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!
3 Tips to Help Your Anxious Partner Feel More Secure
Anxious partners feel more secure when their relationship needs are met. Learn three practical ways to support your partner in feeling safe, valued, and emotionally connected.
Validation: The Key to Emotional Connection
Validation is the foundation of emotional safety in relationships. Learn how to practice validation to strengthen connection, improve communication, and create a deeper bond with your partner.
Navigating Relationship Challenges: Answers to Common Questions
Understand how attachment styles, boundaries, and emotional security shape your relationships. Learn how to distinguish between anxious fears and intuition, repair negative cycles, and move forward with clarity.
Resolve Conflict Using the D.E.A.R M.A.N. Method
Learn how the D.E.A.R M.A.N. method can help you express yourself clearly, set boundaries, and resolve conflict while maintaining emotional connection in your relationship.
How Do Secure Partners Do That?
Securely attached partners communicate effectively, regulate emotions, and maintain strong boundaries while fostering connection. Learn how these behaviors create thriving relationships.
Why Do Disorganized Partners Do That?
Disorganized attachment can make relationships feel unpredictable and overwhelming. Learn how survival strategies formed in childhood impact adult relationships and discover steps for healing.
Why Do Avoidant Attached Partners Do That?
Understanding why avoidant partners engage in behaviors like appeasing, shutting down, or defending themselves is key to breaking negative cycles. Learn how to transform these behaviors and build a more secure relationship.
Why Do Those with Anxious Attachment Do That?
Anxious attachment behaviors often stem from deep fears of abandonment. Learn why these behaviors feel safe and how to shift toward healthier relationship patterns.
Common Experience of Avoidant Partners: Fear of Conflict
Avoidant partners often struggle with emotions, both within themselves and in relationships. Learn how to reconnect with your emotions and build deeper connections.
Things to Know About Your Relationship And Sex
Sexual intimacy offers numerous physical and psychological benefits, but a healthy emotional connection is the foundation of a fulfilling sex life. Learn how to nurture intimacy and address challenges in your relationship.
How Does Attachment Play a Part in Long Distance Relationships?
Long-distance relationships bring attachment needs into sharp focus. Learn how to strengthen security in your relationship before focusing on the logistics of managing distance.
When I'm Sorry Isn't Enough: Repairing Trust Beyond Apology
Saying 'I’m sorry' isn’t always enough. Learn how to truly repair trust by understanding, validating, and committing to change in your relationship.
Insecure Attachment Styles and How They Keep You Stuck
Anxious, avoidant, and disorganized attachment styles often keep partners stuck in negative cycles. Learn how to break free by improving communication, self-awareness, and emotional regulation.
Common Experience of Anxious Partners: The Sense of Over Responsibility
Many anxious partners struggle with over responsibility, feeling the need to control everything to feel safe. Learn how to balance expectations, release control, and build a healthier relationship dynamic.
Being Emotionally Supportive is NOT the Same as Being Your Partner’s Therapist
Many people want to support their partner emotionally, but worry they’ll say the wrong thing, make it worse, or become responsible for their partner’s feelings. Emotional support is a learnable relationship skill, not a therapist role, and it works best when it’s reciprocal.
Emotional Intimacy: What It Looks Like (for Men) and How Avoidant and Anxious Partners Block It
Both avoidant and anxious partners block emotional intimacy in unique but equally intense ways. By understanding these dynamics, couples can begin to break the negative cycle and build a more secure, emotionally connected relationship.
Healthy Assertion vs. Reactive Anger
Reactive anger can trigger negative cycles in relationships. Learn how healthy assertion can shift communication, promote emotional safety, and create space for understanding and compromise.
Your “Window of Tolerance”
Your window of tolerance is your internal safe space for emotional balance. Learn how to find and stay in this space to improve your well-being, regulate emotions, and build healthier relationships.
Spiraling Higher Podcast
If you have ever been in a relationship, or supported someone in one, then you KNOW how distressing it is to deal with feeling like your partner doesn't care about your feelings OR as if their feelings are TOO MUCH.
How to Navigate Hard Conversations with Your Partner
Hard conversations in relationships can be challenging, but with emotional regulation, empathy, and clear communication, you can create a foundation of safety and teamwork for problem-solving.

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.