The Adult Attachment Workbook
By Kate Homily
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About this ebook
Stop Being Needy, Jealous, and Clingy by Understanding Just One Simple Thing About Your Brain
Your last boyfriend told you that you were too intense and that he needed space. How familiar does that scenario sound, and how many times has it happened to you?
Do your relationships break down out of the blue, leaving you clueless about what just happened?
Psychology may have the answer for you.
The secret behind your relationship failures could be hiding much closer than where you anticipate it to be…
In your own head!
Insecure love is the result of things that happened to you in the past, things that could have hurt you without you even realizing what went on.
If only there were some techniques to overcome insecure attachment, build your confidence, and find your happily ever after…
Such techniques do exist, and you don't have to spend half your lifetime in therapy to discover a stronger and happier you.
Focusing on just a few psychological tricks and self-awareness exercises can help you overcome your insecurities, your neediness, or your inability to form deep, meaningful connections.
In The Adult Attachment Workbook, you will discover:
- Red flags and the top signs that insecure attachment is ruining your life
- The link between your childhood and your current inability to find lasting love
- The one exercise psychologists recommend for moving from anxious to secure and fulfilling attachment
- Expert cognitive behavioral therapy exercises you can do in the comfort of your own home
- 5 profound ways to discover happiness in your single life before you can come across the love you've always dreamt of
- Techniques to strengthen the bond with your partner
- Worksheets, exercises, and quizzes you can use to get to know yourself better and kill insecurities
- A simple, yet powerful way to activate positive thoughts about your partner and help your love grow
- Your happily ever after: how to find it and how to keep it
And much more!
You need to understand one crucial thing – you're not broken and you're not damaged beyond repair.
The fact that you've been hurt in the past should not keep you from falling in love again.
Anyone can move from needy, jealous, and troubled attachment to confident, calm, and peaceful love. The trick is to take a look inside, understand what has hurt you in the past, and have the courage to tackle that issue.
When you're equipped with the right mind tools and personal improvement exercises, such growth will be easy to accomplish.
And when you make that mental switch, nothing will be capable of holding you back from enjoying meaningful interactions with others, whether in a platonic or a romantic way.
As cliché as it may sound, happiness is in your own hands… or rather – in your own brain.
Don't let life pass you by without experiencing deep, intense, and meaningful interactions with others. Scroll up and click the "Add to Cart" button now to break free from insecurities and rediscover your immense capability to love and be loved.
Kate Homily
About Kate Homily My name is Kate Homily, and I am a relationship therapist. With over 18 years of experience, I have seen many cases of relationship anxiety. At one point in my life, I even experienced it for myself. It was a battle for me to overcome, but I made it out on the other side. Through my wisdom, I hope to teach others how they can do the same thing. Today, I am a happily married mother of three with two rambunctious puppies. It took a lot of hard work to get here, but I now know exactly what it takes to create harmony in my life and marriage. I no longer spend my days worrying about the what-ifs or that my life could fall apart. Instead, I have the time to enjoy all of my blessings and remain thankful for everything that I've accomplished.
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Reviews for The Adult Attachment Workbook
4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Must-read! This book could've saved me a lot of heartache, such a shame I didn't find it earlier. If you find yourself wasting time from one failed relationships to another, please do yourself a favour and read this. Five stars!
Book preview
The Adult Attachment Workbook - Kate Homily
Introduction
I t’s all about falling in love with yourself and sharing that love with someone who appreciates you, rather than looking for love to compensate for a self-love deficit.
~ Eartha Kitt
You’ve done it again. You entered another relationship that seemed destined to fail. This has become your modus operandi, or so it seems. Why do you go for a certain type of person? It almost seems to be your weakness. However, this is not your weakness; instead, it is your own style of attachment.
From your primary relationship, your bond with your childhood caregivers, you have learned to behave in a certain way. This type of behavior has become a habit that is ingrained in your thinking and doing. These behaviors are known as styles of attachment. Psychologists have conducted many tests and research studies over the years to discover why people do things the way they do them, and John Bowlby (a psychoanalyst) finally created the theory of attachments to explain the four styles of attachment that were identified.
In a nutshell, the best form of attachment that is most stable and responsive to change and helps you to be in a successful relationship is known as a secure attachment style. This style of attachment usually develops in children who are raised in homes with dependable parents who quickly address their children’s fears and help them deal with stressors in a responsible manner. In essence, these children grow up to be secure self-loving adults, and this enables them to share that love with others in a responsible and compassionate way.
The three other styles of attachment are known as insecure attachment styles and start in children who are raised in homes where there was irregular activity, with parents who were not dependable and emotionally unavailable, where they suffered trauma and neglect. These styles all enable us to deal with the stressors of a relationship in different ways, and because of them, we can engage in harmful behavior. There is also evidence of insecure attachment styles contributing to mental health challenges as people struggle to deal with trauma or to build their self-confidence, and we should all try to move towards more secure attachment styles.
If you find yourself displaying the characteristics of any of these three attachment styles, you tend to engage in self-sabotaging behavior in your relationships. You are drawn to the wrong partners, or even when you have an ideal partner, you tend to mess things up or leave that partner. So, how do you get to a point where you can enter a healthy relationship, or even create your own happiness without being in a relationship or partnership? Certainly, you do not need to be a victim of your past.
By dealing with your attachment issues, you will enrich your long-term relationships and heal the broken connections within yourself and between other people in your life. You need to return to a sense of wholeness, the original trusting and caring person you were before you were robbed of your potential by trauma. And, even if that trauma originated in your childhood, it can impact your life today, creating dissociation and a loss of boundaries.
This book is about reclaiming your birthright, finding healthy connections and redeveloping compassion with yourself and with others. By becoming aware of your behavioral mechanisms and attachment behaviors, you will start to see why you make certain decisions, replace your fear with curiosity, and connect with your peers as you enter into healthy relationships with yourself and with others.
In these pages, you will get a better understanding of attachment theory as it applies in your life and the life of your partner. You will come to understand different approaches to interventions as you learn to form deeper bonds, develop your self-confidence, and learn to trust. Looking at all the relationships in your life, whether platonic, romantic, or familial, you will learn a variety of therapeutic techniques and approaches to help you develop a secure attachment style and heal your core wounds.
Your adult behavior need not be a continued reflection of your childhood traumas, and a deep personal transformation is possible. There are a range of traditional psychological methods and new cutting-edge technologies available to help with your transformation. Change is powerful, and you can build more secure and lasting relationships with the people in your life, especially with the people you care about most. Let me be your guide, your therapist, and your compass.
My name is Kate Homily, and I have been a relationship therapist for 18 years. Throughout my long years of family practice, I have seen and even experienced many forms of relationship anxiety myself. I have successfully helped all my clients overcome their own unique relationship challenges by identifying their attachment styles, exploring how this affects their lives and relationships, and planning a constructive guided path for them to work through to achieve their own relationship goals and find happiness. In this book, I hope to share the wisdom and experience I have amassed in my years of helping people of all ages, genders, and races.
I have applied my theories and experience to my own life with great success. Many years ago, I also experienced relationship anxiety, and the battle I won has shaped my approach to relationship therapy to a large extent. Today, I am a happily married mother, and I have built a harmonious life with my family, my two kids, and also my two rambunctious puppies. I no longer spend my days worrying about the what-ifs or that my life could fall apart. Through my experiences, my training, and my years of helping my clients, I have discovered how to enjoy all of my blessings and practice gratitude everyday.
Starting today, you can also develop strategies to strengthen your romantic relationships, understand yourself better, and be a better version of your authentic self with the people you care about. Blessings and daily gratitude is within your reach as you learn to let go of anxieties, create coping strategies, and improve your behavior to become the best version of yourself today. Let go of reacting out of harmful instincts and develop the ability to act with control and compassion right now.
Chapter 1: Attachment Styles: Where Do You Fall on the Spectrum?
Image 1: Geralt on Pixabay. None of us live in isolation. We connect with and to other people, places, and even things. This great big network affects our psyche, and if we are not consciously aware of it and learn to effectively manage it, we can end up being tangled up in it and losing our ability to determine our life course. We react instead of mindfully acting.
Attachment: A Brief History
Attachments form in your early childhood. Before you can even speak or even before your conscious memories form, you start interacting with the people around you. From your first wail, you are engaging in behavior to find the best way to navigate your life. If you were fortunate enough to have responsive parents or primary caregivers who rapidly soothed your wails, fed you on time, eased you from any discomfort, ensured you had routines to develop trust, and kept you healthy from childhood illnesses, you will most likely have developed a secure attachment style. You have been conditioned to believe in the world around you as being good and predictable, which created a low level of anxiety in you.
This will, in turn, create healthy brain chemistry as your body develops naturally. However, should you have been raised in a home that was unpredictable or traumatic, you will have developed a completely different style of attachment. You have been exposed to loud noises, tensions, irregular feeding, lack of comfort, increased levels of fear, and start to develop trust issues. This will result in you forming harmful attachment behavior.
With young children, this is known as reactive attachment disorder. You learn to react to a situation in a negative or harmful way, based on the childhood traumas that shaped your instincts. Later, as an adult, this has created a harmful behavior and thinking paradigm. Your distrustful and self-protecting behaviors have become your personality. As a result, you may have become abusive, or seek abusers, you may have become avoidant, or distrust people, or feel ambivalence that keeps you from making any real connection to other people. In relationships, this causes breakups, conflict, and further trauma.
IMAGE 2: KELLY SIKKEMA on Unsplash. Attachment styles are about more than just romantic attachments; they are about how you share yourself with the world as you understand it. Your worldview is created by how you see the people, places, and events around you. This, in turn, determines how you respond to that world.
There are four distinctive attachment styles, and you could lean towards any of them, depending on your behavior. It is important to find out what triggers you and then work towards a strategy for coping with your past traumas so you can feel more secure and involved in your relationships. You can create a healthy attachment in your relationships, and this includes your relationship with yourself. Here is a brief overview of the four attachment styles to consider:
The Four Attachment Styles
● Secure Attachment Style
Achild who sees their parents and experiences positive emotions will likely smile and appear happy. They are content to greet their parents and also to say farewell to their parents, and they are secure in the knowledge their parents will return again at the end of the work day. Therefore, children with