deficit, we see it as like the only thing that we want in life, and we are we

put it on such a pedestal. And of course love is so important, it is like the lifeblood of being a human, but it is not the only thing about you that is valuable. Is your capacity to be loved and I also think that love isn't something that only has to come from other people. You can show yourself

the love that you expect from others. I always think about this in the sense of like the love languages, right, we constantly think that we need to receive words of affirmation from someone else, acts of service from someone else, physical touch from someone else in order to fill up

those needs. But you can actually perform your love languages for yourself in those moments where you're feeling really anxious, or really abandoned, or really like trying to catastrophize every small thing, Like give yourself a hug, speak words of affirmation to yourself, go and take yourself on a walk, and buy yourself like a little treat, a juice, something that's going to make you feel better, as a way to show yourself the love that you're constantly expecting from

others and should be expecting from others, but also should equally expect from yourself.

Speaker 2

I love that. That's so beautiful and it's so funny because we talk a lot about this too, and you just nailed it, which is like we actually give love to our our selves through our love languages, but also through our needs and so the things that we feel like we're needing so badly from somebody, when we just want them to answer the phone, or we just want them to call us back, or we just want them

to text us more. It's often a really valuable exercise to give those levelanguhiges absolutely, and the big ones for anxious preoccupies are usually quality time, physical touchboards of affirmation like those are usually the top tier ones we're anxious. But then also to be like, well, what is it

that I need from them so badly? And when you said that beautiful thing where you know, often like it represents a deficit people who feel like love is the center of their universe, And I do agree with you. It's like the lifeblood of being a human being. And if we're yearning for it from other people so so much, it always means that we don't have enough in the relationship to ourselves, and so we can We don't have

to just do that when we're anxious. We can do that where we meet our needs or love lang which is when we're anxious and needing something from others. But also the more we make like active habits and practice out of it on a daily basis, and the more we just show up and create those routines in our lives, we fill our bucket halfway. And part of what's happening for anxious attachment styles is that they're not filling their

bucket halfway. So the moment somebody else can't fill their bucket, it's like driving around with your gas tank and you know that you've like two kilometers left right, it's like you're right down to the brand, and so we panic. But if you can get into the habit it's always driving with a half tank full, then if somebody can't go from you know, pull in your gas tank and go from half to full, you're still totally fine and

it's completely okay. And so you know, if you're seeing that in your life, being able to give yourself to that proactively and habitually makes such a difference and also really helps retrain the subconscious mind to get more secure in the relationship to self.

Speaker 1

I love that analogy. I absolutely adore that analogy. Thank you so much for coming on the show and for spreading your wisdom. I feel like I actually learnt so much like I'm listening to I was listening to you. Being like that is just making so much sense to me. Everything is checking out. I can apply so much of this to my relationship and my past relationships and the relationships that I've had with my parents and so many

other people in my life. So I want to thank you again for finding the time to come on the podcast and share your wisdom. Where can the listeners find you?

Speaker 2

Thank you so much. Thank you for sharing. Got that too, So even buy me at Personal Development School dash TII skipson It's spelled tchai ask kind of like tie with an ass at the end, but just Personal Development School will show up. And then also if anybody wants a

free attachment style quiz, we have a free quiz. It tells you like your attachment style and then it gives you a report on like your wounds, your needs, the ways you can communicate, gives like some supportive tools all for free at www dot Personaldevelopment school dot com.

Speaker 1

Oh my goodness, I'm going to go and do that now I feel like I know the answer. But what a good resource. Also, there were so many attached quizzers out there that it's like we can tell you your attachment style and like five questions and then you have to you have to like submit, like you've got to pay for it. It's like fifty dollars in it like doesn't tell you anything.

Speaker 2

So yeah, yeah, ours is free and I think there's about thirty questions on there to really get into like the nitty gritty and really get you a clear answer.

Speaker 1

I'm so excited, I'm actually gonna go and do it. I'm going to send it to my friends as well. So again, thank you so much for coming on the show. As always, if you enjoyed this episode, please feel free to leave a five star review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, wherever you are listening right now. If there is a friend who needs to hear this, maybe you should share them a link, send it along, share the love, maybe they'll learn something. And make sure that you are following

us so you know when new episodes come out. And finally, if you have an episode suggestion, if you want us to talk more about maybe the dismissive avoidant the fearful avoidant, please reach out to me at that Psychology podcast on Instagram and have a lovely week. We would be back next week with another episode.

Speaker 2

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