How Attachment Styles Show Up in Friendships
Written by: Mindful Living Staff
When people think about attachment styles, they often think about dating and romantic relationships. But attachment styles can show up in friendships, too. In fact, friendships are often one of the first places where our attachment wounds, fears, and relationship patterns begin to appear.
If you're new to attachment, you may find it helpful to first learn more about understanding your attachment style and how it develops. Our early experiences with caregivers and relationships often shape how we connect with others throughout life, not just romantic partners, but friends as well.
Some people become very emotionally invested in friendships and fear rejection or abandonment. Others keep emotional distance and struggle with vulnerability or closeness. Some individuals move back and forth between craving connection and feeling overwhelmed by it. Our attachment style can impact how we communicate, handle conflict, set boundaries, trust others, and experience emotional safety within friendships.
In this blog, we'll explore how different attachment styles can show up in friendships and how greater self-awareness can help you build healthier, more secure connections.
What Is My Attachment Style?
Before we dive in, it’s important to understand what your attachment style might be. Most people can start to identify their attachment style by looking at how they think, feel, and behave in their friendships.
Do you find yourself worrying that your friends are upset with you? Do you overthink text messages, feel left out when you see friends spending time with others, or need a lot of reassurance that the friendship is okay? Or do you prefer to keep friends at arm’s length, avoid vulnerability, or pull away when friendships start to feel too close? For some, it may feel like both—wanting a deep connection while also feeling overwhelmed or unsure of how to trust it.
Paying attention to your friendship patterns, your beliefs about yourself and others, and how you respond to conflict, distance, or changes in communication can provide valuable insight into your attachment style. It can also be helpful to look at your early experiences with caregivers and how those relationship dynamics may still be influencing the way you connect with friends today. And if you're not quite sure, working with an attachment therapist can help you better understand these patterns, heal old attachment wounds, and build healthier, more secure friendships.
Anxious Attachment in Friendships
Individuals with anxious attachment often deeply value closeness and connection in friendships. They may become highly sensitive to changes in communication, overthink text messages, or worry that a friend is upset with them. Even small shifts in energy or responsiveness can trigger anxiety and fears of rejection.
People with anxious attachment may also struggle with people pleasing, overextending themselves, or relying heavily on friendships for reassurance and emotional safety. Friendships can begin to feel emotionally exhausting because the nervous system is constantly scanning for signs of distance or disconnection. To learn more about anxious attachment in friendships, read Anxious Attachment in Friendships: Insights From an Orlando Attachment Therapist.
Avoidant Attachment in Friendships
Individuals with avoidant attachment often value independence and may feel overwhelmed by emotional closeness in friendships. They can struggle with vulnerability, emotional expression, or consistently maintaining connection. At times, they may withdraw, shut down, or create distance when friendships begin to feel too emotionally intense.
While they may care deeply about their friends, they often learned early in life that relying on others did not feel safe or comfortable. Because of this, friendships may stay more surface-level or emotionally guarded.
Insecure Attachment in Friendships
For individuals with insecure or disorganized attachment, friendships can feel both deeply wanted and emotionally overwhelming at the same time. They may crave closeness and connection but also fear being hurt, abandoned, rejected, or controlled. This can create push-pull dynamics in friendships, where someone moves between needing reassurance and pulling away when things feel emotionally vulnerable. Relationships can begin to feel unpredictable or emotionally intense, making it difficult to feel fully safe and settled within a connection.
Secure Attachment in Friendships
Individuals with secure attachment tend to feel more balanced in their friendships. They are often comfortable with closeness, communication, boundaries, and independence. They generally trust that conflict or space does not automatically mean the friendship is ending. Secure friendships often allow room for honesty, emotional safety, mutual respect, and individuality. These individuals can connect with others without losing themselves in the relationship or completely shutting others out.
Healing Attachment Wounds in Friendships
The good news is that attachment patterns are not permanent. As we become more aware of how our attachment style shows up in friendships, we can begin building healthier and more secure relationships over time.
Friendships can actually become a place for healing. Safe and healthy relationships help teach the nervous system that connection does not always have to feel chaotic, unsafe, or overwhelming. Through self-awareness, boundaries, communication, and emotional regulation, it is possible to build more fulfilling and secure friendships.
You can learn more about these patterns in our blogs on anxious attachment, avoidant attachment, insecure attachment, and secure attachment. In our next attachment style blog, we’ll explore how learning to “date” your friends can help you better understand your emotional needs, relationship patterns, and what truly creates healthy and secure connections.
Interested in Your Attachment Style?
Attachment therapy can be an impactful way to mend emotional wounds and foster healthier, more secure relationships. At Mindful Living Counseling, we help individuals recognize their attachment styles and facilitate enduring transformation in their connections with others.
Ready to Get More Support?
If you are ready for additional support, reach out to us today to schedule a phone consultation with one of our attachment therapists and take the first step towards healing.
Attachment Therapy Orlando Resources
Orlando Therapist: Understanding Your Attachment Style
Orlando Attachment Therapist Explains Anxious Attachment
Orlando Trauma Therapist Shares: What's Behind "Daddy Issues"
Orlando Attachment Therapist: What is Avoidant Attachment?
Orlando Attachment Therapist: What is Secure Attachment?
Orlando Attachment Therapist Explains Anxious Attachment
Other Trauma Therapy Services Offered at Mindful Living Counseling in Orlando
At Mindful Living Counseling, we offer a variety of therapy services, including:
Attachment Therapist Lauran Daugherty Hahn, LMHC
Lauran Daugherty Hahn, LMHC, is a therapist who specializes in helping individuals cope with anxiety, attachment issues, and recovery from toxic relationships. She is a certified EMDR therapist and an EMDRIA-approved consultant. Currently, Lauran is accepting new clients for EMDR intensives.