Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Rewind): How Your Attachment Style Affects Your Relationships
Episode Date: January 19, 2024We often learn our attachment style very early in life. And it can go on to affect all of our romantic relationships. But how? And to what extent should we excuse people's behaviour because of their a...ttachment style? In this episode, Matt, Stephen and Audrey discuss attachment styles, what they mean, and how we can our awareness of them use to navigate relationships. --- ►► Pre-Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► Get Commitment Without Games or Ultimatums Reserve Your Spot to my Virtual Event for FREE... → http://www.LoveLifeTraining.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If we diagnose ourselves as an anxious attachment style,
the danger of a diagnosis is that it becomes an excuse for whatever we do. hey everybody it's Matthew Hussey with the love life podcast I am excited to
share this clip with you today let's get into it
there are four different attachment styles anxious anxious, secure, avoidant, and anxious avoidant.
Audrey, maybe you can speak to the anxious attachment style and maybe the anxious avoidant.
I'm not sure about you guys, but I first heard about attachment styles when I read the book
Attached, which talked about attachment theory. So I suppose people who have anxious attachment are always looking for ways
the relationship's going to fall apart a lot of it is tied into feeling sort of fears of abandonment
and fears of rejection you can get very very reactive in arguments because you get very
flared up within those kinds of in those kinds of ways but also i
think even when the relationship is going well you're still looking for ways that it could fall
apart even in the best moments what for you is the worst part about being having that anxious
attached style that anxious style well i actually i've got much better over time with it i definitely
related to it more a few years ago but i think i think the hardest part is
not being able to enjoy it not being able to just feel safe not being able to enjoy the thing you have.
Correct.
Yeah.
Not being able to just enjoy the relationship and it can be the most,
you know,
beautiful or non-confrontational,
non-argumentative relationship.
Yet you still somehow have this underlying feeling of everything's going to go
wrong and everything's going to go to shit.
So I think
that's probably the hardest thing and I think accepting that you are safe is something I've
personally had to do a lot of work on as you know and I think that once you can do that you you do
just sort of find a new peace in your relationship and that's really really lovely but I think until you can sort of you can accept the fact that no one really ever is safe truly
right we can all at any given moment we can all get hurt something can go wrong people can leave
people can die and I think if you if you spend your whole time living there it just destroys the experience
Stephen as someone who perhaps relates to the opposite end of the spectrum or not you tell me
is it fair to say you are on the avoidant side of attachment styles? Slightly, yeah. I probably lean, I don't relate so much to
the anxious attachment one, the avoidant one more so. There is one that's kind of a bit of both,
it's called disorganized. And there could be bits of that because in some ways I do crave intimacy
or I don't know if crave intimacy is the word, but I can really feel a sense of like,
I don't know, maybe anyone does. If you're alone for a long time, you can feel a sense of like,
oh, I don't want to be abandoned. Like I want to, you know, being a bit feared of being abandoned
because I'm a natural, I enjoy my own company a lot. I do have a natural sort of loner tendency. Um,
I have historically gotten scared of being trapped in relationships and feeling like
relationships are a large demand on my time and energy. And so that's the avoidant part of you.
Yeah. And, and perhaps feeling resentful at times when I feel I have to do too many things for
the relationship, or I'm very scared of someone becoming emotionally dependent on me for their
needs. And I think that's the crux of it. That's the grand fear is this person will now depend on
me for their happiness. And that's a scary thought scary thought I suppose for someone with that tendency
what I want to know is which one you guys relate to Matthew and Jameson I bet Jameson's secure
can just see it securely attached is that the one you most relate to yeah actually I do relate to
being securely attached but I have to say, I mean, I'm sure
we'll probably get into this because going off of the book Attached, I remember when
I read it, I thought it was a very solid theory and it felt very like this is pretty insightful
about people's different experiences of relationships.
But that book seemed to think that it was pretty, you were pretty much just cut from that cloth,
like you were in one of these categories. And I think it's easy for me to relate to being secure
now because I've been in a long-term relationship that's just based off loyalty and trust and I'm
just very secure there. But I can just imagine that if things went a different way, definitely
wired for all kinds of... There's just definitely
a spectrum. That point, Jameson, about it potentially being fluid is interesting because
I think the risk of a book like this is people can get in sort of diagnose... I don't know,
constant diagnosis mode where you explain everyone's behavior as a function of attachment
styles. And the truth is some people, maybe they're avoidant, but there's also people who
are just selfish assholes and don't want to compromise on anything. And they don't need
to be diagnosed as, oh, if they're avoidant and I just figure out and understand that.
Or there's people who are really anxious to an extent where it's toxic and they're toxically
needy. And it's like, you can't just get off the hook by it being, well, I'm an anxious type,
some forms of anxiousness are genuinely toxic. They are someone who immediately smothers someone and almost uses them to get all their emotional needs met and to feel like,
I'm now subsuming my life into yours. These are not just healthy tendencies.
There can be a way people maybe use it as a way to kind of explain those parts of themselves a bit too much or over-diagnose.
Look, the catharsis of a diagnosis of any kind is that you have a diagnosis.
I mean, anyone who's ever had any kind of illness or pain knows that that having
something diagnosed emotional or physical can be can be very cathartic i now know why i am the way kind of closure on myself. The danger of a diagnosis is that it becomes an excuse for
whatever we do. And if we diagnose ourselves as an anxious attachment style. And then anything we do that is anxious in our behavior,
any way we treat someone, any way we unnecessarily accuse someone or act out,
we say, well, I can't help it. I have this anxious attachment style.
That becomes a very dangerous thing. I think that we have to separate what our tendency may be
from what behavior we are going to choose to model, because that's always a choice. What we decide to do
is a choice. I could be anxious, but say, I'm going to do better than this feeling I have right now. I feel it, but I also know what my nature is. I know that my nature is
to be overly afraid of losing someone, to believe that I'm not going to be okay if I lose someone,
and then to overcompensate for any time I think I've made a mistake, to get overly guilty anytime I do
something that I'm not proud of, to create stories anytime someone doesn't text me enough
or leaves me alone for five minutes, to imagine kind of things in the rustling in the bush is a lion when it's it's nothing it's
the wind you know i know that's my nature so i'm going to do better than that nature in the way
that i behave that is a choice you know you steven could know that it's kind of there's a there's a
part of you that that trends towards feeling suffocated or
feeling like you're afraid of becoming responsible for someone's needs and emotional wellbeing and,
and catch yourself and go, I know that's where my mind goes naturally. It doesn't need any help to go there. That is where my mind goes.
But I also know that about myself. And, and so I, and, and, and given that I know that about myself,
I know that I have a tendency to, you know, overly keep people at arm's length instead of just
setting healthy boundaries and, or even just communicating about the fact that I really like
having some alone time in my week or my day, or I really like being able to go to a quiet corner and just kind of read and and do my thing
i i really think that what can be useful about these kinds of heuristics
is that the ability to know which way the wind naturally blows for us, doesn't become an excuse for all of our behavior.
Instead, it becomes a recipe for self-awareness
so that we can mitigate our own behavior.
Thanks for listening.
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