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!
Testing Your Partner’s Love?
Do you find yourself constantly testing your partner’s love? This blog explores why reassurance never feels like enough and how you can begin to build real trust—from the inside out.
Chapter 2 of Secure Love: Understanding Attachment Theory in Relationships
In this week’s Secure Love Book Club, I guide you through Chapter 2, where we unpack the fundamentals of attachment theory and how it affects your ability to feel safe, seen, and connected in romantic relationships.
How Personal Anxiety Can Impact Your Relationship
Trying to control your environment—like keeping a spotless house—can sometimes be a way to manage inner anxiety caused by relationship disconnection. But when that strategy backfires, it can create more of the very disconnection you’re trying to avoid. This post explores how personal anxiety shows up in relationships, and how couples can break the cycle.
Your Partner Isn’t the Enemy—Your Negative Cycle Is
In emotionally stuck relationships, your partner isn’t the enemy. The negative cycle is. Learn how to identify the cycle, understand each other’s roles, and begin the process of healing.
Secure Love Book Club – Chapter One: The Problem Beneath the Problem
In this first meeting of the Secure Love Book Club, Julie Menanno introduces the foundation of her book and dives into Chapter One, helping participants understand how negative cycles erode connection and how we can begin to heal by recognizing the deeper pain underneath conflict.
Attachment-Friendly Boundaries Sound Like This
Secure relationships are built on mutual respect and emotional safety. These examples of attachment-friendly boundaries show how to protect connection while still speaking your truth.
Coping With Ghosting
Should you get back together with the person who ghosted you? How can you build a secure relationship after being ghosted?
How to Get Through a Breakup
Healing after a breakup isn’t easy—but it’s possible. Learn how to face the pain, let go with intention, and build emotional resilience as you move through the process.
How to Be Emotionally Available – Part Four: Emotional Presence
Emotional presence is the ability to join someone in their feelings without losing yourself in the process. When practiced consistently, it deepens connection and builds trust.
Emotional Attunement: Meaning, Examples, and How to Be Emotionally Attuned to Your Partner
Emotional attunement is the skill of staying present with your partner’s feelings without trying to fix, correct, or rush them. When you learn how to be emotionally attuned, conflict de-escalates faster, emotional safety grows, and problem-solving finally becomes possible.
How to Be Emotionally Available – Part Two: Authenticity
If you’re not showing up, there’s none of you to connect with. Authenticity is the foundation of emotional availability—and it's something you can learn.
How to Be Emotionally Available – Part One: Emotional Validation
Emotional validation isn’t about agreeing with your partner—it’s about showing them that their feelings matter. And when it comes to emotional availability, few things are more powerful.
Tips for Preventing the Negative Cycle When Discussing a Difficult Topic
Tough conversations can easily spiral into disconnection when couples fall into the negative cycle. But it doesn’t have to go that way. These tips can help you communicate better, create emotional safety, and stay connected even when things get hard.
What Is Vulnerability—and Why Does It Matter?
Vulnerability is the foundation of connection—and without it, relationships stay surface-level. But when you've learned to hide, overshare, or shut down, it can feel impossible to get it right. Here’s how to begin.
The Negative Cycle: Part Six – Putting It All Together
The real enemy in your relationship isn’t your partner—it’s the negative cycle you both get caught in. When you understand how it works, you can work together to step out of it and reconnect.
The Negative Cycle: Part Five – Examining the Next Trigger of the Avoidant Partner
It may look like the avoidant partner doesn’t care, but in reality, they’re overwhelmed. When conflict escalates, their instinct is to shut down—not to hurt their partner, but to protect themselves.
The Negative Cycle: Part Four – Examining the Next Trigger of the Anxious Partner
When anxious partners feel dismissed, they often double down in protest. It’s not about control—it’s about emotional survival and the fear of being too much to love.
The Negative Cycle: Part Three – Examining the Trigger of the Avoidant Partner
Avoidant partners aren’t trying to push love away—they’re trying to avoid the shame, fear, and overwhelm of feeling like they’re never enough. Here’s what’s happening beneath the shutdown.
The Negative Cycle: Part Two – Examining the Trigger
The anxious partner in a negative cycle isn’t just “overreacting”—they’re fighting to feel seen, heard, and emotionally safe. Here’s what’s happening beneath the surface.
The Negative Cycle: Part One – What Is the Negative Cycle?
The negative cycle is the real enemy in many relationships. It’s not about who left socks on the floor—it’s about how that moment touches deeper fears, needs, and emotions that create disconnection.

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.