Powered by Shimi and Huvi Jacobovits

The What’s and Why’s of Attachment Styles

Posted June 17, 2026

Key Points

  • Attachment styles are patterns learned early in life that influence the way we approach relationships.
  • Unconscious expectations we formed in childhood about the safety and reliability of love affect our closest relationships.
  • Knowing our attachment patterns helps us to develop the self-awareness that makes genuine connection possible.

There is a particular kind of ache that can settle into the space between two people who love each other but cannot seem to quite reach each other. One pulls close while the other steps back. One worries constantly about the relationship, pushing the other to feel the need for space to feel free within it. Both are doing what feels natural. But somehow, that very naturalness is what creates the distance.

This is not a mystery of personality. Oftentimes, it is a story of attachment.

Where These Patterns Begin

Attachment theory was developed by British psychiatrist John Bowlby, who observed that bonds between children and their caregivers were biological necessities, not merely emotional preferences. Children who felt consistently responded to, developed what Bowlby called a secure base. An internal confidence that the world was safe and that others could be relied upon.

Researcher Mary Ainsworth later identified distinct patterns in how children related to caregivers under stress. Decades of subsequent research confirmed that these early patterns travel with us into adulthood, shaping how we handle conflict, respond to intimacy, and behave when someone we love seems to pull away. Importantly, attachment theory is not about assigning blame to caregivers or declaring that people are permanently shaped by their past. Research consistently shows these patterns can shift through engaging in meaningful relationships, therapy, and honest self-reflection.

The Four Patterns

Most adults can identify with at least one of four attachment orientations. However, it is important to note that attachment styles exist on a spectrum and people generally display traits from a combination of the different styles. Someone may be mostly anxious with some avoidant tendencies, or secure with some anxious tendencies. But understanding which style one identifies with most can be an important start in the self-discovery process.

Those with a secure attachment style feel relatively comfortable with both closeness and independence. They can communicate their needs without excessive fear while also maintaining trust that relationships can weather difficulty.

Those with an anxious attachment style crave connection but worry constantly about whether it is truly available. They may read ambiguity as abandonment and struggle to self-soothe when a relationship feels uncertain. Underneath what can look like neediness is usually a deep sensitivity stemming from a nervous system that learned early that love was inconsistent.

Those with an avoidant style tend to prioritize self-sufficiency and feel uncomfortable with emotional demands. They often care deeply about others but struggle to express that care when vulnerability is required because relying on others once did not feel safe.

A fourth pattern, sometimes called disorganized or fearful-avoidant, blends elements of both anxious and avoidant responses, often rooted in early experiences where the source of comfort was also a source of fear.

Attachment in Daily Life

Within our communities, where family and relationship are so woven into daily rhythms, these patterns surface with particular clarity. Frequent family meals, aids in the removal of distraction and creates sustained face-to-face time. This can be genuinely healing for those learning to feel safe in closeness. Alternatively, it can also bring unresolved dynamics to the surface. The same table that nourishes one person can feel overwhelming to another, depending on the invisible architecture of their attachment history.

Understanding this builds compassion. The person who seems distant or the one who seems desperate for reassurance is not simply being difficult. They are responding from a pattern formed long before they sat down at that table.

Building Toward Security

Research by Dr. Mario Mikulincer and Dr. Phillip Shaver found that even brief experiences of feeling genuinely understood could temporarily shift people toward more secure responses, serving as a reminder that the nervous system remains more adaptable than we often believe. Consistent, trustworthy relationships have the demonstrated capacity to reshape attachment patterns over time.

The starting point is awareness. When we can notice “I am shutting down because closeness feels threatening” or “I am seeking reassurance because I do not trust the connection is still there,” we create a gap between reaction and response. That gap is where choice lives and where, slowly, something new can be built.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Explore More

What Makes a Good Life?

Robert Waldinger directs the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which tracked 724 men for 75 years. The clearest finding: good relationships keep us happier…

Watch Now

What Happy Homes Do Differently

If you asked a hundred people what makes a happy home, you’d likely get answers that mostly involve things: a comfortable couch, a well-stocked…

Read the article

Understanding Attachment Styles and How They Shape Relationships

Everyone has a way they naturally connect with people, how comfortable they feel being close, how they handle conflict, and how they respond to…

Read the article

Parenting When You’re Struggling

The myth of the perfect parent In 1953, British pediatrician and psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott proposed something that ran against what most parents believed they…

Read the article

When to Access Support or Counseling Before Marriage

The Role of Premarital Counseling When you’re dating, it’s easy to imagine that the person you eventually choose to marry will naturally understand you,…

Read the article

How Do I Know if It’s Nerves or a Red Flag?

Dating can carry a great deal of pressure. You’re trying to get an accurate sense of who the other person is, while also trying…

Read the article