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 Therapy Can Help With an Avoidant Attachment Style
Therapy can help people with avoidant attachment communicate more openly, connect more deeply, and become more emotionally available in relationships.
Preventing Your Negative Cycle: Chapter 6 of the Secure Love Book Club
Learn how to turn everyday interactions into an “attachment-friendly” environment, swap reflexive fight-or-flight reactions for healthy connection, and use Julie’s E-V-I-C-T framework to keep shame (and negative cycles) out of your relationship.
Interrupting Your Negative Cycle: Chapter 5 (Part 2) of the Secure Love Book Club
In Part 2 of Chapter 5, Julie ditches the slide deck for a full hour of live Q & A—pressure-testing interruption tools on real couples, unpacking avoidant re-engagement, and prescribing homework that turns resentment into micro-repairs before Chapter 6.
Triggered by Your Partner? Respond with LOVE
When your partner triggers you, the L.O.V.E. tool helps you pause, regulate, and respond with clarity and care. Here's how to shift from reaction to connection.
Interrupting Your Negative Cycle: Chapter 5 (Part 1) of the Secure Love Book Club
In Part 1 of Chapter 5, we explore what it takes to interrupt your negative cycle in the moment. Julie shares how to slow down, name the pattern, and choose connection over protection—even when it’s hard.
Understanding Shame: The Missing Link in Relationship Healing
Shame is often the hidden force behind emotional disconnection. This workshop helps you understand, name, and work with shame—so it no longer controls your relationships.
Attachment 101: The Course Every Relationship Needs
Your attachment style shapes how you love, fight, and connect. The Attachment 101 Course helps you understand your emotional patterns—and how to build secure bonds.
Attachment Needs & Fears
Every partner has attachment needs that support emotional safety. Learn how unmet needs and fears drive disconnection—and how to move back toward security.
What Is Your Negative Cycle?: Chapter 4 of the Secure Love Book Club
In Chapter 4 of the Secure Love Book Club, Julie Menanno explores how negative cycles—not your partner—keep you stuck. Learn how to map your cycle and begin the path to healing disconnection.
4 Tips to Help Your Avoidant Partner Feel Safe
Avoidant attachment doesn’t mean your partner can’t connect. Learn four key ways to help them feel safe, successful, and emotionally understood.
How Do Different Attachment Styles Approach Making Sacrifices for the Good of the Relationship?
Anxious partners over-sacrifice. Avoidant partners resist change. Secure partners give for the greater good. Learn how attachment shapes relationship sacrifices.
How to Recognize Your Attachment Style in Everyday Reactions
The emotional patterns you repeat in your relationship often stem from your attachment style. This post outlines common signs of anxious or avoidant attachment.
Toxic vs. Healthy Anger: The Difference Between Reactivity and Assertiveness
Anger can divide or connect—depending on how it’s expressed. This post shows the difference between reactive and assertive anger and how to use it for deeper connection.
Before You Label Your Partner, Try This Perspective
It can feel easier to label your partner than to feel powerless. But what if the answer isn’t in blame, but in understanding the cycle? This post offers a new way forward.
After the Fight: 3 Options That Shape Your Relationship
After a fight, couples often choose between self-abandonment, protest, or repair. This post breaks down the three paths and helps you choose connection over disconnection.
A Secure Attachment Isn’t Bliss—It’s Safety
A secure relationship doesn’t feel like constant bliss. It feels safe. Valued. Trusted. Seen. This post explains what secure attachment really looks and feels like.
Why Your Partner’s Bad Mood Triggers You—and What to Do
Your partner’s bad mood doesn’t have to mean disconnection. Learn how to regulate your nervous system, reflect with empathy, and stay connected—even when it’s hard.
Identifying Your Attachment Style: Chapter 3 of the Secure Love Book Club
In Chapter 3 of Secure Love, we begin one of the most foundational steps in the healing process—identifying your attachment style. In this session, I guide readers through recognizing the patterns that shape how they relate, connect, and protect themselves in relationships.
How to Set Gentle Boundaries With Your Partner
Boundaries do not have to be harsh to be effective. Gentle boundaries help you protect emotional safety, interrupt negative cycles, and stay committed to connection while still honoring your limits.
Can You Lean Into Your Partner’s Emotions?
Leaning in—offering empathy even when you don’t agree—isn’t the whole relationship, but it is the beginning. Here’s why it matters and how to do it well.

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.