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how to have a secure attachment style

To move toward a secure attachment style, focus on learning emotional regulation, building self-worth, and practicing consistent, healthy relationship behaviors over time. This is a gradual process, but research and clinical practice show that adults can absolutely become more secure in how they connect.

What a secure attachment style looks like

A secure attachment style generally includes a balanced sense of independence and closeness in relationships. People with secure attachment tend to trust others while also feeling okay being alone.

Key traits often include:

  • Comfortable with intimacy and emotional closeness
  • Ability to self-soothe during conflict or distance
  • Clear, honest communication about needs and boundaries
  • Assumption that relationships can be safe, not always chaotic

Step 1: Understand your current pattern

The first step is noticing how you typically react in relationships so you know what you’re trying to shift. Different insecure styles (anxious, avoidant, disorganized) benefit from different growth strategies.

You can start by:

  • Reflecting on how you respond when you feel rejected, ignored, or overwhelmed
  • Journaling triggers (e.g., unanswered texts, criticism, conflict) and your automatic thoughts
  • Taking reputable attachment questionnaires and reading psychoeducation resources

Step 2: Build emotional regulation skills

Secure attachment relies heavily on being able to calm yourself without demanding or withdrawing from others in extreme ways. When your nervous system is steadier, relationships feel less like emotional emergencies.

Helpful practices include:

  • Self-soothing: deep breathing, grounding exercises, short walks, or brief journaling before you react
  • Naming emotions: using a feelings wheel or list to label what you feel (sad, hurt, lonely, ashamed, scared)
  • “Wait time”: giving yourself 20–30 minutes before sending a reactive message or making a big decision

Step 3: Challenge insecure thoughts

Insecure attachment is often fueled by catastrophic or rigid beliefs like “Everyone leaves” or “Needing someone is weak.” Learning to question these thoughts helps your brain internalize more secure expectations.

You can try:

  • Asking “What else could be true?” when you assume the worst about someone’s behavior
  • Writing balanced replacement thoughts, such as “My partner can be busy and still care about me”
  • Checking your story with others: “I’m telling myself X happened; does that actually fit what you meant?”

Step 4: Practice secure behaviors in real time

You don’t become secure only by thinking differently; you change by behaving as if secure, repeatedly, in small steps. Over time, your nervous system and beliefs catch up to your new patterns.

Examples of practicing secure behavior:

  1. Say what you feel and need clearly:
    • “I felt anxious when you didn’t text back; can we talk about it?”
  2. Stay present during emotional conversations instead of shutting down or escalating.
  3. Take small vulnerability risks: share something a bit personal with a safe person and see that the world doesn’t end.
  4. Respect other people’s boundaries and your own, even when uncomfortable.

Step 5: Choose and cultivate secure relationships

Environment matters: secure people and healthier dynamics make it easier to become secure yourself. Attachment research and clinical writing emphasize how “earned secure attachment” often develops in the context of safer relationships.

You can support this by:

  • Seeking friendships and partners who are consistent, kind, and willing to talk about feelings
  • Building a “village” of a few people you can be real with, not just one romantic partner
  • Limiting contact, where possible, with people who are chronically dismissive, manipulative, or abusive

Step 6: Set and keep healthy boundaries

Secure attachment is not clingy and not cold; it’s connected and boundaried at the same time. Boundaries signal self-respect and help relationships feel safer for everyone.

Practical boundary work:

  • Decide what is okay and not okay for you (e.g., tone in arguments, response times, physical affection)
  • Communicate boundaries calmly and early: “I need us to avoid yelling; I’ll take a break if it starts”
  • Follow through consistently so people learn to trust what you say

Step 7: Work with your specific style

Different insecure patterns benefit from different starting points. Tailoring your efforts to your style can speed up progress.

  • If you’re more anxious : focus on self-soothing, slowing down reassurance-seeking, and reality-checking abandonment fears.
  • If you’re more avoidant : practice noticing feelings, staying in conversations a bit longer, and taking gradual risks in intimacy.
  • If you’re disorganized/fearful-avoidant : emphasize emotional awareness, predictable routines, and trauma-informed support when possible.

Role of therapy and community

Many therapists now use attachment-focused and trauma-informed approaches specifically aimed at helping adults earn a more secure attachment. Online communities and forums also exist where people share their journey toward security, which can reduce shame and isolation.

Therapy or group work can help you:

  • Understand how early experiences still shape your reactions
  • Practice secure communication in a safe, structured space
  • Build corrective emotional experiences where you are heard, respected, and not abandoned

A quick storyline example

Imagine someone who panics every time their partner takes a while to respond. Over a year, they learn breathing techniques, delay sending anxious texts, and ask for reassurance in calmer ways. At the same time, they choose partners who are more consistent and willing to talk, and they slowly experience that closeness doesn’t always lead to rejection. Bit by bit, their internal story shifts from “I’m too much and I’ll be left” to “I’m worthy of love and can handle distance without falling apart.”

TL;DR: You build a secure attachment style by learning to regulate your emotions, challenging old beliefs, practicing secure behaviors in relationships, choosing safer people, and often getting support from therapy or supportive communities.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.