[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":120},["ShallowReactive",2],{"glossary-anxious-attachment":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"datePublished":10,"canonical":11,"readTime":12,"glossaryCategory":13,"faq":14,"relatedPosts":27,"relatedTerms":34,"body":44,"_type":113,"_id":114,"_source":115,"_file":116,"_stem":117,"_extension":118,"sitemap":119},"\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment","glossary",false,"","Anxious Attachment: Meaning & Definition","Anxious attachment is a relationship pattern characterized by fear of abandonment and a strong need for reassurance. Here's what it looks like and how to manage it.","2026-04-01","https:\u002F\u002Fhilainie.com\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment\u002F",5,"general",[15,18,21,24],{"q":16,"a":17},"What is anxious attachment?","Anxious attachment is a relationship style characterized by a strong need for closeness combined with persistent fear of abandonment. It typically involves hypervigilance to signs of rejection, frequent reassurance-seeking, and significant distress when the relationship feels uncertain.",{"q":19,"a":20},"What causes anxious attachment?","Usually inconsistent caregiving in early childhood — where affection and availability were unpredictable. The nervous system learned to stay alert, because connection wasn't reliably there. This pattern carries into adult relationships.",{"q":22,"a":23},"Can anxious attachment be fixed?","It can shift significantly over time through consistently safe relationships, self-awareness work, and sometimes therapy. 'Earned security' — developing a more secure attachment style — is a well-documented phenomenon. It's not instant, but it's achievable.",{"q":25,"a":26},"How does anxious attachment affect relationships?","The reassurance-seeking, hypervigilance, and fear of abandonment can create a push-pull dynamic — particularly with avoidantly attached partners. The anxious person pursues, the avoidant withdraws, which triggers more pursuit. Understanding the pattern is necessary to interrupt it.",[28,31],{"title":29,"href":30},"Attachment Styles Explained","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fattachment-styles-explained\u002F",{"title":32,"href":33},"How to Stop Overthinking in a Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fhow-to-stop-overthinking-in-a-relationship\u002F",[35,38,41],{"label":36,"href":37},"Avoidant Attachment","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Favoidant-attachment\u002F",{"label":39,"href":40},"Attachment Theory","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fattachment-theory\u002F",{"label":42,"href":43},"Emotional Flooding","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Femotional-flooding\u002F",{"type":45,"children":46,"toc":108},"root",[47,56,91,97,103],{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":50,"children":52},"element","h2",{"id":51},"how-it-shows-up",[53],{"type":54,"value":55},"text","How It Shows Up",{"type":48,"tag":57,"props":58,"children":59},"ul",{},[60,66,71,76,81,86],{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":62,"children":63},"li",{},[64],{"type":54,"value":65},"Overanalyzing messages, tone, and behavior for signs of rejection",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":67,"children":68},{},[69],{"type":54,"value":70},"Needing frequent reassurance that the relationship is secure — and the reassurance not lasting long",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":72,"children":73},{},[74],{"type":54,"value":75},"Fear of asking for too much, followed by fear of not asking enough",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":77,"children":78},{},[79],{"type":54,"value":80},"Strong reactions to perceived distance (a slow reply, a distracted evening)",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":82,"children":83},{},[84],{"type":54,"value":85},"Difficulty being alone without anxiety",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":87,"children":88},{},[89],{"type":54,"value":90},"The relationship consuming a significant amount of mental energy",{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":92,"children":94},{"id":93},"managing-anxious-attachment",[95],{"type":54,"value":96},"Managing Anxious Attachment",{"type":48,"tag":98,"props":99,"children":100},"p",{},[101],{"type":54,"value":102},"Anxious attachment develops from early experiences where love and safety were inconsistently available. The nervous system learned to stay alert for threats. In adult relationships, this shows up as hypervigilance to any signal that might mean abandonment.",{"type":48,"tag":98,"props":104,"children":105},{},[106],{"type":54,"value":107},"Managing it involves both internal work (building a more secure relationship with yourself, understanding where the anxiety comes from) and relational work (communicating directly about needs rather than acting on the anxiety). Consistently safe relationships — with a partner who provides secure, predictable connection — can shift anxious patterns over time.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":109,"depth":109,"links":110},2,[111,112],{"id":51,"depth":109,"text":55},{"id":93,"depth":109,"text":96},"markdown","content:blog:glossary:anxious-attachment.md","content","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment.md","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment","md",{"loc":4},1775272859635]