I offer safe and secure video Telehealth sessions in California Only.
You may find yourself:
If this sounds familiar, you are likely dealing with attachment patterns that started in earlier relationships and now play out with partners, friends, family, or even colleagues.
Attachment is the way we learn to bond, seek comfort, and trust others. These patterns form early with caregivers and then become templates for how we approach closeness, conflict, and dependence in adult life.
When early relationships are inconsistent, frightening, or emotionally distant, it can be hard to feel safe with others later. You may want connection and feel overwhelmed by it at the same time.
The ability to form secure, steady relationships usually begins in childhood. When a child experiences caregivers who are mostly emotionally present, responsive, and protective, they tend to grow into adults who believe:
When relationships in childhood are marked by neglect, criticism, chaos, or trauma, the nervous system adapts. Children learn to shut down their needs, cling tightly to others, or stay constantly on guard. Those strategies often show up in adult attachment patterns.
Attachment difficulties can also develop even in otherwise loving homes if there are unaddressed mental health issues, unspoken conflict, or events that overwhelm a child’s ability to cope.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.
Attachment theory describes several broad patterns in how adults relate to closeness and trust. Most people recognize themselves in parts of more than one category, rather than fitting neatly into a single box.
People with a more secure attachment style usually:
People with more anxious attachment often:
People with more avoidant attachment often:
Some people experience a mix of anxious and avoidant patterns:
None of these patterns are character flaws. They are adaptations that once helped you survive emotionally difficult situations. In therapy we treat them as understandable strategies your nervous system learned, not as something to be ashamed of.
Adults with attachment difficulties can experience many of the following:
If you recognize yourself in several of these, attachment therapy can help you understand what is happening and build new patterns in relationships.
Attachment focused therapy looks at how your early relationships shaped your nervous system, expectations, and coping strategies, then helps you experience new, safer ways of relating in the present.
In our work together we might:
For many people this work also includes processing attachment trauma using methods like EMDR and somatic approaches, so that old experiences no longer drive your reactions in the present.
Attachment challenges often begin in childhood. While this page focuses on adults, it can be helpful to understand how early signs sometimes show up. Children who struggle with attachment may:
These patterns can change with the right support. If you recognize some of these in your own story, attachment therapy can help you address how those early experiences are still affecting you now.
I am a licensed therapist in California with a special focus on attachment, trauma, and mindfulness based approaches. I work with adults who are ready to understand how their attachment patterns developed and want to build steadier, more secure connections in the present.
Together we will work at a pace that respects your nervous system. The goal is not to erase your past, but to help you relate to yourself and to others in new ways that feel safer, steadier, and more authentic.
You don’t have to figure this out alone. Let’s take the first step together. Call so we can schedule a consultation.