Attachment Based Relationship Tips
Looking to strengthen your relationship? Our blog offers expert relationship tips rooted in attachment theory and Emotionally Focused Therapy. Learn how to identify your attachment style, communicate more effectively, and foster emotional safety with your partner. From overcoming conflict to building deeper trust, our practical advice and tools, created by couples therapist Julie Menanno, are designed to help you move toward a secure and fulfilling connection. Dive in and start transforming your relationships today!
How Anger Shows Up in Anxious Attachment, and What Is the Work?
Anger can feel overwhelming and frequent if you have anxious attachment. Learn how this response is rooted in vulnerability, fear, and past wounds, and discover strategies for healing and assertiveness.
How Do Attachment Wounds Get in the Way of Closeness?
Attachment wounds, caused by breaches of trust and ongoing harmful behaviors, can block vulnerability and connection. Discover how to recognize and heal these wounds to strengthen your relationship.
Learn to Love Podcast
What does attachment theory say about how parents should raise their children? What are our adult attachment needs? How can couples break out of negative communication cycles?
Tips for Healing an Insecure Attachment
Learn how to heal an insecure attachment by improving communication, regulating emotions, and building a healthier sense of self.
Emotional Support in Your Relationship
Learn how to build emotional support in your relationship by diversifying support systems and fostering self-support for deeper connection and balance.
The Anatomy of a Trigger (and How to Do Something New)
Explore the anatomy of a trigger and how vulnerability can transform conflict into emotional safety and connection.
From the Relationship Therapist: How I Personally Approach My Relationships
Discover how a relationship therapist navigates her own relationships with authenticity, humor, and a commitment to personal growth.
Attachment Needs in Action
Explore how attachment needs show up in relationships and why meeting them fosters emotional safety, connection, and trust between partners and friends.
How Expanding Conversations Can Strengthen Your Relationship and Build Secure Attachment
Learn how to deepen emotional intimacy in your relationship by expanding small conversations into meaningful connections, creating secure attachment and a stronger bond.
Blaming vs. Owning: Taking Responsibility in Relationships
Discover the difference between blaming and owning in relationships, and learn how taking responsibility for your emotional needs can create space for healing, growth, and connection.
Common Question: How Can I Have Attachment Needs While Being Responsible for My Emotional Needs?
Learn how to balance emotional responsibility with attachment needs, foster mutual respect, and create closeness in your romantic relationship.
Taking Breaks from Arguments
Learn how taking breaks during arguments can improve communication and create emotional safety for both anxious and avoidant partners.
The Fight: What’s Really Happening and How to Do It Differently
Learn how to transform relationship fights by addressing unmet attachment needs, creating emotional safety, and fostering connection instead of conflict.
Feeling Triggered In Your Relationship?
Feeling triggered in your relationship? Learn these five steps: look inward, self-regulate, balance your perspective, assess timing, and follow through.
How to Help Soothe Your Distressed Partner
Discover how to support your distressed partner effectively with self-regulation, validation, and timing, creating a safer emotional environment for both of you.
Secure Attachment Is Not Enmeshment: How to Avoid Enmeshment in Your Relationship
Enmeshment in relationships can blur boundaries and hinder individuality. Learn how to avoid enmeshment and foster secure attachment for a healthier connection.
The Importance of Timing in Your Relationship: What It Means and Why It Matters
Timing in relationships affects both when and how you address hard topics. Learn to improve timing for better communication.
Fear-Based Questions vs. Self-Security Thoughts: Navigating Relationship Anxiety
Fear-based questions like 'Do you even think about me?' often arise from insecurity. Learn how self-security thoughts can shift your perspective and improve your communication.
When You Have To Ask the Question...Should I End My Relationship?
Wondering 'should I end my relationship'? This guide explores 7 essential steps to evaluate your connection, from unhealed wounds to hope for change.
From Mrs. to Ms.
Julie also shares actionable advice for anyone feeling stuck in conflict or disconnection, offering hope for singles navigating modern dating challenges like hookup culture and dating apps.

Sometimes the moment that hurts the most does not make sense. A small shift in tone or distance can create a big reaction. In this open forum, we explore how those moments are shaped by the meaning your nervous system assigns to them, often rooted in past experiences. When you understand the “why” beneath your reactions, you can begin to respond differently and create change.
Some of the most important relationship work doesn’t come from structured lessons. It comes from real questions in real moments.
This open forum is a space where people bring in the situations that are actually happening in their lives right now. Not the polished version. Not the “right way” to explain it. Just the moment that felt confusing, reactive, or hard to understand.
And that’s where the work becomes real.
Because most relationship struggles don’t show up clearly labeled. They show up in small moments. A tone that shifts. A response that feels off. A reaction that feels bigger than expected.
In this session, Julie works through live questions and helps participants slow those moments down. Instead of jumping to fixing or defending, the focus is on understanding what is happening underneath the reaction.
You start to see that what feels like “too much” or “out of nowhere” usually has a reason. There is meaning in it. There is history in it. And there is a pattern that can be understood.
There is also a shift away from seeing behaviors as the problem. Shutting down, reacting quickly, getting critical, or pulling away are not random. They are ways the nervous system tries to protect something.
When you begin to understand what those responses are protecting, the work changes.
This session also highlights how easy it is for couples to get stuck in their own perspective. One person is focused on what they meant. The other is focused on how it felt. Without slowing down, both sides stay disconnected.
The goal is not to get it perfect. The goal is to stay engaged long enough to understand what is happening between you.
That’s what these open forums offer.
Not just concepts, but real examples of what this work looks like in everyday life.
If you are already part of the group, you can watch the full replay and go deeper into these conversations.
If you are not, this is where the work moves from understanding into practice.