Issues with my anxious attachment style (long read)
Posted: Wed Jan 14, 2026 12:41 am
Long read of 836 words
Content warnings: emotional distress, feeling unaccepted, mention of mental health crisis and mental health issues, very detailed discussion of anxious attachment
Hi everyone,
I have an anxious attachment style, based on what people have told me and the article I linked to below. (In one case, I was told this by my best friend in the context of a break-up, although they were and are kind about it.) I’m also very analytical and judgmental of how I think and act.
I’ve noticed that I have a very significant desire for intimacy, which I mostly experience as wanting to be closer in friendships, talk to my friends a lot, etc. I also want affirmation, usually reassurance that I haven’t made someone upset.
How much it feels like I want or “need” connection and affirmation varies based on my stress level, from “I wonder what Z thinks of this, maybe I’ll text him” to “if I don’t get to talk to my friends soon, I’m gonna have a mental health crisis”. I’ve had times where the thing I wanted most in the world was to see my friends.
I also have a very annoying bit of how my mind works: a really good interaction causes me to really want more, which makes it extra uncomfortable if more doesn’t happen.
I know that being so influenced by how much interaction happens makes me more vulnerable and might cause me to overload my friends in seeking it. Because of that, I’ve spent perhaps five or ten percent of all of my time thinking about how to not overload people; how to express my wants while also always respecting consent and spoon levels; and analyzing my thoughts and actions for potential problems. This is emotionally painful and an huge use of my time and energy.
It feels like the distress that happens when I don’t get to talk with someone or they don’t reply (among other things that upset me) is made less valid or acceptable because it’s from anxious attachment. I think I get this message from TV shows and pop psychology. There is a lot of compassion for the struggles of being in a relationship (of any kind) with someone who has a non-standard/non-normative mind. On the other hand, they often don’t show compassion for the distress that comes from having that non-standard mind or trying to carefully manage it. And I don’t think I’ve ever seen something where a certain amount of dysfunction was openly accepted.
I know that desperately wanting connection is a problem, and that putting desperation onto people who don’t want to deal with it is hurtful, but knowing that that doesn’t stop me from feeling desperate, lonely, or upset.
I deeply, deeply care about my friends and their wants and needs about friendship, and I often feel stuck between how much friendship and interaction I want and how much they want to give. It doesn’t help that I almost always underestimate how much time and energy my friends have available to give. (When I say ‘give’, I mean giving in the sense of using their time and energy on me, not that I am the only one benefiting from the friendship. I certainly hope not…)
I know that I have certain absolute duties towards people I know: to never intentionally cause harm, to always value their needs as much as I value my own. But I also feel that the world as a whole doesn’t accept me because of my anxious attachment style, even when I am meeting those absolute duties. I don’t want to hurt people because of how I experience intimacy, but what I do to avoid that hurts myself, at least in the short term. I don’t know whether I’ll always develop anxious attachment, and if I always do, I’m scared that I’ll always be less accepted than someone who develops “healthy” attachment.
I feel weird for saying all of this so explicitly, it’s hard to explain how I feel about friendship—connection for me serves a function in helping me feel less terrible about the world, but I also deeply love getting to know people and them getting to know me. My friends are helpful and I love them, but it feels weird to say the first part so plainly.
I don’t really have any questions about this, but if someone else relates, I’d really appreciate your thoughts.
Sorry for this being so very long, and I welcome any accessibility or ease-of-reading edits.
- AQ
Article: “How Anxious Attachment Manifests In Adult Relationships” https://www.simplypsychology.org/how-an ... ships.html
PS 1: I know this is a psychological problem that I should talk about in therapy, so I understand if this isn’t appropriate for the boards. I hope the content warnings make it ok.
PS 2: I feel much less entitled to connection and affirmation than this writing makes it seem—I’m caught between feeling like I don’t deserve it but also knowing that it helps me.
Content warnings: emotional distress, feeling unaccepted, mention of mental health crisis and mental health issues, very detailed discussion of anxious attachment
Hi everyone,
I have an anxious attachment style, based on what people have told me and the article I linked to below. (In one case, I was told this by my best friend in the context of a break-up, although they were and are kind about it.) I’m also very analytical and judgmental of how I think and act.
I’ve noticed that I have a very significant desire for intimacy, which I mostly experience as wanting to be closer in friendships, talk to my friends a lot, etc. I also want affirmation, usually reassurance that I haven’t made someone upset.
How much it feels like I want or “need” connection and affirmation varies based on my stress level, from “I wonder what Z thinks of this, maybe I’ll text him” to “if I don’t get to talk to my friends soon, I’m gonna have a mental health crisis”. I’ve had times where the thing I wanted most in the world was to see my friends.
I also have a very annoying bit of how my mind works: a really good interaction causes me to really want more, which makes it extra uncomfortable if more doesn’t happen.
I know that being so influenced by how much interaction happens makes me more vulnerable and might cause me to overload my friends in seeking it. Because of that, I’ve spent perhaps five or ten percent of all of my time thinking about how to not overload people; how to express my wants while also always respecting consent and spoon levels; and analyzing my thoughts and actions for potential problems. This is emotionally painful and an huge use of my time and energy.
It feels like the distress that happens when I don’t get to talk with someone or they don’t reply (among other things that upset me) is made less valid or acceptable because it’s from anxious attachment. I think I get this message from TV shows and pop psychology. There is a lot of compassion for the struggles of being in a relationship (of any kind) with someone who has a non-standard/non-normative mind. On the other hand, they often don’t show compassion for the distress that comes from having that non-standard mind or trying to carefully manage it. And I don’t think I’ve ever seen something where a certain amount of dysfunction was openly accepted.
I know that desperately wanting connection is a problem, and that putting desperation onto people who don’t want to deal with it is hurtful, but knowing that that doesn’t stop me from feeling desperate, lonely, or upset.
I deeply, deeply care about my friends and their wants and needs about friendship, and I often feel stuck between how much friendship and interaction I want and how much they want to give. It doesn’t help that I almost always underestimate how much time and energy my friends have available to give. (When I say ‘give’, I mean giving in the sense of using their time and energy on me, not that I am the only one benefiting from the friendship. I certainly hope not…)
I know that I have certain absolute duties towards people I know: to never intentionally cause harm, to always value their needs as much as I value my own. But I also feel that the world as a whole doesn’t accept me because of my anxious attachment style, even when I am meeting those absolute duties. I don’t want to hurt people because of how I experience intimacy, but what I do to avoid that hurts myself, at least in the short term. I don’t know whether I’ll always develop anxious attachment, and if I always do, I’m scared that I’ll always be less accepted than someone who develops “healthy” attachment.
I feel weird for saying all of this so explicitly, it’s hard to explain how I feel about friendship—connection for me serves a function in helping me feel less terrible about the world, but I also deeply love getting to know people and them getting to know me. My friends are helpful and I love them, but it feels weird to say the first part so plainly.
I don’t really have any questions about this, but if someone else relates, I’d really appreciate your thoughts.
Sorry for this being so very long, and I welcome any accessibility or ease-of-reading edits.
- AQ
Article: “How Anxious Attachment Manifests In Adult Relationships” https://www.simplypsychology.org/how-an ... ships.html
PS 1: I know this is a psychological problem that I should talk about in therapy, so I understand if this isn’t appropriate for the boards. I hope the content warnings make it ok.
PS 2: I feel much less entitled to connection and affirmation than this writing makes it seem—I’m caught between feeling like I don’t deserve it but also knowing that it helps me.