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4 Attachment Styles You Must Understand While Dating in 2023

Different types of attachment styles
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Ever felt like you can't live without a certain relationship, be it a friend or a romantic partner? Or do you find yourself too afraid to be alone or make decisions on yourself? Or do you feel that you are repeating the same mistakes in your relationships time and time again?

In psychology, attachment theory can be used as a useful model to explain why your relationships have succeeded or failed in the manner they did. It can also point out repeated patterns of your relationship problems.

The Core Attachment Styles You Need To Know

In general, there are four kinds of attachment: secure, anxious, avoidant, and anxious-avoidant.

Secure attachment style

Secure Attachment

People with secure attachment strategies are comfortable with displaying interest and affection. They are also comfortable being alone and independent. They are able to prioritize relationships, draw clear boundaries and stick to them.

They also have a positive perception of others and positive perception of themselves. They make the best romantic partners, family members and friends. They are capable of accepting rejection and moving on despite the pain but are also capable of being loyal and sacrificing when necessary. They have very little issue trusting the people they are close to and are trustworthy themselves.

Anxious attachment style

Anxious Attachment

People with an anxious attachment style may value intimacy to an extent that they become overly dependent on the attachment figure. Compared to the securely attached type, people who are anxious or preoccupied with attachment tend to have a less positive perception of themselves.

People with anxious attachments have a positive perception of others and a negative perception of themselves. This strategy may be developed in childhood by infants who receive affection and care with unpredictable sufficiency.

Avoidant attachment style

Avoidant Attachment

People with avoidant attachment types tend to be independent, self-directed and are often uncomfortable with intimacy. People with avoidant attachment have a positive perception of themselves and a negative perception of others. This strategy may be developed in childhood by infants who only get some of their needs met while the rest are neglected.

Anxious avoidant attachment style

Anxious-Avoidant Attachment

People with this attachment style are much less comfortable with expressing affection. They frequently deny and suppress their feelings. They commonly have a negative worldview of others and view themselves as unworthy. These mixed feelings are combined with unconscious, negative views about themselves and others. They often have other emotional problems in other areas of their life: substance abuse and depression. This attachment type is commonly developed from an abusive or negligent childhood.

Map of attachment style intersections

Psychological research backs it up as well, people with the same level of self-esteem end up dating each other.

Research also suggests that anxious and avoidant people frequently end up in relationships with one another. It normally goes like this: the avoidant types are so good at putting others off that oftentimes it is only the anxious types who are willing to stick around to put in the extra effort to get them to open up.

I may be generalizing, but think of the man who constantly pushes away a woman's needs for intimacy. If it's up to a woman with a secure attachment, she'll simply accept the rejection and move on. However, an anxiously attached woman will be more determined by a man who pushes her away. The avoidant man then is reassured that he can behave independently around her and still ultimately avoid emotional intimacy (he's avoidant right?).

You can argue that women who are willing to stay around and be manipulated are probably anxiously attached. The inability of an avoidant attachment-styled male to express genuine affection and intimacy triggers her anxious attachment that makes her chase even more that in turn rewards the avoidant style that he adopts. She chases, he runs, and it becomes a cycle.

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The implications from an emotional needs standpoint can run deep. The anxious and the avoidant have a fundamental belief that their emotional needs aren't important. The avoidant denies their emotional needs by avoiding them, and the anxious attempts to force theirs by overcompensating. Ultimately, both end up failing to get their needs met in a relationship.

I experienced this chaser and chase pattern in my first serious relationship with my ex-girlfriend. Every time I chased, she ran. Every time I got sick of it and threatened to leave, she came back chasing. It was constant and exhausting too and fro. It felt exhilarating at times, however, it’s not long before that relationship ended up exploding. The problem with such romantic relationships is that it can feel as if you made progress after going through emotional whirlwinds with the other party. The higher highs of reconciliation and the lower lows of arguments and fights. It can be mistaken as 'love' or 'passion'.

Sad girl in a tub

The Narcissist and the Co-dependent

One other way to think about attachment styles is the narcissist and codependent dynamic. I am going to generalize again here but bear with me. The narcissist is usually the 'taker', and the codependent is normally the 'giver'. In many dysfunctional relationships, you can find the giver and the taker. The giver is the one that always gives and gives without taking as he or she feels intrinsically unworthy and unaware of his or her own emotional needs.

  • The Narcissist

The taker and the narcissist always takes and takes because he or she is unable to meet their own emotional needs and is attempting to fill a void.

The narcissist only cares about his or her own needs. He/ she is the overly domineering one in social interactions. This is the annoying individual who is always going on and on about him or herself and is unable to empathize with the people around them. It's always him, his stories, her failures or her successes. They aren't generally unable to listen.

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Hanging out with a narcissist is equivalent to social waterboarding.

They always require more. That is because external validation is a temporary high. It feels good at the moment but is still an empty victory. I’ll argue narcissists get more results in their dating life than co-dependents solely because of their willingness (and blindness) to assert themselves in spite of negative social feedback.

The taker, the narcissist is unable to generate self-esteem from within and hence strives to generate it externally.

  • The Co-dependent

If your life choices, decisions or self-esteem is dependent on another person, you may have a co-dependent relationship. This can be your best friend, your parents or your romantic partners.

Co-dependents find themselves in relationships where their primary role is that of the rescuer. Their happiness is reliant on their ability to meet their partner's emotional needs and not their own. 

Unresolved patterns of co-dependency can lead to other problems such as alcoholism, drug addiction, eating disorders, sex addiction, self-destructive and defeating behaviors. Co-dependents also have higher chances to form abusive relationships and stay in stressful jobs or relationships.

The listener, the giver, the co-dependent who listens to the narcissist's troubles quietly and doesn't give any input. He or she just takes it in and may seem sympathetic to the narcissist's sorrows. That's because the only way the listener can feel loved or accepted in that social situation is to tend to someone else's emotional needs.

For the Overly Attached: Note on Roller Coaster Relationships

Ultimately, rollercoaster and dramatic relationships lack true intimacy and boundaries. Both individuals do not get their emotional needs met. They both are unable to accept love and validation, yet at the same time overcompensate in getting their needs for recognition, love and validation from each other (or others).

Psychologists argue that our unconscious is constantly attempting to seek out attention, love and validation that we miss out from our parents growing up.  There’s research suggesting that parents who view their children as an extension of their own self, hence, getting their needs met by the child leads to the child to believe that his or her own needs aren’t important. The child becomes attuned to the parent’s needs and feelings instead of the other way round.

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This plays out when someone attempts to get their needs met from people around them as adults. This can be from areas of their lives other than their relationships. You may overcompensate and seek to meet your needs through sex, achievements, financial pursuit or just about any area of life.

Look, everyone needs a pat on the back and validation at some point. The question to ask yourself is this: are you pursuing something from a standpoint of values or are you scratching an unresolved emotional need?

The Attachment Theory - Self Esteem Model

The problem with a lot of dating and relationship advice is that they don’t encourage the expression of emotions from a secure standpoint. Instead, they promote insecure strategies such as using of lines, techniques, not calling back in X amount of days in an attempt to manipulate someone else into doing something. They aren't effective in the long run, and may only work on individuals who aren't able to express themselves directly as well. You’re blocking out any genuine real emotional engagement. You're still not getting your emotional needs met.

If you’re wondering if attachment theory has something to do with one’s self-esteem. You’re right. Psychologists also hypothesized a model showing one’s attachment strategy corresponding to the self-image of yourself and your perception of others. Your attachment style is connected to self-esteem, emotional needs and vulnerability. These ideas are interlinked.

Illustration of how self-esteem works

How to Find Our Your Attachment Style

How do you know if you are overly/ underly attached? You may do a self-test to figure out which attachment style you fall under. There's an attachment theory test that you can take to find out your attachment type. If you don't want to take the test, then rely on the following examples to roughly give you a guess on your style of attachment. 

You can ask yourself some questions:

  • Do you have your own life handled or are you merely using your relationship as an excuse?
  • Flip it around and ask yourself if the person across you has his or her own life going on, or is he or she living vicariously through her relationship?
  • Are you dependent on each other for each other's happiness, or are both of you already happy as individuals with or without a relationship?

Can Your Attachment Style be Changed? 

Is there hope for the anxiously attached hopeless romantic or the commitment-phobic avoidant? Or maybe you are reading this and determined you’re either a pushover codependent or a raging narcissist. Hear me out. The good news is that attachment styles can be changed. The bad news is that it's slow and difficult.

I was a classic hardcore avoidant throughout my teens up till my early twenties. Since I started therapy, I had one anxiety uncovered after another. There were periods of my life where I swung heavily from avoidant to anxious. You'll be surprised to find that underlying avoidance may be anxiety. There were other periods where I was going through phases of emotional vomit and flipped manically in and out of being anxious and avoidant.

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There's also research suggesting that an individual with an insecure attachment who enters a long-term relationship and the other party who has a secure attachment can be "raised up" to the level of secure over an extended period of time.

Unfortunately, insecure attachments such as the anxious or avoidant can also "bring down" a secure attachment. Other extreme negative life events such a divorce, death of a child, serious accident, loss of friendships can also cause secure attachment types to fall into a more insecure attachment.

Conclusion

There's no quick fix for changing attachment styles. Similarly, there is no quick fix for a lack (or overflowing) of self-love.

If your happiness is derived from making extreme sacrifices to meet other people's needs. Then it’s a red flag. If you're the giver or the listener, then you need to stop being a pushover. It's time to stop being Mr. Nice Guy/ Gal. You'll need to learn how to assert your own emotional needs and get your needs met in your relationships.

Now, I am not saying you can’t sacrifice for each other in a relationship. However, there’s a difference between sacrificing for someone and a lack of relationship boundaries.

Or maybe you find yourself as a raging narcissist and constantly get pushed away by others. You may want to take a step back and learn how to empathize with others. The point here isn’t to be overly selfish or aggressive. It is to find a fine balance between caring for your own and other people's needs.

Unfortunately, I’m not immune. In my life, I had my fair share of stages in life where I fell into co-dependence or fell into narcissism. 

However, all in all, I’m happy to report that today, I’m a lot better at handling my relationships.

Ultimately, attachment styles can give us a good framework for healthy relationships.

So are you saying that all healthy relationships are non-dependent on each other? Nope. The best forms of relationship are not completely independent, but interdependent. An interdependent relationship is where two partners support each other unconditionally. They are able to generate self-esteem as an individual. They aren't vicariously living through their partner. It's two emotionally independent individuals consciously choosing to support one another.

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Works Cited

Alan Rappoport, P. (n.d.). Co-Narcissism: How We Accommodate to Narcissistic Parents.Retrieved from AlanRappoport.Com: http://www.alanrappoport.com/pdf/Co-Narcissism%20Article.pdf

Hazan C.; Shaver P.R. (March 1987). "Romantic love conceptualized as an attachment process"J Pers Soc Psychol52 (3): 511–24.

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