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Alternative Therapeutics Blog

Understanding Attachment Theory in Counseling

Through the lens of attachment theory, all relationship behaviors are attempts to experience, maintain, or obtain connection and security. Attachment theory, developed by psychologist John Bowlby, suggests that the bonds we form with our caregivers in infancy and childhood determine how we perceive and engage in relationships as adults. We develop secure attachments when our caregivers provide consistent love, support, and responsiveness, fostering a sense of safety and trust in relationships.

In contrast, insecure attachments are developed when caregivers are unpredictable, neglectful, or absent, often creating difficulty trusting others and issues with emotional intimacy. These initial attachment experiences can influence the type of relationships we choose and environments we create later in life. In an environment of secure attachment, our needs for security and closeness are met, and so we feel safe to be vulnerable, connect with others, and explore the world around us. But in an environment of insecure attachment, we may develop dysfunctional behaviors in a misguided attempt to get our attachment needs met, often not knowing what a securely attached relationship even feels like. Looking at these behaviors through the lens of attachment theory helps us find better ways to achieve the same goal: To feel seen, heard, safe, and loved.

Understanding attachment theory helps put words to our body’s attachment experiences. Our body is wired with systems that are always working to gain and maintain safety and survival. For example, our body’s appetite system lets us know when we are hungry and cues us to eat. Similarly, our body is wired with an attachment behavioral system that causes our bodies to experience distress when our attachment feels threatened and maintain this distress until we get our attachment needs met. Just like we learn to recognize our body’s signals of hunger and how to communicate and meet those needs, counseling can help us learn to recognize our body’s signals for attachment and how to communicate and meet those needs in functional ways.

If your counselor practices attachment theory, you can expect them to:

  1. Prioritize the therapeutic relationship

  2. Create a safe, non-judgmental environment for you to explore painful feelings and experiences

  3. Help you identify your individual attachment style and explore the role that it plays in your current relationships

  4. Support you in exploring past experiences that shaped your attachment system and encourage you to reflect on how these experiences may impact the way you perceive and interact with the world now

  5. Help you shift dysfunctional perspectives and engage in more functional behaviors to meet attachment needs

Attachment theory is not just about the past; it’s also about the future. The therapeutic relationship itself can serve as a corrective emotional experience, allowing us to process and challenge dysfunctional attachment patterns in a safe, supportive, and secure environment. By learning to recognize, communicate, and fulfill our attachment needs, counseling can help us develop and feel a more secure attachment with our loved ones and ourselves.

Curious about your attachment style? Take this free quiz!!

Written by: Hailey Adams, M.Ed., LPC