Orlando Attachment Therapist: What is Secure Attachment?
Written by: Lauren Daugherty Hahn, LMHC
Have you ever wondered why some relationships feel safe and steady while others leave you feeling anxious, unsure, or emotionally drained? Often, the difference lies in attachment style, the patterns we develop early in life that shape how we connect with others.
In last week's blog, we explored anxious attachment, a pattern where individuals fear abandonment, crave reassurance, or feel highly sensitive to changes in a relationship. If you notice yourself overanalyzing texts, worrying about being rejected, or feeling emotionally unsettled when a partner pulls away, you may recognize some of those patterns. Understanding anxious attachment can be an important first step toward change.
The good news is that attachment patterns can change. With awareness, supportive relationships, and often the help of therapy, it is possible to develop a secure attachment style and experience relationships that feel safer, more balanced, and emotionally fulfilling.
What Is Secure Attachment?
Secure Attachment is the ability to feel emotionally safe and connected in relationships with healthy people. People with secure attachment generally feel comfortable with intimacy, trust their partners, and believe that their needs matter.
Rather than experiencing relationships as unpredictable or overwhelming, secure attachment allows people to feel grounded and emotionally regulated in connection with others.
Signs of a Secure Attachment:
People with a secure attachment style tend to experience relationships as stable and supportive rather than stressful or uncertain. While no one is perfectly secure all the time, several common characteristics often show up in secure relationships.
6 Signs of secure attachment include:
Comfort with emotional closeness: You feel safe being vulnerable and sharing your thoughts and feelings with others.
Trust in relationships: You generally believe that people you care about will be supportive and reliable.
Healthy independence: You enjoy close relationships but also maintain your own identity, interests, and boundaries.
Ability to communicate needs: You can express when you feel hurt, need support, or want something to change.
Emotional regulation during conflict: Disagreements may feel uncomfortable, but they don’t immediately trigger fear that the relationship will end.
Comfort giving and receiving support: You’re able to rely on others while also being there for them when they need you.
These qualities help relationships feel more balanced, respectful, and emotionally safe.
Why Secure Attachment Doesn’t Always Come Naturally
Attachment patterns begin forming in early childhood through interactions with caregivers. When caregivers are consistently responsive and emotionally available, children learn that the world is safe and relationships are reliable.
However, many people grow up with experiences that make secure attachment more difficult to develop. These may include:
Inconsistent caregiving
Emotional neglect
Caregivers who were overwhelmed or unavailable
Family environments where emotions were discouraged
As a result, adults may develop patterns such as anxious attachment (fear of abandonment and strong need for reassurance) or avoidant attachment (difficulty trusting others or relying on people emotionally). These patterns are sometimes casually referred to as “daddy issues” when they stem from unresolved experiences with a father figure.
Secure Attachment as an Adult
Developing secure attachment is a process that involves becoming more aware of your emotional patterns and intentionally practicing healthier ways of relating. Over time, these small shifts can create meaningful changes in how you experience relationships.
Increase Awareness of Your Attachment Patterns
The first step is recognizing your own patterns in relationships. Notice how you tend to respond when you feel emotionally triggered.
For example, you might notice:
Anxiety when someone pulls away
Difficulty expressing your needs
Fear of being vulnerable
A tendency to withdraw during conflict
Understanding these responses with curiosity rather than judgment helps create space for change.
Learn to Regulate Your Emotions
Attachment triggers often activate the nervous system, making it harder to think clearly or communicate effectively. Developing skills to regulate emotions can help you respond thoughtfully rather than react impulsively.
4 helpful practices may include:
Deep breathing or grounding exercises
Taking a pause before responding during conflict
Identifying and naming emotions
Practicing self-compassion during difficult moments
When the nervous system feels calmer, it becomes easier to engage in healthy communication.
Practice Clear Communication
Secure attachment relies heavily on open and respectful communication. This means expressing your needs and feelings directly rather than expecting others to guess or suppressing emotions entirely.
For example, instead of saying nothing when something bothers you, you might say:
“I felt hurt when that happened, and I’d like to talk about it.”
Learning to communicate in this way strengthens emotional safety within relationships.
Build Relationships With Emotionally Safe People
Attachment patterns are shaped through relationships, which means they can also be healed through relationships. Spending time with people who are emotionally consistent, supportive, and respectful can gradually reshape expectations about connection.
4 Healthy relationships provide opportunities to experience:
Reliability
Empathy
Mutual respect
Safe vulnerability
Over time, these experiences can help rewire the nervous system to expect safety rather than threat in relationships.
Develop Healthy Boundaries
Secure attachment includes the ability to maintain both connection and individuality. This means feeling comfortable saying no, protecting your emotional well-being, and respecting your own limits.
Boundaries allow relationships to feel balanced rather than overwhelming or one-sided. They create clarity and prevent resentment from building over time.
How Therapy Can Help Build Secure Attachment
Because attachment patterns often develop early in life, changing them can sometimes feel challenging without guidance. Therapy offers a safe space to explore relationship patterns, understand emotional triggers, and develop healthier ways of connecting.
An attachment-focused therapist can help you:
Identify your attachment style
Understand how early experiences shaped relationship patterns
Process unresolved emotional wounds
Develop stronger emotional regulation skills
Practice healthier communication and boundaries
Perhaps most importantly, the therapeutic relationship itself can provide an experience of consistent, supportive connection, which can help foster greater emotional security.
Moving Toward Healthier Relationships
Learning how to build secure attachment is not about becoming perfect in relationships. Everyone experiences moments of insecurity, fear, or emotional overwhelm. Secure attachment simply means having the tools to navigate those moments with greater stability and trust.
With time, awareness, and supportive relationships, it’s possible to move toward connections that feel calmer, more balanced, and emotionally fulfilling. If anxiety, trust issues, or past relationship wounds continue to affect your relationships, therapy can provide meaningful support in developing healthier attachment patterns.
Interested in Your Attachment Style?
At Mindful Living Counseling, our therapists help individuals explore attachment patterns, heal emotional wounds, and build stronger, more secure relationships. If you’d like support on this journey, we invite you to reach out to learn more or schedule a consultation.
Additional Attachment Therapy Orlando Resources
Orlando Attachment Therapist Explains Anxious Attachment
How to Set Boundaries: 5 Simple Steps That Actually Work
51 Grounding Techniques to Help You Feel Grounded Now
Baffled by Your Relationship Patterns? Allow Me to Shed Some Light
4 Qualities of a Healthy Relationship
Is Arguing Healthy in a Relationship? Insights from an Orlando Therapist
5 Signs You’re Healing from Trauma
Other Trauma Therapy Services Offered at Mindful Living Counseling in Orlando
At Mindful Living Counseling, we recognize that can be a difficult obstacle to overcome trauma, but we understand that there may be other challenges as well. That's why we provide a range of therapy services, such as Anxiety therapy, EMDR therapy, Eating Disorder Therapy, Divorce Therapy, Parenting Therapy, and Teen Therapy, as well as Guided Meditations. If you have any inquiries, don't hesitate to contact us.
Attachment Therapist Lauran Daugherty Hahn
Lauran Daugherty Hahn, LMHC, is a licensed therapist based, specializing in helping individuals cope with anxiety, attachment issues, and recovery from toxic relationships. Lauran is also a certified EMDR therapist and an EMDRIA-approved EMDR consultant. She is currently accepting new clients!