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!
What to Do Instead
When your partner shares a concern, like spending habits, it can be tempting to shut down, deflect, or fight back. But emotional safety comes from staying engaged, validating each other, and communicating with clarity.
Do You Really Want to Be Agreed With? Or Do You Just Want to Feel Valued and Understood?
Constantly arguing over facts in your relationship? You may not be seeking agreement—you may be seeking emotional validation. Here’s how to tell the difference and reconnect.
What Is a Secure Sex Relationship?
A secure sex relationship isn't perfect—but it is emotionally safe. Here's how partners can support intimacy, vulnerability, and evolving desire without shame or pressure.
Your Attachment Style Has So Much to Say…
Each attachment style holds a story—about fear, need, and connection. When we give those stories words, we begin the process of healing, connection, and secure attachment.
Are You Emotionally Available?
Emotional availability is the foundation of secure connection. If you're wondering whether you're truly showing up for your partner, here are five ways to deepen emotional presence and intimacy.
Met Attachment Needs = Secure Attachment
Secure attachment is built on a foundation of consistent emotional attunement and met needs. When both partners feel seen, valued, and safe, the relationship thrives.
Your Partner Doesn’t Want Help With Their Feelings?
When your partner avoids emotional support, it can feel confusing and lonely. But it often stems from shame, fear, or past conditioning—not rejection. Learn five reasons this happens and how to respond with compassion.
Hope: 8 Ways to Grow Secure Attachment in Your Relationship
Secure attachment doesn’t just happen—it’s created moment by moment, through emotional safety, self-awareness, and commitment. Here are 8 hopeful and practical ways to build a stronger, more connected relationship.
Unmet Childhood Attachment Needs: How Early Experiences Shape Adult Relationships
Many struggles in adult relationships trace back to unmet attachment needs from childhood. Explore how early emotional experiences shape your reactions, defenses, and patterns—and what healing can look like.
If You’re Struggling with Emotional or Relational Pain, Start Here
If you’re navigating CPTSD, attachment wounds, anxiety, or trauma, this book may change your life. Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving by Pete Walker offers powerful tools for emotional healing and recovery.
Relationship Challenge: Respond to Criticism with Curiosity
Feeling criticized by your partner? Try responding with curiosity instead of defensiveness. Over time, openness fosters emotional safety and creates a stronger, more connected relationship.
How to Know If You’re Healing or Just Accommodating Your Wounds
Understanding whether you are truly healing your wounds or merely accommodating them can be challenging. Healing involves sitting with your pain and supporting yourself, while accommodating often means avoiding the pain altogether.
Can You Have Both an Anxious and Avoidant Attachment Style?
Attachment styles can be confusing, but in most cases, people lean heavily toward one attachment style in their closest relationships. Learn why you might feel like you have both anxious and avoidant tendencies and what that really means.
Validating Anger: For Yourself and Your Partner
Anger is not the problem—how we respond to it is. Learning to validate your own anger and your partner’s can lead to emotional regulation, deeper understanding, and stronger communication.
Enneagram and Marriage
Whether you're navigating anxious or avoidant patterns, or seeking to build deeper trust, this episode offers hope and concrete steps toward secure, lasting connection.
How Disorganized Partners Can Feel Safe in Relationships
Disorganized attachment can create intense emotional highs and lows in relationships. For these partners to feel safe, they need emotional validation, understanding, clear boundaries, and a partner committed to self-care and honest communication.
How to Break Free from Negative Communication Cycles in Your Relationship
Negative communication cycles are the real enemy of relationships—not your partner. Learn how to identify, interrupt, and prevent them so you can strengthen your emotional connection and resolve conflicts more effectively.
What Does Emotional Safety in a Relationship Really Mean?
Emotional safety is the foundation of secure love. When you feel safe in a relationship, your body can relax, you can be yourself, and conflict becomes something you work through together instead of something that threatens the bond.
What Is Your Sense of Self?
A strong sense of self allows you to move through life with confidence, authenticity, and emotional resilience. Learn how to develop a deeper connection to yourself, accept your flaws, and build more fulfilling relationships.
Splitting vs. Integrating: How to Shift from Extreme Thinking to Balanced Perspectives
Understanding the difference between splitting and integrating can help you develop a healthier, more balanced perspective in relationships. Learn how to move from extreme thinking to a more integrated way of seeing yourself and your partner.

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.