Anxious Attachment Style: Why Your Partner Never Believes You Love Them

Anxious Attachment Style: Why Your Partner Never Believes You Love Them

Through attachment therapy (which I started doing a few months back), I discovered I tend toward anxious attachment.

  • I worry that the second conflict shows up, the other person is going to pull away.
  • I overanalyze every little thing.
  • And I get anxious that someone is mad or upset at me, even when there’s zero evidence to back that up. 

…Or at least I used to! 

While it took work, I’ve managed to work through a lot of these patterns and move toward a more secure place in my life. 

And if you read my article on avoidant attachment, you already know how someone can pull away the moment things start to feel close. Having an avoidant and anxious person in a relationship can be a recipe for disaster. 


Compared to an avoidant, anxious attachment lives on the opposite end of the spectrum. 

You might even be in a really good relationship.

Maybe you’re with someone wonderful.

  • They tell you they love you.
  • They show up.
  • They text back.

And yet, somewhere in the back of your mind, that little voice keeps whispering, but do they really mean it?

  • You reread their texts looking for hidden meaning.
  • You panic when they take too long to respond.
  • You replay conversations in your head, wondering if you said something wrong.

And no matter how much reassurance they give you, it never quite sticks.

If this sounds painfully familiar, you might be anxiously attached. But don’t worry; attachment styles are far from permanent. It all comes down to understanding yourself and working through those patterns that keep showing up. 

 

What Is Anxious Attachment Style?

Anxious attachment (sometimes called anxious-preoccupied) is one of the insecure attachment styles. People with this style desire closeness and connection, but they live with a constant fear that the people they love will eventually leave them.

And, to be clear, it’s not that they’re being needy or dramatic. It’s that connection, for them, feels fragile, like something they have to actively hold onto or it’ll slip away.


Like most attachment patterns, anxious attachment usually traces back to childhood.

It tends to develop when caregivers are inconsistent, sometimes warm and attentive, but other times distracted, distant, or emotionally unavailable. The child never quite knows which version of their caregiver they’ll get, so they learn to stay hyperaware. They watch for changes in mood. They learn to amplify their emotions to get noticed and reassured.

Hyperawareness essentially becomes the survival strategy. And while it might’ve worked when they were little, it follows them into adulthood, where every unanswered text or quiet evening starts to feel like a threat.

While a secure partner can really help an anxious partner work toward secure attachment, an avoidant partner actually has the opposite effect. Anxious and avoidant people tend to aggravate each other’s triggers.


But this isn’t always bad. If you and your partner are willing to put in the work, it’s possible for both of you to move toward a secure and healthy relationship.

Related Article: The 4 Attachment Styles: How Can They Affect Your Relationships?

 

What Are Signs of Anxious Attachment Style?

Here are some common signs of anxious attachment:

  • Constantly seeking reassurance, even when nothing is actually wrong
  • Overanalyzing texts, tone, body language, and silences
  • Fearing abandonment, even in healthy, stable relationships
  • Having a hard time being alone or sitting with their own thoughts
  • Becoming preoccupied with the relationship, sometimes losing sight of friends, hobbies, or even themselves
  • Tending to idealize a partner, then panic when reality doesn’t match the fantasy
  • Picking fights or creating drama (sometimes unconsciously) to test the connection
  • Taking everything personally, especially quietness or distance

In other words, anxious attachment is often about not trusting that the love you already have is real, or that it’s going to last. And this is learned from your past experiences. So, again, it’s totally addressable through self-improvement and also therapy.

 

6 Tips to Manage Anxious Attachment Style

Again, therapy is a very useful tool here. A professional can personalize your care and truly get to the root of the problem, helping you untangle many years past and move toward a healthier future. 

But I get it; we don’t all have the money or insurance for therapy, so here are some tips to help you navigate it in the meantime.

If you’re dating someone with anxious attachment:

  • Be consistent: The biggest gift you can give an anxious partner is reliability. Predictable communication, follow-through, and showing up the way you say you will go a long way toward calming their nervous system.
  • Reassure without resentment: They’re not trying to be exhausting; their fear is genuinely loud. A simple, “I’m here, I love you, nothing’s wrong” can defuse a lot before it spirals. But at the same time, you’re not their full-time regulator either, so gently encourage them to do their own work, too.

If you have anxious tendencies yourself:

  • Pause before reacting: Yes, this one’s harder than it looks but so worthwhile to give a real try. When the panic spikes, don’t act. Sit with it for ten minutes and see what actually surfaces. Sometimes, the best coping mechanism is just reassuring yourself and letting the emotions pass.
  • Build a life outside the relationship: This includes friendships, hobbies, time alone. The less your nervous system has riding on one person, the less terrifying their normal, everyday absences will feel.
  • Practice self-soothing: Notice when you’re spiraling (pausing inevitably helps with this!), and remind yourself that distance doesn’t always mean abandonment. Sometimes people are just tired, busy, or having an off day.
  • Consider therapy: More specifically, attachment-focused like Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), can help you get to the root of the problem and develop personalized strategies to overcome it.

Related Article: 5 Powerful Ways to Use AI for Personal Growth

I had to remind myself of this so many times.

Remember, no one expects you to be perfect. As long as you’re trying, that’s what matters the most. Gain awareness, dig into your patterns, and focus on breaking them.

Ultimately, this can really change things when it comes to all kinds of relationships around you, romantic and otherwise.

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