The Mel Robbins Podcast - Why Do I Love the Way That I Love: The 4 Attachment Styles Explained
Episode Date: December 18, 2023Why do you love the way that you love? How do you have the best relationships of your life (including the one with yourself)? Today, Mel sits down with an expert in attachment theory Thais Gibson ...to explain the framework to improve any relationship in your life. Her work on the subconscious mind and personal transformation will empower you to set better goals and have happier and healthier relationships. Topics discussed include:How to have secure and healthy relationships (including your relationship with yourself)What your “attachment style” means and the 4 typesHow your subconscious mind drives a lot of what you doWhat love is supposed to look likeHow your attachment style impacts your personal goal-settingThe biggest limiting beliefs from childhood (which one is yours?)How to figure out your attachment styleHow to make your attachment style “secure”The difference between “core wounds” and “core needs”The 2 things you did in childhood that made you a people-pleaserHow to feel less anxious and overwhelmed in relationshipsHow your fear of abandonment shows up in your relationshipsThe one question to ask yourself before you argue with your partnerWhat your new love interest needs if they have a hard time trustingHow to reprogram your subconscious mind for healthier relationships You can purchase Thais’s latest book, Learning Love: Build the Best Relationships of Your Life Using Integrated Attachment Theory, here: https://a.co/d/i2Ae9vG Follow Thais Gibson: Instagram: instagram.com/thepersonaldevelopmentschool YouTube: youtube.com/@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool Watch the podcast episodes on YouTube: https://bit.ly/45OWCNr Check out my book, The High 5 Habit: https://a.co/d/g1DQ8Pt Follow Mel: Instagram: https://bit.ly/3QfG8bb The Mel Robbins Podcast Instagram: https://bit.ly/49bg4GP LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/46Mh0QB TikTok: https://bit.ly/46Kpw2v Sign up for my newsletter https://bit.ly/46PVnPs Want more resources? Go to the episode page here.Episode Webpage: www.melrobbins.com/podcasts/episode-130 Disclaimer
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Hey, it's your friend Mel and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
I just want to start out by saying thank you, thank you, thank you for being here with me.
I know that when you are here with me and you're listening to this podcast,
you do it as a way to invest in yourself. And I think that's super cool.
And that is why I am really excited for the conversation that you're about to hear because
this one is a really, really good one.
What are we talking about?
We're talking about something called attachment theory.
And the reason why I wanted you to learn about attachment theory is because this framework
has helped me profoundly in my marriage.
It's helped me in my relationship with my kids.
Frankly, it's helped me in every relationship that I have
because understanding my attachment style
has allowed me to really show up in a different way
in a more powerful and secure way.
And I think it's gonna help you too.
Now, if you've never heard about attachment style,
there are four different attachment styles.
You're going to learn in detail about all
four attachment styles.
And I love the expert that I have for you today.
Her name is Tais Gibson.
She has a brand new book out called Learning Love.
And one of the reasons why I like the way
that she explains attachment theory
is she gets into the nitty gritty.
You're not only going to understand the four different attachment styles, she will explain
things like, okay, if you text someone and they don't text back for three hours, this
is how you will act based on your attachment style.
She's also going to give you scripts, she's going to give you strategies and she's going
to teach you that you can change your attachment style. She's also going to give you scripts. She's going to give you strategies, and she's going to teach you that you can change your attachment style. You can become more secure.
Now, when I told our team that Tyce Gibson was coming into our new studios in Boston,
Shay Washington, who is our senior manager of the video team, fell out of her chair. Because
of the video team fell out of her chair. Because Tais' work has changed Che's life.
Check this out.
Around this time last year, I was going through
like a huge, huge hairline journey.
And I realized that I was like so emotionally stunted.
Therapy didn't work.
Antidepressants didn't work.
And so I stumbled upon Tais Gibson
and the personal development school. But one
thing that really stood out to me was when Tais Gibson specifically spoke about your core
rooms, they still sort of manifest in my current day. And I just don't know how to navigate
through any of those things. And I just never heard it broken down in that way that she broke it down
before. And things started coming together really smoothly. I had a much bigger understanding.
And it changed my life a little better. And like, I'm going to continue doing this
self work. And I hope to one day become securely attached.
Shea, I love you. And thank you for sharing that.
And I had a very similar reaction to
Tyes Gibson's work.
And I know you are too, because
you're going to leave this conversation
having a much better understanding
of yourself, core wounds,
attachment theory.
There is no doubt in my mind that
that's going to happen.
In fact, it happened for me.
I walked into this conversation thinking that my attachment style was one thing, and it
turns out it's something completely different, and it was Tais that pointed it out to me,
and I think you're going to have that revelation too.
And there's one more thing that I'm really excited to share with you before we jump into the conversation. In addition to all of the amazing tactical information that you're about to learn that is going
to help you improve your life, this episode has a bonus.
It is followed by a very short bonus episode because Taiz recorded a meditation for you.
That's right for you. That's right, for you. And it's a meditation
that you can listen to that will put everything that you're about to learn into action. And
it's going to help you transform not only your attachment style, but also your subconscious
mind. And it is there for you right in this podcast, Q, for free. The episode is entitled Daily Meditation,
Listen for 21 Days to Reprogram Your Subconscious Mind.
And you're gonna wanna listen to it
right after this episode.
All right, are you ready to learn
why you love the way that you do me too?
TIEES Gibson, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
Thank you, excited to be here with you. So Mel Robbins podcast. Thank you.
Excited to be here with you.
So thrilled you're here.
Thank you.
So Ty Ees, you have this incredible new book called Learning Love,
Build the Best Relationships of Your Life,
Using Integrated Attachment Theory.
And one of the things that I love about your work
is how empowering it is.
You teach how every single one of us
can break free from patterns that are holding us back
using the science of attachment theory.
So I wanna start with the basics.
What is an attachment style?
The subconscious set of rules you have
for love and connection.
And those rules can be in the form
of the different beliefs you have,
the different needs you have,
what you expect in relationships,
and how you communicate and set boundaries with others.
You're not born with an attachment style,
it happens through conditioning,
and we can re-condition our attachment style patterns
if we grew up in an unhealthy environment.
We didn't get good learnings about attachment styles
and about relationships.
We can actually heal that and change that to become secure
and have really successful thriving relationships, whether that's romantic, family or friendships.
Let's just start with the basics. This is an episode that we're going to release at a time of year
where almost everybody is thinking about goals for next year and resolutions and all the changes that you want to make. How does going to work on your attachment style
and your beliefs about love and relationships?
How the heck does that help you with goals
or with making positive change?
The biggest limiting beliefs that we pick up
from childhood about who we are
and what relationships look like,
also form primarily the relationship we have to ourselves,
which will color everything else in our world.
Whoa.
When does this start in childhood exactly?
Like, what age are you talking about?
It gets conditioned into us actually
between the ages of zero to two years old.
That early?
That early, yeah.
Zero to two.
Zero to two.
So the stuff that goes down before you even remember zero to two is what's stored in
your subconscious.
Yes.
And is what drives you as an adult unless you do the work to change it?
Exactly.
So like as an example, if somebody grows up in a household where they have a really
critical parent, and maybe that parent has the best intentions, they want to prepare
their child for the world, it's really easy for a child because a child personalizes everything,
right? They can't say, oh, my parents is communicating in a suboptimal way. So instead, what happens
is the child goes, oh, this is about me, I must not be good enough or I must not be worthy
or I must be bad. And so what happens is the meaning we give to things when we perceive
our environment and our experiences, programs or subconscious mind through repetition plus emotion.
So anything we're repeatedly exposed to that creates an emotional response, basically
fires and wires, neural pathways.
And so then what will happen is we form these deep beliefs about who we are in relationships,
but unfortunately, these same beliefs associated with our different attachment styles will
also be what we believe about ourselves in the workplace, in our friendships,
in terms of how we operate financially,
it can really spread into multiple areas of life.
And a lot of the roots of these things
actually exist from like how we attach
and what we experience in our environment
as young children.
Wow, I love that you just put this thing
that every one of us struggles with.
Every single day, I wake up and I'm like,
okay, today,
I'm not gonna be bitchy to anybody.
Today, I am not gonna exercise.
Tonight, I'm not gonna pour myself a glass of wine.
I have all of these conscious intentions,
but then things happen throughout the day
and I find myself dropping into the same behavior
and it is incredibly frustrating.
And so if I'm tracking with what you're saying, your theory and what you do out in the world,
you now have 31,000 people that you are working with through your company on the stuff that you're about to teach us, you're saying
that we can identify those rules and behaviors that run in the background that drive our entire
life and we can change them. 100% That is amazing because we've talked about attachment style and
attachment theory on this podcast before and I find that a lot of the material
on attachment theory is very interesting and empowering
when you understand what your attachment style is.
But I've always felt that's your attachment style,
but I've never felt like there's a way to change it.
Absolutely.
And you can change it.
So I've just created a whole body of work
called Integrated Attachment Theory and the whole purpose of it is not to just
discover your attachment style and really see who you are and what your patterns are, but then to
be able to use that because just knowing something doesn't give you a whole lot of context until you're
able to say, okay, here's what I don't like about this and here's what I can recondition what's not
working for me. And if you're not born with something like an attachment style,
if it gets conditioned into you over time,
we're just reconditioning to move into a space
that works better for us.
And so it's quite simple to do.
There's a lot of different tools.
I'm sure we'll get into and talk about,
but that is the whole purpose of this work.
Wow.
OK, so how many attachment styles are they?
And what are they?
OK, so there's four major attachments.
I'll talk a little bit about how they come about as well.
So the first one is the securely attached child growing into the securely attached adult.
And the secure attachment individuals in their childhood, they get a lot of approach oriented
behavior. So if they approach oriented, what does that mean? So essentially if they cry as a child,
their parents will come towards them, try to figure
out what's going on and what's wrong and try to meet their needs.
And so the repetition and emotion, the conditioning or programming to the subconscious at this
age is, okay, if I express my emotions, I get my knees met.
It's safe to express my needs.
It's safe to rely on other people.
And I get loved when I'm in hard time.
So I'm worthy of connection and I'm worthy of love just for who I am,
not for what I do.
And so this person as an adult grows up
to have much easier experiences around relationships,
of course, and they trust and they rely,
and they communicate,
and they feel safe expressing their emotions
and feeling their emotions.
And so statistically, they have the biggest success rate
in relationships by far and away.
Then we have three insecure attachment styles.
On one end of the continuum,
we have an anxious preoccupied attachment style.
And this individual essentially grows up
with a lot of warmth and a lot of care
from their caregivers, but a lot of inconsistency.
So a really common example would be that
moments out of very loving, they are approach oriented,
they do care, but they both have really long jobs.
They're gone for 12 hours a day.
And the child's often at daycare,
or with the grandparent who might be more cold and withdrawn.
And so what happens is the repetition and emotion.
So the programming becomes, okay, I really want love,
and I really feel good when my caregivers are here,
but it keeps getting taken away.
And so this child learns to really fear abandonment,
and fear being left alone or excluded.
And so they grow up really having a lot fear abandonment and fear being left alone or excluded.
And so they grow up really having a lot of abandonment wounds and they're very sensitive
to rejection, exclusion, and they become very panicked if they see partners in their relationships
start to pull away.
And so they really struggle, unfortunately, because they want love, they want connection
so much, but because of this deeply conditioned fear of abandonment, it's almost like they
hold on so tight
that the sand's sort of constantly slipping
through their fingers, it accidentally pushes people away.
Wow.
And so that's our anxious preoccupied.
And they tend to struggle in relationships big time,
especially when it comes to getting people
to kind of commit and stick around.
On the basically opposite end of the continuum,
there's a dismissive avoidant attachment style.
This individual grows up with childhood emotional neglect. And sometimes it's really overt, like food's not on the table,
nothing's organized. Sometimes it's very covert, where instead it's like, you know, mom and dad are
there, but if you cry or express emotion, they're like tough enough, they don't check in. If the
child comes home from school, they're never going, oh, are you okay? See that you're off.
So this neglect happens.
And this child grows up in this environment and they can't understand that my parents
are emotionally unavailable.
So instead they go, there must be something wrong with me that I'm not getting my needs
met.
And so they build this deep wound of I am defective and they feel shame.
And then they grow up and they don't want to be that vulnerable again to anybody and
rely on anybody. So they become hyper independent and in relationships as a result, as
soon as things get real or as soon as people get too close, they sabotage, they push away
and they tend to fear commitment. And of course, the anxious and dismissives often end up
in relationships together. Are you talking about my marriage? Just like you just summarized
three years of marriage therapy with Chris Robbins and Mel Robbins,
but I know what's the third insecure attachment style.
So the last one is fearful of void and sometimes referred to as disorganized attachment.
And essentially they grow up in an environment where there's chronic chaos.
So a really easy example or analogy would be if there was a parent who was an alcoholic.
So let's say it's mom as an example.
One day, the child comes home from school and mom is drinking and she's in a really good mood and she's an alcoholic. So let's say it's mom as an example. One day, the child comes home
from school and mom is drinking and she's in a really good mood and she's really loving.
Another day, you know, mom comes home or child comes home and she's drinking a lap and
now she's angry. She's an angry drunk. Another day, she's so bring up, she's in a good
mood, she feels guilty. Another day, she's so bring up, she's going through withdrawal,
she's in chaos, right? So it's like you never know what you're going to get. It can be
a bad divorce, parents fighting all the time,
having a parent with narcissistic personality disorder,
all these sorts of things where there's chaos and fighting
and you never know what you're gonna get.
So this child grows up having some positive experiences
with love but some terrifying experiences with love
and so they feel conflicted.
This is what I was.
And so, you know, what the person will experience
is this feeling of like, I want closeness
and the people get close and they're like, get back.
And so they'll really be in this push pull pattern, but more than anything they struggle
to trust.
They feel like they can't rely on people.
They can't really connect.
They don't want to open up too much similar to the dismissive avoidant, but they also have
the anxious side.
And so they become as adults, the hot and cold partner in relationships, who's constantly going back and forth.
But again, these patterns get conditioned into us so that things we don't like or don't
serve us, we can absolutely re-condition to become secure and have thriving relationships.
You know what I love about listening to you?
Is that I find it personally reassuring that anyone can become more secure. And before we discuss the specifics
of each of the four attachment styles and how we can use this entire framework to heal yourself
and create better relationships, I really want to back up for just a second. I keep hearing you
use the word subconscious and it's a word that can be confusing to a lot of us. It's a
confusing to me, for example. So can you tell me and everyone listening? What
exactly is your subconscious mind? So your conscious mind, if you were looking
at your mind from sort of the top down as an analogy, your conscious mind,
which is like the tip of the iceberg floating above the surface, your
subconscious mind is what is just out of your conscious mind, which is like the tip of the iceberg, floating above the surface. Your subconscious mind is what is just out of your conscious mind's awareness.
And you can imagine this sort of the part of the iceberg that's just beneath the water level.
We actually then have the unconscious mind, which is like the very bottom of the iceberg,
but our unconscious mind is very difficult to retrieve information from.
So I put a lot of focus on the subconscious mind, because your subconscious mind,
you can actually, it's those warehouse of information, but you can actually dig into
it and be like, Oh, how did I feel 15 minutes ago when that happened? And you can retrieve
information even though it's out of your peripheral awareness. So in summary, your subconscious
mind is essentially the part of your mind that stores all information. And it's just
out of your conscious mind's awareness,
but it is retrievable.
Okay.
So I think that one of the most important things
to recognize is that we have a subconscious mind
that's really running the show.
And our subconscious mind gets all these patterns
and ideas about what love looks like.
And then we take those with us and that forms the lens
we basically see and interact with the
world through. So if we grew up in an environment where we learn that we don't communicate about things
or we learn, okay, we should just expect people to know what we need or we learn to violate our
own boundaries and people please. If we learn these patterns at a subconscious level, your attachment
style is the subconscious set of rules you have for what love and closeness and relationships are supposed to look like. And for some people that
works in their favor and for some people unfortunately if they didn't learn
healthy patterns it's really working against them and it can make relationships
feel very difficult, very hard and very confusing. Wow. There was so much I want
to dig into in what you just said. And one of the things that caught my attention
is when you said that the rules and the beliefs
that we have about what love is
and how relationship work,
that that is all stored in your subconscious.
Yes.
And why is it important to know that?
Because our subconscious mind, first of all,
is responsible for roughly 95 to 97%
of our beliefs, our thoughts, our emotions, and our actions. And our conscious mind is 3 to 5%.
And so the other thing we have to understand is that our conscious mind cannot outwill or overpower
our subconscious mind, which means we can have the experience of going, I don't want to get angry at
my partner. I don't want to raise my voice, or I want to stop drinking,
or we can have all these goals, or new years resolutions,
or ideas for how we want to change our behaviors.
But unfortunately, it just being a conscious goal,
until it's actually ingrained at the subconscious level,
we are going to experience this friction
between what we say, we want to do, and what we actually do.
And this has a huge impact on our relationships
where if we say, I want to show up better
or I want to have a relationship that lasts,
but if we have subconscious patterns working against us,
we will constantly feel like we're putting the gas
on the brakes on at the same time.
And that can be a very frustrating process.
Are you saying that it's possible though to change?
Yes.
What's in your subconscious mind?
Absolutely, of course.
How did you figure all this out?
I figured this out because I was a very...
I had a lot of work to do on myself.
I had a tough upbringing and I was kind of a mess.
And to be honest, the actual prude was that I was addicted
to opioids at 15.
So I went through from 15 to about 20 years old.
It was actually, I think it was just before I turned 15.
I had a knee surgery, I got addicted to pain killers, and actually my biggest experience
was every day being like, I'm going to get clean, I'm going to delete people's numbers
from my phone, and every day repeating the same pattern.
And for me, going through that over and over again, I was like high functioning enough. I made it to school. I was in a psychology class one day and somebody said to me,
the conscious mind can't outweigh their overpower the subconscious mind. And I was like, you described
all of my suffering that I experienced every day because going through that and being like,
I'm going to do this. And then every day losing that battle to myself. It was like tormenting.
And so when somebody said that to me, I was like, I'm going to learn everything I can on
God's greed or the about the subconscious mind.
And then it really opened up to all these different how, you know, what is the subconscious?
How does it affect us?
Oh, it's our core wounds.
It's our unmet needs.
It's our beliefs about ourself that really extend from those core wounds and our patterns in terms of boundaries. So I actually started there, did all that work, actually
wanted to practice and then revisit it, attachment theory.
And by practice, you mean, working with people?
Yes, working with counseling. Yeah, counseling.
And so then I was doing a lot of subconscious work with people and then I realized, oh,
all of the attachment styles
actually have very specific core wounds.
All of these generalized core wounds I was working on
with people, there's about 18 or so.
They actually fit in these perfect little packages
to each attachment style, as well as the needs fit perfectly
into these little packages, as well as the boundary issues.
And the commute, so what I end up doing is,
okay, once I know somebody's attachment style,
I don't have to find all these core wounds all over the place. I just know they're kind of blueprint. And then I had done so much work
on the subconscious for how to heal. And so that's sort of how everything became born.
Well, that makes a lot of sense because when you're working with someone who is a client of yours,
you're dealing with the pain. Yes. And by figuring out all of the pain that someone is talking about,
whether it's, I'm unworthy
of love or I'm ashamed of what I did or I regret this or I don't trust somebody, whatever
it is that the pain may be, you're only ever talking about the pain level.
So you're not going deep enough to change fundamentally.
Absolutely.
And so realizing that you weren't going deep enough, you dug in and it's when you discovered
attachment theory and the fact that when you locate yourself in one of the four different
attachment styles, you now have this simple framework to be able to heal the insecure attachment
style that you may have or maybe dealing with and become more secure with yourself
and more secure in relationship with other people.
Absolutely.
I'm getting this.
Thank you for kind of sharing the background on this
because when we come back,
I want to dive into exactly how to figure out
your attachment style.
So don't go anywhere.
Faiz Gibson and I are going to be waiting for you right after the break.
Welcome back. It's your friend Mel Robbins and you are here with me and Taís Gibson.
And we are digging into attachment styles. And Taiyis, I have a question for you.
How exactly can you figure out your attachment style
now that you're an adult?
Great question.
So part of it is definitely understanding
some of the childhood contacts,
but then it really goes into the biggest body of work
that we developed on top of traditional attachment theory
was about our core wounds.
So each attachment style has very specific core wounds.
They also have very specific needs,
and they have very specific issues with boundaries and how they communicate. So we can kind of unpack
those things. So, um, securely attached people, I mean, they tend to communicate healthily. They
don't really have many core wounds that are specific to relationships. They can have insecurities
because they're human beings, but we won't see too much of that as a whole. They tend to have healthy
boundaries. They want to resolve things right away.
Is anybody securely attached?
I mean, I was laughing as I was kind of preparing to talk to you
because as I was looking at the definition of secure attachment,
I thought, oh, is this sort of like you thinking
you're a good driver?
90% of us think we're great drivers,
but we're really not great drivers.
Do most people think they're securely attached?
It's actually very interesting.
So traditional research will show about 50% of people are securely attached.
That many?
One percent is the actual number, yes.
How is that possible?
I completely disagree.
In my practice, what I saw over and over again is people will come in.
The first session, I would take them through some of this stuff and they would be like,
oh, I'm the secure one.
And then by session two, I was like,
there's no way that they're secure.
You know, they, they, and I think that people,
we felt when we self-report, things are skewed, right?
And those numbers, that 51% is based on self-reporting.
Obviously, I have a bio-sample size of people
because they're people who are going through struggles
and are reaching out for help and support.
But I just found so many times that like more than half
the time people would say I'm secure and then definitely not secure.
I'm kind of making a joke about it, but as a parent, right?
And having three kids, 24, 23, and 18, as I'm listening to you describe the four different attachment styles, I was listening both as a parent thinking, oh, you know, I really
probably created the anxious preoccupied attachment style by working a lot. The second
you said daycare, I thought, oh gosh, that explains it. Our two daughters were in daycare.
There you go, Malia, you really blew it. And then of course, I'm listening for myself.
And what was interesting is that I always presumed
that I was probably anxious, preoccupied.
Interesting.
But as we have this conversation
and I am listening in real time,
I'm wondering if I'm going to see that I'm more in the fear for
probably I can't even say it. I'm so nervous about fear full avoidant. Because when you said
a chaotic environment, including narcissistic behavior, I was like ding, ding, ding, ding, ding,
ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, and when I go ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Yes. And when I go ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, you know what means I'm leaning in.
And I know that you, as you're listening, are leaning into.
And so let's go even deeper into this concept of core wounds.
What are the core wounds of the three insecure attachment styles?
When we get into the insecure attachment styles, this is where we can really see the nuances
that haven't been developed before. So, anxious attachment styles, their biggest
core wounds are, I will be abandoned, I will be alone, I will be excluded, disliked, rejected,
not good enough, and unsafe. And what we'll see is they tend to feel this big trigger of
unsafety when people pull away, because in childhood, we're very reliant on our caregivers,
so we can't literally cannot
survive without them. And so what happens is as children, the anxious attachment style,
when their caregivers pull away, they actually have a trauma response, like, will I survive without
them, you know, as they're gone? And so we really easily confuse and intertwine survival with approval
as anxious attachment styles, and that becomes really prevalent in childhood.
And as adults, the anxious attachment, they'll have a full nervous system reaction when
somebody pulls away.
That abandonment will really trigger also this deep feeling of being unsafe.
I'm just sitting here selfishly, processing and thinking about my family as I'm sure as you're listening,
you're doing the exact same thing. Can I give you a scenario? Because I think it might be helpful.
There's no doubt in my mind that our daughter Kendall has anxious attachment style,
because I often say I feel like you're human blanky. Yes. And if she has a situation that is anything that would make her nervous or anything that
would make her slightly uncertain, there's a phone call.
And you know that the attachment style is kicked in because then there's a second one, and then there might be a third one.
And is that sort of a classic indication
that you feel this sense when you can't get a hold of somebody,
this alarm bell goes off inside you
and you're firing off the text
or you're calling them again
or you're checking their location?
Is that a good example of the type of behavior that somebody with anxious attachment?
Absolutely. What you'll see is that these core wounds, if you sort of were to trail them across,
you'd see that core wounds, when we feel like I'm abandoned, we start thinking thoughts about
they're never going to come back, or what if I can't get my needs met, and then this sparks
emotions, and then we'll feel those emotions and neuroscience has actually proven that every single come back or what if I can't get my needs met. And then this sparks emotions.
And then we'll feel those emotions and neuroscience
has actually proven that every single decision
we make is based on our emotions.
So then these actions happen in a subconscious level
where the anxious, preoccupied will cling.
And part of what's happening is they're
terrified of losing proximity to people.
And they also, as children, didn't ever
learn to self-south consistently enough.
So they really rely on other people to soothe.
And when they can't soothe through other people,
it will create problems in terms of their ability
to regulate.
And so some other things you'll see beyond core wounds
is the needs anxious preoccupies tend to have.
Is they need a lot of validation, reassurance,
consistency, certainty is a huge one,
especially in their romantic relationships.
And one of their big love languages is around physical touch.
They want to be close.
They want to be nearby.
You'll see a lot of those sorts of patterns.
Anxious preoccupied attachments,
else are the sweetest.
They are so kind.
They're so thoughtful.
They really think about people.
They really spend a lot of time focused on the people around them.
I mean, they have superpowers.
And so some of the superpowers of the anxious attachment
is that they're very loving.
They're very warm. they're very warm,
they're very kind, they're thoughtful, they're supportive,
they really go out of their way to think about the people
in their lives.
So they have all these beautiful characteristics
they bring to relationships, but because their subconscious
comfort zone is to be so focused on other people,
the primary casualty in that relationship
becomes a relationship to themselves.
And so they will constantly deprioritize themselves,
put their needs last, not speak up for their needs, because they get into people pleasing behaviors, and actually all
of those things that they're doing are the crux of why it's so difficult to self-suit. Because if you
don't know your needs, you can't meet your own needs, and you have all these core wounds, it
becomes so difficult to self-suit, and they'll constantly try to maintain that closeness and
soothe through others, but when other people are not available, that's where it becomes really tricky.
When it comes to trying to change your behavior or trying to achieve something or trying to
achieve a goal, how does having this anxious attachment style and the core wound of abandonment
show up in terms of sabotaging your ability to either be consistent or to do the work
to change yourself. In so many ways. So one of the biggest things is like let's say something in
your workplace. Yeah. Interesting attachment cells in the workplace they'll often put themselves
last. They'll put themselves in the back burner. They'll take on other people's work and not set healthy
boundaries and all of a sudden they're behind on their things because they're people pleasing
others. And also if they have this huge fear of abandonment, what happens is we abandon
ourselves, right? Whatever our core wounds are, also become the biggest things we reenact
in the relationship to self because the sub-conscious mind wants to maintain its comfort zone.
So if you see somebody with an abandonment core wound, they're so worried about getting abandon
by others, that they will abandon themselves to please others. And that's actually how the wounds stays alive.
Like if we ask ourselves, hey, those wounds came from childhood
30 years ago, how are they still alive in me now?
Oh, because I am reenacting them in relationship to self
through repetition and emotion on a daily basis.
And if I wasn't doing that,
they actually wouldn't still be here.
It's not possible.
So that's how the subconscious keeps these things.
And so what the anxious preoccupied has to do is learn to meet their own needs, reprogram their subconscious
core wounds, and then be able to actually consider themselves equally to others, like take
their own boundaries into consideration as much as they do with others. And those things
become a huge part of the healing process. And we can talk about subconscious reprogramming
in a little bit, perhaps, but those tend to be some really important things to recognize in terms of the patterning.
And then the very last thing I'll say is just anxious attachment styles as well. If they
have a goal, and then it's not even in the workplace, it's a personal goal. And then
their friends say, but I need you. Or then they, you know, want to make social plans or
commitments. They'll be so preoccupied with that that they struggle to actually balance the other
areas of their life.
They'll be so focused on relationships.
Career can be on the back burner, finances, mental growth, emotional growth, spiritual
wealth.
All those things can kind of take less precedence, which of course they'll feel later
over time because they're always deprioritizing themselves.
That makes so much sense.
If you look at the anxious attachment style from a standpoint of
needs, what are their core needs? Yes, the biggest needs that they have, and interestingly enough,
these have to be the needs that they give to themselves. So the big needs are reassurance,
validation, encouragement, support to be seen, to be heard are really, really big. People who
being present with them.
And then really that certainty and consistency,
like those are the big ones.
And I think ones would discover that.
The real like discussion has to become,
well, if for any number of reasons,
I didn't get access to that as a child.
Part of healing is to repetitively give that to myself now
because I'm leveraging principles of neuroplasticity,
same thing, repetition and emotion that fire in wire neural pathways.
And if I'm leveraging those principles, then by giving those things to myself,
yeah, not only do I learn to self-south, but also because if I have those needs met,
the bucket's half way full, right? So I'm not panicked without somebody else meeting them.
I'm actually soothing myself. I'm able to get there. And then it also heals and undoes the past
because we're changing the programming
at the subconscious level that originally existed.
So let's go back to the example of somebody
who's anxiously attached.
Yes.
And they say to themselves, all right,
I'm not gonna bother my significant other at work today.
And then they find themselves getting
that wave of emotion and wanting to send 15 texts. What do you do in that moment if the
solution to reprogramming your subconscious is to give yourself what you need? What would
you do is you're standing there with the phone? What are you doing that moment? Yes, amazing question. So there's ways to reprogram that are proactive so that we can
actually recondition those wounds to begin with. So they stop coming back. That's the real crux of
everything. But in the moment, until we've done the reprogramming, which takes about 21 days,
what we want to be able to do is make sure that we are in a position where whatever it is that we
are needing from that person person we want to isolate.
So if you're needing from your significant other,
like what are you reaching out for?
What are you hoping to get as a result?
Are you needing encouragement?
Are you needing certainty?
And if you can look at that and realize,
hey, I as a human being have the capacity
to give that to myself, you can literally think of,
if I could paint a picture of what that encouragement
would look like from my spouse or from my friend, or whoever it is, how can I give that to myself
inwardly?
So if I'm hearing you correctly, what you need to do is take a step back in those moments
and ask yourself, what do I need?
Yes.
And what's really interesting is the subconscious mind really wants a comfort zone.
So it doesn't like unfamiliarity because ultimately the subconscious is
survival-wired, which means anything unfamiliar tends to reject.
It's part of why we end up in the same types of relationship patterns or the
same types of situations so often.
So what happens is originally when an anxious preoccupied tries to give the
need that they would want from others to themselves instead.
Like, if I want to encourage myself, let me write out three of my wins or
let me journal about why I will be okay, or if I need certainty,
let me schedule out what I'm needing,
or create structure in my life.
At first, it feels a little bit foreign.
This is always like the thing for anxious preoccupies.
They have the hardest time meeting the needs themselves,
more so than the other insecure attachment cells.
But as we start doing it repetitively,
we start creating these neural pathways
where it becomes more comfortable.
So basically what happens is over time,
through the repetition and emotion of building that
into our comfort zone, we usually have to essentially
use our conscious mind to recondition our subconscious mind.
So at first, it's more like mechanical
for the first little bit.
It definitely helps to soothe in that moment,
but it won't feel as soothing
as what an anxious preoccupied is seeking from somebody else.
But by about day seven of doing this behavior repetitively,
we start to build a subconscious comfort zone around it.
And by day 21, I mean, I have seen at this point,
thousands of people who are like anxious preoccupied,
really afraid to even be alone and spend time alone,
who now come and say, oh, I actually love spending time alone.
I feel comfortable with myself.
I've built this relationship to myself.
I don't panic anymore when my partner's not available.
So this is something that's very feasible.
It just takes that really first seven days of commitment
to start feeling comfortable within it.
And by day 21, we see a tremendous difference.
That's incredible.
So one other question before we move on
to the other attachment styles.
If you're in a relationship with somebody
who has that anxious attachment style,
what is the best thing for you to say
or the best way for you to show up
to create more security for the person.
Like, can you change somebody else's attachment style?
So in theory, yes, because anything we're exposed to through repetition plus emotion
has the impact to reprogram.
So yes, and if you're dating somebody who's securely attached, there can be a benefit.
However, there's a big caveat to this. Which is that our subconscious mind, because
it wants to maintain its comfort zone, tends to not be attracted to people who are very
secure of your insecurity attached. I have heard countless, fearful avoidance attachment
cells, just as an example, say things like, you know, I started dating somebody and there
wasn't chaos, and it felt boring. And anxious preoccupies as well. If somebody is too present
or too kind or too kind or too
sweet or too loving, often they will sabotage it because again at the end of the day, the subconscious
mind is like, I want what's familiar, familiarity equals safety, which equals survival. And so if they
grew up with a lot of push pull, a lot of hot and cold and inconsistency, the anxious preoccupied
will often reject somebody who's really secure. It's quite rare that they'll actually invest. And so I don't want to take away from the idea that, yes,
in theory, an in principle that happens,
rarely have I seen that actually be the case
in the years and years of client practice.
I've been focused on this.
But what I have seen is that when we do that work
in the relationship to ourselves,
we get this two-pronged benefit,
which is on one side of the equation,
when we build a secure attachment in the relationship to ourselves because we start this two pronged benefit, which is on one side of the equation, when
we build a secure attachment in the relationship to ourselves, because we start to meet our
own needs, because we reprogram our core wounds, all of a sudden, now we are securely attached
to self.
And so now we are actually attracted to securely attached people who will show up for us
in a way that feels safe and familiar to our subconscious mind.
And the second part is that there's tremendous benefit.
I mean, doing the work helps you feel healed,
helps you feel more confident.
And because it's really about the relationship to ourselves
at the end of the day,
that will spill out into all other areas of life,
be it career, financial, friendships,
family relationships, et cetera.
Tyese, that was a master class in anxious preoccupied.
I can't even say it.
My head is spinning so much.
And I know as you've been listening to Tais,
you've now basically put half of your family
into that category.
But I want to hit pause, let us hear a word from our sponsors.
They allow me to bring this to you for zero cost.
But when we come back, don't you be anxious?
I want you to stay attached.
I know I'm making stupid jokes,
but we're gonna go in depth into the two other insecure
attachment styles.
One is the dismissive of Voidant,
and the second one is the fearful of Voidant.
Stay with us. Welcome back. It's your friend, Mal. I am so happy you're still here because we are just
scratching the surface on what you're about to learn about attachment styles. We've already
covered everything you need to know about the anxious attachment style. We've got two
more to cover. First up, dismissive avoidant attachment.
That's a mouthful, Ties.
So how about you tell us, who is that person?
So because this person grows up
with that childhood emotional neglect,
they tend to really not want to emotionally attach
to people, they tend to want to keep their space.
They basically as children adapt
to the discomfort of emotional neglect
because we're all wired and attuned for deep connection.
So they adapt by going, well, I don't need that.
I'm just gonna not need it.
So I stop feeling this pain and shame of rejection from it.
Because if you grew up as a child,
yearning for that connection,
yearning to be seen and we're literally
biologically wired for that, just yearning for it.
All the time becomes counterproductive.
Eventually that yearning is so pervasive that the person adapts by going,
I'm going to reject the connection that's rejecting me and that's how I'm going to feel safe.
So they're big core wounds because of that. Become, I am defective.
I am shameful. That's why I couldn't get my needs met.
They're very sensitive to criticism, although they will not show it.
They're too stoic to show it. They're sensitive to criticism, though.
And they'll really withdraw.
And they sell sooth by literally pushing everybody away and icing everybody out because
they really go inwards and they usually rely on different creature comforts for soothing,
like binge watching television or eating a lot of food or video games or these sort of
things that they can sue through.
Exactly.
Exactly.
All of those things, 100%.
What are the core wounds for somebody
with a dismissive avoidant attachment style?
Dismissive avoidance, they're a big core wounds are,
I am defective, I will be unsafe.
They really tend to not like conflict.
They'll try to sort of retreat from conflict.
A lot of the time until it reaches sort of a threshold,
then they may get involved.
They tend to feel trapped, helpless, powerless,
afraid of being weak if they rely on others. And they actually tend to, especially people
who grow up in a more severely neglecting environment, tend to have this deep wound and kind
of fear that I do not belong, kind of like I'm an outsider, because as a child, if you
grow up in that environment, you're not getting to deeply connect with other people, it will
really foster that kind of wounding. So, this individual is an adult, becomes a person who can be very charming, charismatic, wonderful,
early on, but when things get real, they often get afraid.
And so, they will push people away.
And they tend to draw.
Or withdraw.
Is that like the other, like when you say push people away, it sounds very active and
purposeful.
Yes.
That is withdrawing and isolating. Yes, that's actually a really beautiful
nuance that you pointed out, which is the pushing people away versus pulling away. For sure,
the dominant pattern with dismissive avoidance is to pull away and to withdraw and to really retreat,
kind of like a turtle going into their shell. But we will definitely see dismissive avoidance,
especially in like the earlier dating stages of relationships,
actively push people away by sabotaging the relationship by leaving early.
If they feel like their feelings are too real or it feels too raw for them, they'll often say,
okay, I have to get out of here, that's it, we're done.
And there can be that push away dynamic, but when they're actually in a committed relationship,
you'll see a lot more of the pulling away, the withdrawing, the retreating. So, what are their needs?
Because I'm married to somebody who is always in his head.
Yes.
Like, he's very, very kind-hearted.
Yes.
And yet, isolates so quickly.
Yes.
And is absolutely checking the box on absolutely everything that you just said.
Yes.
And he has often said, I really am not sure what I need.
Yes, the dismissal wouldn't slogan.
But how do you then, what do they need if they don't know what they need?
It's an amazing question.
And so what you'll see is the big needs that they have are number one,
they really need to feel safe in their relationships.
This element of feeling that sense of safety
and consistency is really important
because as children, they didn't feel safe
when they had that neglect going on.
And so they tried to develop that sense of safety
just within themselves,
but they often don't feel too safe
for lying on other people.
Beyond that, they really need,
even though they will never show it,
they really need acknowledgement and appreciation. Now they don't want like, oh you're the best
partner in the world, they don't want these grandiose forms of it, they want the
little things, they want, hey, I see that you're really trying here. Thank you.
Dismissive avoidance responds extremely poorly to negative reinforcement.
They respond extremely positively to positive reinforcement. And what you'll
see is if you ask a dismissal
avoidant for a need to be met,
and then they do it and you say,
hey, thank you, I see that you like really showed up for that.
They get this sense, because you have to remember, right?
If you grow up as a dismissal boy,
then you don't get modeling for healthy exchange
and relationships.
You get modeling for neglect
for everybody being shipped passing in the night.
And so they often feel really disempowered and incapable of doing relationships in this way. You are literally describing my husband.
I wish I had known this year one in Darmerage. I mean, we're at year 27 and are finally unpacking
the fact that and what you just said is incapable. Yes. That he was so conditioned to be on his own,
ships passing in the night,
fend for yourself is the word that he used
about his childhood.
Yes.
Fend for yourself.
Absolutely.
And also this sense,
because it's been very frustrating at times
to go, you're so capable in every other area,
why the hell can't you just like
exactly think ahead about us or about the family.
And a lot of things have changed, but this makes so much sense.
And dismissive avoidance often, like you said, they're so capable, they're very capable
because they had to mentally and intellectually develop to fend for themselves, but they
didn't really emotionally develop the exchange and relationships because that wasn't there.
So they're almost stunted in their growth emotionally there.
And that's part of when we go to needs that appreciation and acknowledgement gives them
this idea that, oh, I can do this.
I am doing this right.
And they respond so positively when they get that acknowledgement and appreciation.
And beyond that, some other needs that they really have is they really tend to need
empathy. They really tend to fall into infatuation or limmerance if somebody's really empathetic and supportive of them. It goes a very long way because again, these are deeply unmet needs from childhood.
And so that sense of supportiveness, that sense of empathy, that sense of appreciation,
acknowledgement, safety, all of those things harmony
tends to be another huge need in relationships,
but I would say those encompass their biggest needs.
The really interesting thing is that the dismissable void
and has the subconscious comfort zone.
So because of this, what you'll see is like,
they grow up, they get neglected.
Who is the biggest neglecter of the dismissable void
in some oceans?
Themselves, themselves.
And so part of their healing just like for the anxious preoccupied is to learn to give
to themselves what they didn't get access to in childhood repetitively.
So when they can actually start tuning into their feelings, practicing like meditation
or breath work or things that are going to anchor them into the parasympathetic or rest
in repair nervous system mode.
What you'll see is doing that, getting their feelings back online, actually being okay
with their emotions, not being afraid of them, realizing that their feelings are just
feedback, their guidance mechanisms, building that relationship back to their feelings is
actually the very thing that gives them emotional bandwidth and their relationship to others.
Wow.
So that becomes a huge part,
along with giving themselves appreciation,
giving themselves a sense of support.
Well, what's interesting is that, you know,
if you're in a relationship with somebody
who has this dismissive, avoidant attachment style,
you tend to get very frustrated.
Absolutely.
And so you, in your frustration, are giving a lot of negative reinforcement, which makes
them only pull away more and act more confused and more ashamed and more avoidant of you.
And it makes sense that the small, specific, consistent, positive,
thank you for this.
I see that you're doing this.
I appreciate that.
Thank you for remembering this.
You're creating this reciprocal exchange
that they never got in childhood.
Absolutely.
In the context of goals.
So you have somebody who is dismissive avoidant
and they have personal goals.
How do they sabotage their ability
to take new actions, to be consistent,
to put themselves first?
Great question.
So often what you'll see is there's subconcious comforts
and because there's a lot of this wounding of shame,
they often don't want to be seen.
So they can avoid putting themselves in the spotlight,
they can absolutely avoid asking for help.
It's such a big dynamic where they will just,
they'll think they have to do it all in their own all the time.
And I'm sure you've probably noticed this in your life
as I have is it's sometimes comfortable to do it all on your own,
but you get so much further ahead in life
when you're working with other people,
when you have people you can learn from and learn with and support
each other. And I think one of the biggest pain points is that they will literally get
into a place where they won't be open to that. And they can struggle to work in teams sometimes,
they can silence themselves out a lot. So that would be a big saboteur in regards to work.
But then personal goals can be that because they have such a subconscious comfort,
don't have needing safety, needing comfort, sometimes they can be ones to avoid stretching themselves as
much as other attachment styles because they kind of want to just retreat into that safety
and comfort zone in their spare time.
And part of what's happening is they're actually dealing with a fairly dysregulated nervous system
throughout the day.
They're kind of in low level fight or flight a lot of the time.
And so when they finish work or these commitments that they have to do or have to show up for,
they will often retreat and go into just soothing by themselves doing their own thing at the end of the day,
which of course, then you're not putting those that time into stretching, into growing yourself in other areas.
That makes so much sense because you're right.
Anxious attachment is high levels of that fighter flight energy, which I think we all know somebody who's anxiously attached to as a friend or somebody that
we're dating or somebody in our family, and you can feel that vibrational energy.
Absolutely.
I also very much relate to the description of a low level of that fight or flight. They may not show it on the surface, but they're up in their
heads with drawing, dealing with it.
Absolutely.
Now, one more scenario for the dismissive avoidant. Can you give us one with regard to
texting and reaching out to somebody you're dating? And what is the conflict that a dismissive avoidant
would have if the anxious attachment person is,
okay, I'm not gonna text him today,
I'm not gonna be clingy today and then,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
they're texting.
What is a dismissive do?
The dismissive avoidance is almost the exact opposite.
So they tend to get afraid of people relying on them
to various degrees because they feel like,
okay, I can,
I'm just here to take care of myself.
They feel like it's a big commitment
and they also feel like it's a bit of an injustice
in that commitment.
I shouldn't have to do things I don't wanna do.
The really interesting thing is that exactly
what each attachment style needs to do to become secure
is essentially if we could sort of summarize it
in a very high level umbrella term,
it's like we are striving for interdependency.
Anxious attachment cells are super codependent.
I should meet all of your needs,
you should meet all of mine, we never meet our own.
Dismissive avoidance are very counterdependent.
I should meet all my own needs,
you should meet all your own needs,
and we'll just sometimes come together.
What they each need to do is to come to center.
I can meet my needs, and I can rely on myself to meet my needs and feel empowered to do so.
And I feel safe and comfortable expressing and receiving from you and vice versa.
And the dismissive avoidant when it comes to texting, they sort of have this idea that like,
I shouldn't have to text you if I don't feel like it.
The part of their growth is to allow people to rely on them. And they will actually do better at that.
When they learn that, hey, I can rely on other people too.
There is an exchange and there's something beautiful
about the exchange.
And what we'll see is on the path of dismissal avoidance
becoming more secure, they'll start to rely on other people
a little more first.
And then they'll actually feel good about it.
And then they'll realize that they want to do that with others
and allow others to rely on them.
And then when they get that positive reinforcement, like, hey, see you showing up. Thank you.
And they feel capable and they feel encouraged. That's where they start to really move into
interdependency. And they won't feel like texting if they don't feel like it is a chore.
And they'll be more mindful and more consistent.
This is so amazing. And you're right. it is an incredibly helpful framework to really understand why
some people are the way that they are. And we've covered a lot. So let me just recap where
we are. We've covered what people with a secure attachment style are like. You have described
anxious, preoccupied attachment. We've now just covered dismissive avoidant attachment styles, and we
got one left. And that is fearful avoidant. Tyese, who are these fearful avoidant attachment
style people, and what do they show up like in life, and can you tell us about their
core wounds? Yes. Okay, so fearful avoidants, because of growing up in that chaos, they
usually, their primary wound is actually
to struggle with trust.
And it may not be trust in this really over-at-way
the way you would think,
but fearful avoidance are the most hyper-vigilant.
They notice everything.
Reading between the lines on everything,
little tiny micro expression change they thought they saw at first,
little tiny change in a pattern of behavior, they noticed it and
Fearful avoidance actually have the most court wounds. So they tend to have the court wounds of the anxious
They can fear abandonment, but what we'll see a lot for fearful avoidance is they can want this this connection
They can feel afraid of being abandoned or not good enough or disliked or alone
But if people get too close too fast
They can also go into their very avoidance side, feel
very afraid of being trapped, helpless, powerless.
And then that's sort of combined with this struggle to trust and to feel safe opening up
and relying on other people.
So they really have both sides.
What's interesting as well is that as you date somebody more avoidant because if your
full avoidant kind of has shared attributes of both sides, it will polarize you more into
your opposite side.
So make you more anxious.
Exactly.
They tend to have a little bit more intensity,
a little bit more fire and spice.
So we will generally see that fearful avoidance,
they tend to be fairly high achievers, hard workers.
They tend to be a little bit of overcompensator sometimes,
sometimes this idea of like, if you
grew up in a childhood where nothing was kind of ever good enough, you can actually struggle
with a deep unworthiness core wound as well.
And so really struggle to kind of overcome that by showing up in all these different ways.
Obviously, there can be superpowers to that.
That can be super beneficial.
But again, the sort of casualty in it can be the relationship to self because it can
be so much about the outside world, how you have to show up for others, fearful of wouldn't
show up incredibly well for people in crisis.
But they're so focused on other people, concerned with other people, that again, they kind of
lose that relationship to self.
And the funny thing as well is that, you know, with a fearful avoidant and dismissive
avoidant, this is something I noticed so much with my own husband is I,
in the early stages, realized I was much better communicating my needs because I had done a lot
of work on that. But I realized that I still had this element of like expecting him to know my needs
when I would become critical or negatively reinforced. It was because I would hold in my needs,
not make space for myself, put myself last, prioritize everybody else, and because I would hold in my needs, not make space for myself,
put myself last, prioritize everybody else, and then I would hold it in, hold it in.
Anxious preoccupies can do that forever.
Fearful avoidance cannot.
They hold it in, they hold it in, and then they kind of become the volcano erupting
eventually.
And they will say something harsh with their words, or they'll cut a little bit with
how they speak.
And what happened and what the learning for me was was, okay, I have to be
so good at communicating my needs proactively. And that was actually part of my healing
as a fearful avoidant was to learn till I consider myself as much of those I was considering
everybody else. And so fearful avoidants have this dynamic of being very on, very intense
personalities. They've had to struggle through chaos. So sometimes that subconscious comfort zone is chaos.
They make very good entrepreneurs
because they tend to do well outside of their comfort zone
in the chaos, but part of the healing is learning
to be balanced and centered,
learning to keep the relationship to self.
And of course we have to do the healing
on the abandonment wounds and the trapped wounds,
both the anxious and the avoid inside.
But the real dynamic is to learn to trust. Could you say more about the trust?
Yes. Because I think when you say the word trust,
it, to me, I just think of, oh, do I trust you?
Do I not trust you? And I think,
on the surface, I think I trust people.
But as you're talking, I'm feeling like,
when I don't know what my needs are, I get very overwhelmed and chaotic internally.
And how does that relate to trust?
Because there's this element of not trusting your environment to be okay.
There's this element at a deep level of the trust isn't just and there can be of course,
like that I don't trust somebody won't lie or betray me.
The thing that's really important to remember too is that our attachment wounds
become the loudest and the most real for us when we actually attach.
So we may it means when we actually build an emotional bond and start developing feelings or open up or developing real closest.
So you may feel like oh I trust the stranger on the street or the person I just met, but when we really let somebody in, that's
when we'll feel afraid that they might leave us or they might betray us by lying or through
infidelity or through not showing up in a pinch when we really need them to be there. And so you'll
see that those elements can really represent trust, but at a deeper level because it really
is the relationship to ourselves first.
We'll also see that trust shows up in the way of us not trusting the outcome, trusting
the environment.
Sometimes we'll try to hyper control things.
And so the real healing for that trust wound actually becomes to look at all the places
we betray ourselves.
And a lot of that can be that we don't show up for own boundaries sometimes,
or we say, it's fine when it's not actually OK.
Or we agree to things, and we say, yes, when it's really
a no, and we don't protect our space.
Or there can be ways that we betray or lie to ourselves
even.
Like, this is completely an OK situation.
Meanwhile, you're just floundering.
So there can be these dynamics where we do that
and part of the healing around trust
is to understand it in that context.
And then as a result of that,
to be able to be better in the relationship
to ourselves around those things.
And as we do that better,
we'll learn to trust other people
because we'll also learn that people are not perfect.
They're never gonna be perfect.
People will hurt us,
but the real building of relationships doesn't come from people being perfect. It comes from, people will hurt us. But the real building of relationships
doesn't come from people being perfect.
It comes from when somebody does hurt us,
we can be vulnerable and say,
I wish that hurt, that didn't feel good for me.
Can we work on this together?
And allowing people that chance to build that trust
with you by working on it.
And that's where we really built those deep roots
around trust.
You know, as I'm sitting or listening,
it almost sounds as if the anxious
and the dismissive avoidant attachment styles,
it's typical for somebody to be trapped in it
and not really know their needs
and to be completely hijacked by their emotions.
And if I'm reading between the lines
based on what you just said about the fearful
or disorganized
avoidant that you do know when your boundaries being violated.
You just don't do anything about it.
It's a really nuanced thing, but it's really a powerful question.
What tends to happen is that fearful avoidants can be a little bit dissociated from themselves.
They can be a little bit like so focused
on the external world and their commitments
and their things they have to do
that they can be a little bit disconnected.
And generally what happens is fearful
when the will field their emotions very strongly
when they feel them.
And it will usually look like holding things in,
but you may sort of have to reach this pivotal threshold
where the emotions become strong enough
because the frustrations and the experiences are big enough, that now you reach the threshold.
And it's almost like the fearful one will go, oh, this person's violated my boundaries.
Wait a minute.
They did this three weeks ago and four weeks ago and five weeks ago.
And then that frustration will really come to a head.
And so yes, there can be a pushing down and a repressing, but it's almost so subconscious that it's not even in the periphery.
And when it does come to the threshold, then the emotions can be a little bit stronger.
So, when it comes to personal goals, how does a fearful avoidance sabotage their ability to change?
Great question. They tend to put so much pressure on themselves and take on so much that eventually they
can kind of scatter themselves and be pulled into many places. They also tend to put the goals and
the interests of other people, sometimes ahead of themselves. And again, it's not that we should be
always putting ours ahead of everybody else. We want to get into equilibrium as much as possible.
So like considering ourselves equal to others as much as possible, whereas fearful avoidans tend
to be like put everybody first to a fault
until they're really frustrated and reach that threshold. So that can be a saboteur and then also
through avoidans core wounds can get in the way, right? We can come to believe, okay, I'm not worthy of my goal or
you know, I don't deserve it or I'm not good enough or I know for myself something I learned on my own journey
to being secure was that I used to run a business
all my own. And I wanted to control things enough because I didn't trust that other people could
do it properly. And so, and it was that sort of trust wounding, right? Like, oh, but if I give
this to somebody else or delegate it, they may not be able to do it. And they might make a mistake.
And so learning to rely on other people with our goals, learning to reach out for that help and support and to delegate can be a really important part
of building that trust as well.
So the good news is that you can go do subconscious work because all of this stuff is running
in the subconscious of your brain. Yes. And you're not going to overpower it with your conscious mind.
And the only way that you're going to change how you are showing up in relationships to
yourself and everybody else is to take care of it in the subconscious.
100%.
How do we do that?
Okay.
So the first thing is we want to go back to the principles of repetition and emotion.
That repetition, emotion of us being able to first meet our needs.
Like we talked about is a really important pillar of healing.
The second thing is we can talk about a really simple tool
to reprogram the core wounds,
which is called auto suggestion.
So this is the really powerful step to becoming secure
to reprogram your core wounds,
and it is called auto suggestion.
So basically how auto suggestion works is the first first thing and I'll give a sort of a
background story here for a sort of context for it.
But the first thing is we want to put ourselves in what we call a suggestible state.
As somebody with a background in hypnosis, this is where this comes from, suggestible
state basically means that your brain is producing mostly alpha brain waves.
And when you're in alpha brain waves state, you're a lot more suggestible.
AKA, your subconscious mind is much more open to
suggestion or to being reprogrammed.
If you've ever seen somebody in an alpha state, it's often
after a deep meditation, it's the first hour that they wake up
in the morning, the last hour before they go to sleep, or if
you've ever seen somebody when they're watching television,
and you're like, Bob, Bob, and Bob's just like in the
television, he's like in this sort of trans-like state.
When we watch television,
we actually produce a lot of alpha brain waves.
So we get into a relaxed state.
Easiest way is first thing in the morning when you wake up.
Okay, but can I just make sure I understand?
Yes.
That when you first wake up, you are in the alpha state.
Yes.
But if you look at your phone, I'm assuming you will not be
in your alpha state. You're in your cell phone. I would have it very quickly. Okay, so you're talking roll out of bed. Yes. But if you look at your phone, I'm assuming you will not be in your office state. You're talking very quickly. Okay. So you're talking roll out of bed.
Absolutely. And immediately the first thing you do so that you can take advantage of this
alpha state in your brain, where you're highly suggestible, which means highly programmable
everybody. What are we doing? So then what we do is we take our first core wound.
Okay.
So the, let's just use a really simple one for argument six.
So let's say it's, I'm not good enough.
Okay.
Now, how the hell do we figure out our core wound?
So remember the anxious track when it was like abandoned alone, excluded,
disliked, not good enough.
So we mentioned them all before.
So hopefully people recognize themselves in that attachment style.
So if you go, so the processes, locate yourself in the attachment style.
Yes.
Second, really dig into,
what is the one for you and how is it showing up?
Yes, and I mean, you can like,
if you're not sure,
you can ask yourself when I get triggered,
what am I afraid the worst case scenario will be?
Like you can think of times you were triggered
and be like, what am I really afraid will happen next?
And that's a way of kind of isolating it.
But as a general rule, vast majority of people
are like, I have the abandonment core wound
and they feel it and they know.
And so, so you can pick the one
that's really bothering you the most.
If we started with one for each,
it would be abandonment for anxious attachment style.
It would be betrayed for fearful avoidant,
but also very strong secondary abandoned or trapped.
Those also show up quite strongly.
And dismissal boy, it would be, I am defective.
So like I am shameful essentially.
Gotcha.
Okay.
And so we picked the core wound that's bothering us the most.
Then we oppose it.
Okay.
So what's the opposite of the core wound?
Let's just use, I'm not good enough.
I am good enough.
Now here's a really interesting part.
But what if you don't believe it?
Like you know what I mean?
Like here's the thing.
Like okay, well my core wound that's been in my subconscious for 50 years that runs on repeat
where I literally look in the mirror and go, that's a loser. Well, so that's the point, right?
Is that your subconscious doesn't believe it. And so we have to address like a lot of people
will do affirmations. Affirmations are extremely limiting. I'm a big not believer in affirmations.
Here's why your conscious mind speaks language. Your subconscious does not believer in affirmations. Here's why. Your conscious mind
speaks language. Your subconscious does not speak in language. If I say, do not, whatever you do,
think of the pink elephant. You can't help it. You think of the pink elephant. Your conscious
mind here is do not. Your subconscious mind do not is irrelevant. It just hears and sees pink
elephant, right? So what we have to do is we have to understand the language or subconscious mind speaks, which is emotion and imagery.
Huh, okay.
So we need to leverage emotion and imagery for reprogramming
and we need to do it repetitively
because the repetition is what fires and wires.
So if you think of subconscious reprogramming,
three simple ingredients, repetition,
emotion, imagery, the more you have of all of it,
the better and the faster it will work.
Okay. So if we have, I am not good enough, we have to find emotion and imagery for I am good enough.
If I were to say, okay, tell me your favorite childhood experience,
and close your eyes for it, you would close your eyes, and you would start talking about it, and you would smile,
and you would actually see the memory in your mind's eye, and the emotion is actually the container,
or the memory is the container for emotion there. So you would actually feel the emotion in your mind's eye. And the emotion is actually the container,
or the memory is a container for emotion there. So you would actually feel the emotion still in
that memory and you would see the images. So what we do for auto-suggestion, we get an
not-suggestible state, we get in that relaxed space, then we say, okay, what's the opposite
of my wound? I am not good enough, I am good enough. And then we find 10 pieces of evidence
or memory for why we are good enough. So for
example, it could be, I graduated from this school and we want to feel about it and see ourselves
walking across the podium or, you know, getting our certificate. And as we do that, we are actually
using our conscious mind to speak to our subconscious mind. And we are doing it repetitively. So we
are firing and wiring new paradigms of how
this works. And then we ideally want to divest not not feed into those old stories, those
old narratives in the same way. But if we literally just do that 10 pieces of evidence in
a suggestible state to oppose our core wound for 21 days, there are tremendous, tremendous
results people will have. And they can actually drop these big core wounds that they've been
caring forever that are causing them in the first place
to feel all that panic around abandonment,
or fearing to really rely on people or open up,
or fearing being trapped.
Like, we can let those things go once and for all.
So given that you've done this with more than 31,000 people,
what is the coaching that you have for somebody
who is new to this,
and they're sitting there saying to themselves, that you have for somebody who is new to this.
And they're sitting there saying to themselves,
well, I don't even know what an image would be
of me being loved.
I'm sure this is the most common objection you hear,
which is I can't think of one.
So what advice or coaching do you have for the person listening?
That's like, okay, I get it.
I'm going to bathe in this emotion and these visual images,
but I can't even come up with one for I'm good enough or I'm lovable or you know, I am what it like I
How do you do this?
Great question. And this is for sure. Like you said one of the biggest sort of points that people hit where they will feel stuck.
So what we do is we start general and I get specific. So if somebody is not open to seeing that I am loved or I'm worthy of love, we start with things like
it is possible to be worthy of love.
And then we can even start as general
as looking for other people who are similar to us
or other people we know and how we may share characteristics.
So we're just trying to, the really interesting part
is that repetition and emotion will build momentum.
So if we start with something that just feels
like a little stretch outside of that subconscious comfort zone because part of why we are also like I have no idea is
because we have a comfort zone that's like no I am not loved and I'm scared to even believe
that I could be loved because every time I've hoped for that it doesn't work. So our subconscious
will try to like give us that pushback and that's normal. For some people it's they don't have much
of it at all because they're open to the work and they're excited. For other people, there will be like a specific wound they get really stuck on.
And so we start really general.
So we would say something like, it is possible to be loved.
And if you still don't feel resonance with that, we can say it is possible for all people to be loved
and look for other evidence of other people you've seen with similar characteristics,
build love, connect with people, create that loving relationship.
And we can start there. And what we'll see is generally around day seven, people will start
to have like a little bit of that resonance and feel good about it. And when we start feeling
like, Oh, okay, this is believable for me now. I can see myself coming into resonance.
That's where we stretch again. We say, Okay, it is possible for me to be loved, not just
all people to be left. And then we stretch again. And the other
thing too is people don't have to come up with like 10 new things every day. We can hack
the system. We can record it in our phone and we can just listen to it back and feel
about it for 21 days if we want to shortcut and streamline the process. But it's just
the repetition and emotion that we really need there with that imagery.
Tyce, I just love that people can use that simple tool to begin to change their attachment
style.
And I also love knowing I can change my attachment style because what you're offering
is not only this awesome framework, but you're also offering a simple way for any one of
us to reprogram our subconscious mind.
That is so cool.
And I also want to thank you because you have put together a special bonus meditation
for the listeners of the Mel Robbins podcast and that is so generous of you.
And for you listening, let me just tell you a little bit about this meditation so you know what to
expect. So, Taís recorded this meditation as a gift to you. It is designed to be listened to 21
days in a row. And here's how you can find it.
It's the very next episode of the Mel Robbins podcast.
We also put a link in the show notes.
But the title is this, Daily Meditation.
Listen for 21 days to reprogram your subconscious.
And again, it is already there waiting for you
right after this episode.
It's one of the tools that Tyce uses
with her private clients,
and it's something that you can use and share in your own life.
Tyce, can you just give the person listening
a sense of the impact of this meditation?
Yes, and so you can shut all the stuff
we've been carrying for so long.
I mean, sometimes we have all these wounds,
and they show up everywhere, and they interfere in so many different areas but to actually drop
them and to not have them that you they're popping up and you have to cope all the time and
backtrack and apologize like to not live like that. Wow. Amazing. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you for being here. Thank you. Thank you. This is I'm honored to be here. So grateful for
you having me. Well, I'm grateful too. I learned that I did not have the attachment with them that I thought I did.
And I know what to do about it. So what you're doing is really important. Thank you so much.
I am just in awe of how simple this framework is and how powerful it is. If you truly start to apply this to your life,
I also wanna thank you for opening my eyes
to the fact that my attachment style
is not what I thought it was
because that insight is going to allow me
to make my marriage even better.
Thank you.
And one more thing.
As you're listening, could you just send
a little positive energy to Tais
and help me thank her for the bonus meditation that she created specifically for you?
Please check it out next. Listen to it 21 days in a row. I can't wait to hear the impact that it's had on your life.
And if nobody else tells you this today, let me be the person to tell you. I love you, I believe in you, and I believe in your ability to become
the most secure and the happiest version of yourself.
I'll see you in a few days.
I think the dry cleaner must have washed the shirt.
Oh, it has totally shrunk.
The sleeves are shorter, the...
Thank you so much for pulling out a second.
I might need to probably do this, yeah.
Thank you so much for taking the time to be here with,
okay, hold on a second, this is, can we start over?
And let me give you an example.
Is that, do you hear that?
Yes.
Is that Geese?
No, that's the end of the song.
Oh my god, it sounded like a, like, 10,000 Geese.
I'm like, what is happening over there?
Okay, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, I'm so like, what the hell are you doing?
Okay, what?
Okay, okay, great.
All right, got it.
Go.
Superpowers as people.
Okay, okay, great. All right, got it, go.
Super powers as people.
Okay, yeah.
The camera is like, no, don't worry.
Oh, that was yours.
Yeah.
And generally within the,
yeah.
Not meant to be.
My camera.
And try to actively, I feel like I got further this time though. That's okay. Um, and try to actively.
I feel like I got further this time though.
We did.
We out.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes. I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of
a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional. Got it? Good. I'll see you in the next episode.
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