[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":361},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-wellness-earned-secure-attachment":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"summary":10,"datePublished":11,"dateModified":11,"canonical":12,"readTime":13,"category":5,"howToSteps":14,"faq":30,"relatedPosts":52,"relatedTerms":62,"body":78,"_type":354,"_id":355,"_source":356,"_file":357,"_stem":358,"_extension":359,"sitemap":360},"\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fearned-secure-attachment","wellness",false,"","Earned Secure Attachment: Can You Change Your Attachment Style?","Earned security is the term for developing a secure attachment style as an adult, even if you didn't grow up with one. Here's what the research shows and how it actually happens.","Earned secure attachment is the result of changing your attachment style in adulthood through consistently safe relationships, self-awareness, and often therapy. The research is clear that it's possible — and the lived experience of doing it suggests the path is slower, less linear, and more transformative than people expect.","2026-04-27","https:\u002F\u002Fhilainie.com\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fearned-secure-attachment\u002F",8,[15,18,21,24,27],{"name":16,"text":17},"Map your starting point honestly","You can't shift what you can't see. Spend time identifying your default patterns across multiple relationships, not just your current one. Look for what activates you, what you do when activated, and what you've always assumed was just 'how relationships are.'",{"name":19,"text":20},"Find or build relationships that don't reinforce the pattern","Earned security develops through corrective experience — being in a relationship where the old pattern doesn't get rewarded. This might be a partner, a close friend, a therapist, or a chosen family. The key is consistency over months and years, not intensity.",{"name":22,"text":23},"Practice the discomfort of new responses","If you're anxious, this means tolerating uncertainty without seeking immediate reassurance. If you're avoidant, this means staying in conversations that feel emotionally demanding. Both feel wrong at first. That feeling of wrongness is what change feels like in your body.",{"name":25,"text":26},"Build a coherent narrative of your past","The single strongest predictor of secure attachment in adulthood isn't whether your childhood was happy — it's whether you can describe it coherently, with both the good and the painful parts integrated. Therapy is one route to this. Reflective writing is another.",{"name":28,"text":29},"Expect non-linear progress","You'll have months of feeling secure, then a stressful event will collapse you back to default. That's not regression — it's normal. Each cycle of activation and recovery, when met with awareness, builds the neural and relational habits of security.",[31,34,37,40,43,46,49],{"q":32,"a":33},"What is earned secure attachment?","Earned secure attachment is when an adult develops a secure attachment style despite growing up with insecure (anxious, avoidant, or disorganized) attachment. It's the result of corrective relational experiences, self-awareness, and often therapeutic work over time.",{"q":35,"a":36},"Is earned security real or just a comforting idea?","It's well-documented in research. Studies using the Adult Attachment Interview consistently identify a category of adults who score as secure despite reporting insecure childhoods. They tend to have engaged in significant reflection and built consistently safe relationships in adulthood.",{"q":38,"a":39},"How long does it take to develop earned security?","Years, typically. Not months. The shift happens through accumulated experience, not a single insight or intervention. People often notice meaningful change at the 1-2 year mark of consistent work, with deeper integration over 5+ years.",{"q":41,"a":42},"Can you develop earned security without therapy?","Yes, though it's harder. Therapy accelerates the work because it provides a relationship explicitly designed to be a corrective attachment experience. People who develop earned security without therapy usually have a long-term partner or close friend filling a similar role.",{"q":44,"a":45},"What's the difference between secure and earned-secure attachment?","Functionally, very little — both groups handle relationships, conflict, and intimacy in similar ways. The difference is biographical: secure people developed it in childhood; earned-secure people built it deliberately. Some research suggests earned-secure people are even more attuned to relational dynamics, having had to learn them consciously.",{"q":47,"a":48},"Can you lose earned security after developing it?","Significant trauma or sustained relational stress can collapse anyone back to older patterns temporarily. The difference for earned-secure people is that they have the tools to notice it and rebuild — the underlying capacity is intact even when the day-to-day functioning regresses.",{"q":50,"a":51},"Is earned security possible if I'm in an insecure relationship now?","Possible but slower. The work is harder when your daily relational environment confirms your old patterns. If your partner is willing to do their own work in parallel, the relationship itself can become the corrective experience. If they're not, individual therapy and other secure relationships in your life become more important.",[53,56,59],{"title":54,"href":55},"Attachment Styles Explained","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fattachment-styles-explained\u002F",{"title":57,"href":58},"The Anxious-Avoidant Trap","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fanxious-avoidant-trap\u002F",{"title":60,"href":61},"How to Stop Overthinking in a Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fhow-to-stop-overthinking-in-a-relationship\u002F",[63,66,69,72,75],{"label":64,"href":65},"Anxious Attachment","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fanxious-attachment\u002F",{"label":67,"href":68},"Avoidant Attachment","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Favoidant-attachment\u002F",{"label":70,"href":71},"Attachment Theory","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fattachment-theory\u002F",{"label":73,"href":74},"Emotional Intimacy","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Femotional-intimacy\u002F",{"label":76,"href":77},"Healthy Boundaries","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fhealthy-boundaries\u002F",{"type":79,"children":80,"toc":345},"root",[81,95,100,113,120,125,130,135,141,146,157,167,177,187,193,198,208,218,228,238,244,249,254,259,271,276,282,287,312,318,328,333],{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":84,"children":85},"element","p",{},[86,89],{"type":87,"value":88},"text","Earned secure attachment is the answer to a question almost everyone with an insecure attachment style eventually asks: ",{"type":82,"tag":90,"props":91,"children":92},"em",{},[93],{"type":87,"value":94},"can this actually change?",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":96,"children":97},{},[98],{"type":87,"value":99},"The research says yes. The lived experience of doing it says: yes, but slower and stranger than you expect.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":101,"children":102},{},[103,105,111],{"type":87,"value":104},"This piece walks through what earned security actually is, what the evidence shows about how it develops, and what people who have done it tend to say about the process. If you're new to the framework itself, start with ",{"type":82,"tag":106,"props":107,"children":108},"a",{"href":55},[109],{"type":87,"value":110},"attachment styles explained",{"type":87,"value":112}," — it covers the four styles and where they come from. This piece picks up where that one ends.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":115,"children":117},"h2",{"id":116},"what-earned-security-actually-means",[118],{"type":87,"value":119},"What Earned Security Actually Means",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":121,"children":122},{},[123],{"type":87,"value":124},"Earned secure attachment is when an adult ends up scoring as secure on attachment measures despite having developed insecure patterns in childhood. The technical version comes from the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI), which classifies adults based on how they describe their childhood relationships — not on whether the childhood was happy, but on whether the adult can talk about it coherently, with both painful and positive parts integrated.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":126,"children":127},{},[128],{"type":87,"value":129},"People with earned security have something specific in common: they can describe difficult childhood experiences without either minimizing them or being overwhelmed by them. They've integrated the story. The childhood happened; the patterns formed; the patterns are no longer running them.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":131,"children":132},{},[133],{"type":87,"value":134},"That integration is what makes the security \"earned\" rather than inherited.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":136,"children":138},{"id":137},"the-research",[139],{"type":87,"value":140},"The Research",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":142,"children":143},{},[144],{"type":87,"value":145},"A handful of findings shape what we know:",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":147,"children":148},{},[149,155],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":151,"children":152},"strong",{},[153],{"type":87,"value":154},"Earned-secure adults exist in measurable numbers.",{"type":87,"value":156}," Studies using the AAI consistently find roughly 5-15% of secure adults report childhoods that would have predicted insecure attachment. The pathway is real, not just theoretical.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":158,"children":159},{},[160,165],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":161,"children":162},{},[163],{"type":87,"value":164},"They tend to have had a \"corrective\" relationship.",{"type":87,"value":166}," Often a long-term partner, sometimes a therapist, occasionally a mentor or close friend. The common feature is consistency over years — someone who responded reliably enough that the old pattern stopped being reinforced.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":168,"children":169},{},[170,175],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":171,"children":172},{},[173],{"type":87,"value":174},"They show similar relationship outcomes to continuously-secure adults.",{"type":87,"value":176}," In studies of marital satisfaction, parenting, and conflict regulation, earned-secure people look much like people who were secure from childhood. The biographical difference doesn't translate into functional difference.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":178,"children":179},{},[180,185],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":181,"children":182},{},[183],{"type":87,"value":184},"They often parent with more attunement than continuously-secure parents.",{"type":87,"value":186}," This is striking. People who had to consciously work out what secure functioning looks like sometimes do it more deliberately than people who absorbed it implicitly. Effort produces awareness; awareness produces precision.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":188,"children":190},{"id":189},"how-the-shift-happens",[191],{"type":87,"value":192},"How the Shift Happens",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":194,"children":195},{},[196],{"type":87,"value":197},"There's no single mechanism, but there's a recognizable shape.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":199,"children":200},{},[201,206],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":202,"children":203},{},[204],{"type":87,"value":205},"Awareness.",{"type":87,"value":207}," It starts with seeing the pattern. Most people in their 20s and 30s have a moment — sometimes triggered by a relationship that ended badly, sometimes by therapy, sometimes by reading about attachment for the first time — where they recognize themselves. The awareness alone doesn't change behavior, but it creates the precondition for change.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":209,"children":210},{},[211,216],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":212,"children":213},{},[214],{"type":87,"value":215},"Corrective experience.",{"type":87,"value":217}," New relationships (or evolving existing ones) provide repeated chances to interrupt the old pattern. The anxious person tries asking less and discovers the connection doesn't disappear. The avoidant person tries staying present and discovers the closeness doesn't engulf them. Each instance is small. The accumulation is what shifts the underlying expectations.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":219,"children":220},{},[221,226],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":222,"children":223},{},[224],{"type":87,"value":225},"Integration of past.",{"type":87,"value":227}," This is the part that often requires therapy. Looking honestly at what early caregiving was like, what you needed and didn't get, what you did to cope — and grieving the gap. The work isn't blame; it's coherence. Once the past is metabolized rather than buried, it stops driving present behavior.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":229,"children":230},{},[231,236],{"type":82,"tag":150,"props":232,"children":233},{},[234],{"type":87,"value":235},"Practice through rupture.",{"type":87,"value":237}," You don't get to skip the relapses. Earned-secure adults aren't people who stopped having anxious or avoidant moments. They're people who developed faster recovery and didn't take the moments as evidence of fundamental brokenness.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":239,"children":241},{"id":240},"what-it-doesnt-look-like",[242],{"type":87,"value":243},"What It Doesn't Look Like",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":245,"children":246},{},[247],{"type":87,"value":248},"Several common misconceptions worth naming:",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":250,"children":251},{},[252],{"type":87,"value":253},"It's not \"becoming a different person.\" Your attachment history doesn't disappear. You'll still recognize the pull of your old pattern, especially under stress. What changes is your relationship to that pull.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":255,"children":256},{},[257],{"type":87,"value":258},"It's not linear. Years of progress can feel undone in a week of bad sleep, a hard conflict, or a major life transition. The trajectory matters more than the day-to-day.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":260,"children":261},{},[262,264,269],{"type":87,"value":263},"It's not the result of one good relationship. People sometimes hope their next partner will fix them. Earned security develops through ",{"type":82,"tag":90,"props":265,"children":266},{},[267],{"type":87,"value":268},"doing",{"type":87,"value":270}," the work in the relationship, not from being in one with the right person.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":272,"children":273},{},[274],{"type":87,"value":275},"It's not the same as never feeling insecure. Secure people, including earned-secure people, feel insecurity. They just don't organize their entire response system around avoiding it.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":277,"children":279},{"id":278},"what-people-whove-done-it-tend-to-say",[280],{"type":87,"value":281},"What People Who've Done It Tend to Say",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":283,"children":284},{},[285],{"type":87,"value":286},"A few patterns recur in how earned-secure adults describe the process retrospectively:",{"type":82,"tag":288,"props":289,"children":290},"ul",{},[291,297,302,307],{"type":82,"tag":292,"props":293,"children":294},"li",{},[295],{"type":87,"value":296},"\"I had to get tired of the cycle before I was willing to do anything different.\" Insight rarely produces change without enough pain to motivate it.",{"type":82,"tag":292,"props":298,"children":299},{},[300],{"type":87,"value":301},"\"Therapy gave me a relationship where the old pattern didn't work.\" Not as the only relationship, but as a reliable testing ground.",{"type":82,"tag":292,"props":303,"children":304},{},[305],{"type":87,"value":306},"\"The change crept up on me. I noticed I'd stopped doing X about a year after I'd actually stopped.\" Slow, then suddenly visible.",{"type":82,"tag":292,"props":308,"children":309},{},[310],{"type":87,"value":311},"\"I'm still surprised when I respond differently to a trigger than I would have before. It feels like cheating.\" The new response stays a little novel for a long time.",{"type":82,"tag":114,"props":313,"children":315},{"id":314},"the-practical-question",[316],{"type":87,"value":317},"The Practical Question",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":319,"children":320},{},[321,323],{"type":87,"value":322},"If you're wondering whether it's worth trying, the question to ask isn't \"can I change my attachment style?\" — the answer to that is well-established. The better question is: ",{"type":82,"tag":90,"props":324,"children":325},{},[326],{"type":87,"value":327},"am I willing to do work whose results show up over years, in a domain where my own behavior is the thing I have least control over?",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":329,"children":330},{},[331],{"type":87,"value":332},"For most people who answer honestly, the answer is yes — but only after enough rounds of the old pattern that the cost of staying becomes obviously higher than the cost of changing. That tipping point is what most journeys toward earned security have in common.",{"type":82,"tag":83,"props":334,"children":335},{},[336,338,343],{"type":87,"value":337},"Whatever your starting style is — see ",{"type":82,"tag":106,"props":339,"children":340},{"href":55},[341],{"type":87,"value":342},"the attachment styles overview",{"type":87,"value":344}," if you're not sure — the path forward is the same in shape: notice, practice, repair, repeat. The destination is the kind of relationship that twenty-something-you would have read about and assumed wasn't available to you.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":346,"depth":346,"links":347},2,[348,349,350,351,352,353],{"id":116,"depth":346,"text":119},{"id":137,"depth":346,"text":140},{"id":189,"depth":346,"text":192},{"id":240,"depth":346,"text":243},{"id":278,"depth":346,"text":281},{"id":314,"depth":346,"text":317},"markdown","content:blog:wellness:earned-secure-attachment.md","content","blog\u002Fwellness\u002Fearned-secure-attachment.md","blog\u002Fwellness\u002Fearned-secure-attachment","md",{"loc":4},1777251613825]