Learn more about attachment and relationships

Attachment, Relationships Kayli Larkin Attachment, Relationships Kayli Larkin

Top Down or Bottom Up? How to Approach the Shift to Secure Attachment

Is it better to work on your attachment system by learning and thinking about attachment, and taking practical steps to change your behavior (a top down approach), or by accessing the felt sense/working with body sensations, working on calming the nervous system, and feeling what secure feels like in your body (a bottom up approach)?

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Attachment, Relationships Kayli Larkin Attachment, Relationships Kayli Larkin

Calm Down Quickly - Tips for Insecure Attachment Styles

Stress that stems from relationships is one of the biggest challenges that people face having an attachment adaptation. Since it is rarely possible to remove ourselves from all relationships — lots of downsides to that one, as you can imagine — it is more practical to work on our attachment system and learn ways to feel calmer in relationship.

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Anxious Attachment Triggers and Coping Behaviors

Anxious attachment usually stems from inconsistent or unpredictable connection in childhood. The result is a desire to keep someone close, and a fear of being abandoned.
Here are some triggers that people with anxious attachment often feel in the beginning stages and later on in relationships:

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How to Save Your Friendship — 15 Tips From Attachment Theory

You may have been hearing story after story lately of friend breakups and people ending long relationships. If it seems like you’ve been hearing more stories like this since the pandemic started, it’s not your imagination — people have been struggling with relationships of all kinds, and that includes friendships.

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Helping Your Relationship Survive a Quarantine — 20 Tips From Attachment Theory

Anytime we experience stress from our environment, it can impact a romantic relationship. We turn to our relationships for comfort and stress relief, but can there be too much of a good thing? Yet some couples are handling this with more ease than others, and we can find some answers in attachment theory.

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