Avoidant Attachment Style: Signs You May Be Emotionally Distant or Disconnected

Avoidant attachment style; it’s a term many of us have become familiar with in recent years. But what does it mean?
We all develop a blueprint for how we connect with others. This emotional wiring is shaped mainly by early caregiving experiences and affects how we respond to intimacy, trust, conflict, and vulnerability in adulthood.
The avoidant attachment style is one type of blueprint and develops when a child learns, indirectly or directly, that expressing needs or emotions leads to rejection. As a result, the child adapts by turning inward, suppressing emotions, and becoming self-reliant.
In adulthood, avoidant attachment looks like emotional distance, discomfort with vulnerability, and a strong need for independence. Clearly, such patterns can impact relationships and life satisfaction. If you’re concerned that you or someone you care about has an avoidant attachment style, healing can be achieved through professional support.
This article can also help, as it covers:
- What avoidant attachment really is
- How to recognize the signs that you may be emotionally distant or disconnected
- Why the avoidant attachment pattern develops in the first place
- How to heal from avoidant attachment

Understanding Avoidant Attachment Style in Adults
The avoidant attachment style is one of the four main attachment styles, initially described by John Bowlby’s attachment theory and further expanded upon by Mary Ainsworth and Mary Main.1 Simply put, it’s a pattern of emotional self-protection that develops when closeness feels unsafe.
Avoidant attachment is part of what psychologists refer to as “insecure” attachment.2 People with avoidant attachment tend to downplay the importance of relationships, keep emotional distance, and often rely heavily on self-sufficiency.
Based on these traits, an avoidantly attached person is more likely to shut down emotionally instead of reaching out and communicating when they feel upset.
However, like all attachment styles, avoidant attachment exists along a spectrum. Some people are mildly avoidant and only pull back in high-stress situations, while others may consistently keep their emotional world tightly sealed.
As is clear, such patterns can be highly distressing in intimate relationships. Yet it’s not that someone with avoidant attachment can’t or won’t feel love. It’s that their experiences have taught them to subconsciously protect themselves from the vulnerability that emotional closeness can bring.
Signs of Avoidant Attachment in Adults
Initially, recognizing avoidant attachment in adults isn’t always easy. This is because, on the surface, people with avoidant attachment often seem put-together and emotionally “low-maintenance.” However, there are certain behavioral patterns that show up in emotionally intimate situations.
Here are some of the signs of avoidant attachment in adults:3
- A strong preference for independence and not “needing” anyone
- Discomfort with emotional closeness
- A tendency to intellectualize feelings rather than express them
- Sensitivity to control or obligation in relationships
- Keeping partners at arm’s length
- Shutting down and withdrawing during conflict
- Difficulty giving and receiving emotional support
- Low tolerance for vulnerability, as it can feel uncomfortably “exposing”
What Causes an Avoidant Attachment Style in Adults?
Avoidant attachment is usually formed in childhood with our earliest relationships – those with primary caregivers.
Mary Ainsworth’s “Strange Situation” study in the 1970s found that infants with avoidant attachment didn’t outwardly show distress when their caregiver left the room. Nor did they seek comfort when the caregiver returned.4
But their internal physiological responses (high heart rate and stress hormones) revealed that the child was distressed. They had simply learned not to show it.
Based on evolving research over the years since the Strange Situation experiment, common childhood patterns that contribute to avoidant attachment include:
- Emotionally distant caregivers: When a parent is consistently unresponsive to a child’s emotional bids (like crying or showing fear), the child eventually stops reaching out. Over time, they learn to meet their own needs and suppress emotions that aren’t acknowledged.
- Caregivers who prioritized independence over connection: Some parents, often unintentionally, reward emotional stoicism. For instance, a child may be praised for being “tough” or “not a crybaby,” while emotional expression is subtly discouraged. This focus on independence can cause the child to associate vulnerability with weakness.
- Parentification: In some families, children are expected to emotionally support the adults rather than the other way around. For example, by taking on emotional responsibilities or age-inappropriate tasks. The role reversal teaches them to suppress their own needs.5
- Inconsistent affection: If a caregiver provides warmth only when a child meets their expectations but withdraws when the child is upset, emotional intimacy can start to feel unsafe.
- Emotionally volatile environments: In homes where emotions ran high (for example, with a parent who was angry or emotionally reactive), some children learn that emotional expression escalates conflict.
The same strategies that protect a child become barriers in adulthood – the instinct to emotionally withdraw and suppress needs hinders connection in close relationships.
How Avoidant Attachment Affects Relationships
For the avoidantly attached, emotional intimacy activates discomfort. Their nervous system is wired to associate closeness with loss of autonomy and vulnerability. So, even in a healthy and supportive relationship, their instinct may be to create distance.
People with avoidant attachment are skilled at staying near others but not being emotionally open to them. In the early stages of a relationship, everything feels fine, even exciting. But as emotional intimacy builds, they can start to feel overwhelmed, which leads them to turn towards deactivation strategies.
“Deactivation” refers to the mental and emotional moves avoidant people use to maintain distance, like:6
- Mentally minimizing the relationship’s importance
- Focusing on how the partner is “too needy” or “not right”
- Reminding themselves that they’re better off alone
In emotionally intimate moments, like when a partner expresses fear or insecurity, avoidant individuals often go blank. Or, they resort to offering practical advice instead of comfort while unintentionally dismissing the other person’s emotions. Likewise, they may rarely ask for reassurance themselves.
This lack of emotional reciprocity creates a lopsided dynamic, where one partner is always reaching and the other always retreating. While this information may sound damning for avoidant relationships, it is possible to repair and grow from childhood experiences. With the right support, people with avoidant attachment can and do lead mutually satisfying partnerships.
How Avoidant Attachment Style Affects Your Mental Health
The core of avoidant attachment is emotional suppression, which is the persistent habit of pushing down your needs and managing everything by yourself.7
However, emotional suppression doesn’t make emotions disappear; it just buries them. Research shows that chronically suppressing emotional expression increases physiological stress, even if you don’t consciously notice it.
For instance, studies using heart rate monitoring and cortisol levels (the stress hormone) show that people with avoidant attachment experience elevated stress responses during interpersonal conflict.8 Additionally, long-term suppression of emotions contributes to:
- Tension headaches
- Fatigue
- Sleep disturbances
- Gastrointestinal issues
- A general feeling of emotional numbness
Avoidant attachment is also associated with increased risk for depression and anxiety. But these conditions often go undetected because people with this style are less likely to seek support and acknowledge psychological pain.
As a result, depression shows up as emotional blunting, persistent apathy, over-reliance on work, productivity, or distractions, and a low-level “emptiness” that doesn’t get voiced.
In other words, the very strategies that are meant to protect people with avoidant attachment from rejection also create a profound sense of isolation. When you habitually keep people at arm’s length and minimize emotional connection, loneliness is inevitable.
Can You Change Your Avoidant Attachment Style?
Yes, avoidant attachment is not a fixed personality trait. It is a set of emotional habits your nervous system developed to protect you in environments where vulnerability didn’t feel safe. Like all patterns, it can be reshaped.
Attachment researchers, Dr. Phillip Shaver and Dr. Mario Mikulincer, have long emphasized that attachment styles are plastic, meaning they shift in the context of new relational experiences.9 Further, studies using brain imaging show that with emotional regulation training and therapy, the brain areas tied to emotional suppression and self-protection can literally change activation patterns.11
In other words, your attachment system is not locked in. It is dynamic. It updates, slowly but meaningfully, through repeated exposure to consistent, emotionally safe relationships.
Healing From Avoidant Attachment Style
If you’ve spent years protecting yourself from emotional vulnerability, it might be hard to imagine a different way of relating to others. Yet help is at hand. In this section, we’ll explore research-based paths to healing from avoidant attachment.
Mindfulness
Mindfulness means learning to notice what’s happening in your body and emotions without running from it.
Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) is a structured eight-week program developed by Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn.10 It teaches you how to become more aware of your thoughts and bodily sensations in the present moment through gently noticing areas of tension, breath awareness, and guided meditation.
You don’t need to meditate for hours every day. 5-10 minutes of daily awareness, where you check in with your body and emotions, can shift your relationship with yourself over time.
Earned Secure Attachment
Earned secure attachment refers to a shift from an early insecure attachment style (like avoidant) to a secure one that happens later in life.12
Unlike people who develop secure attachment from early caregiving (called “continuous secure”), people with earned security did not grow up with consistently warm caregivers. Instead, they became secure by gradually internalizing new experiences with a therapist, partner, friend, mentor, or within a support group.
However, it’s good to be aware that avoidant attachment won’t transform into security the first time someone offers you emotional safety. Many people with this style initially mistrust and push away secure partners or friends. But with enough repetition, they can learn new emotional truths through lived experience.
To put it another way, the more often your nervous system experiences safety in connection, the more your brain updates its internal model of relationships.
Journaling and Self-Reflection
Avoidant attachment tends to develop in environments where emotional expression is discouraged. As a result, your inner emotional world might feel unfamiliar. Psychologists call this “alexithymia,” the difficulty in identifying and describing feelings.
Journaling creates a safe space for you to engage with your emotions on your own terms, in private, without fear of being judged or misunderstood.
At first, journaling might feel pointless to you. But over time, it teaches your brain and body that emotions can show up, be seen, and not cause chaos.
The most healing aspect of journaling for avoidant attachment is that it allows you to be emotionally known, first by yourself, and eventually, if and when you’re ready, by others.
It is a low-risk way to experiment with visibility, to write out thoughts you’d never say out loud, and to name fears that feel too vulnerable to share. In doing so, you begin to give yourself permission to accept your emotions and start to share them more with the outside world.
Therapy for Avoidant Attachment Style
Emotionally focused therapy (EFT), developed by Dr. Sue Johnson, is an evidence-based technique for repairing and reshaping how we bond with others. It’s rooted in the science of adult bonding and works from the premise that emotional responsiveness is the core of secure relationships.
EFT doesn’t push you to talk about your feelings before you’re ready. Instead, the therapist helps you track your internal emotional responses in real time. The micro-moments when you might be pulling back, going quiet, intellectualizing, or downplaying discomfort are explored with compassion.
The therapist bypasses the shame or self-defense that avoidant clients bring into the room and instead validates these coping strategies as protective responses that once made sense.
EFT also creates new neural pathways around connection. Your nervous system begins to learn that expressing needs doesn’t automatically lead to rejection.
Additionally, multiple experiments confirm EFT’s effectiveness in shifting attachment dynamics. One study found that, after 32 weeks of emotionally focused couple therapy, couples showed much less attachment avoidance and their behaviors shifted towards more secure ones.13
Get Professional Help for Avoidant Attachment Mission Connection
At Mission Connection, we offer EFT, a research-backed, compassionate approach that helps individuals, couples, and families move from distance to emotional connection.
EFT may be the right approach for you suspect you have avoidant attachment or often find yourself pulling away from close relationships. Our experienced therapists can work with you to identify the emotional patterns beneath avoidance and help you reconnect with parts of yourself that may have been shut down for years.
Call us today to request an appointment or get started online now.
References
- Bretherton, I. (1992). The Origins of Attachment Theory: John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth. Developmental Psychology, 28(5), 759–775. https://psychology.psy.sunysb.edu/attachment/online/inge_origins%20DP1992.pdf
- Dagan, O., Groh, A. M., Madigan, S., & Bernard, K. (2021). A Lifespan Development Theory of Insecure Attachment and Internalizing Symptoms: Integrating Meta-Analytic Evidence via a Testable Evolutionary Mis/Match Hypothesis. Brain Sciences, 11(9), 1226. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11091226
- Simpson, J. A., & Rholes, W. S. (2017). Adult attachment, stress, and romantic relationships. Current Opinion in Psychology, 13, 19–24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2016.04.006
- van Rosmalen, L., van der Veer, R., & van der Horst, F. (2015). Ainsworth’s Strange Situation Procedure: The origin of an instrument. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 51(3), 261–284. https://doi.org/10.1002/jhbs.21729
- Dariotis, J. K., Chen, F. R., Park, Y. R., Nowak, M. K., French, K. M., & Codamon, A. M. (2023). Parentification vulnerability, reactivity, resilience, and thriving: A mixed methods systematic literature review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(13), 6197–6197 https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20136197
- Uccula, A., Mercante, B., Barone, L., & Enrico, P. (2022). Adult Avoidant Attachment, Attention Bias, and Emotional Regulation Patterns: An Eye-Tracking Study. Behavioral Sciences, 13(1), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs13010011
- Messina, I., Calvo, V., & Grecucci, A. (2024). Attachment orientations and emotion regulation: new insights from the study of interpersonal emotion regulation strategies. Research in Psychotherapy, 26(3). https://doi.org/10.4081/ripppo.2023.703
- Kidd, T., Hamer, M., & Steptoe, A. (2011). Examining the association between adult attachment style and cortisol responses to acute stress. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 36(6), 771–779. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psyneuen.2010.10.014
- Van der Horst, F. C. P. (2014). Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation Procedure. In Attachment: Theory and classification. Oxford University Press. https://academic.oup.com/book/28760/chapter/235152533
- Kelly, A., & Garland, E. L. (2016). Trauma-Informed Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Female Survivors of Interpersonal Violence: Results From a Stage I RCT. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 72(4), 311–328. https://doi.org/10.1002/jclp.22273
- Fonzo, G. A., Goodkind, M. S., Oathes, D. J., Zaiko, Y. V., Harvey, M., Peng, K. K., Weiss, M. E., Thompson, A. L., Zack, S. E., Lindley, S. E., Arnow, B. A., Jo, B., Gross, J. J., Rothbaum, B. O., & Etkin, A. (2017). PTSD Psychotherapy Outcome Predicted by Brain Activation During Emotional Reactivity and Regulation. American Journal of Psychiatry, 174(12), 1163–1174. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2017.16091072
- Jacobsen, C. F., F Falkenström, Castonguay, L., Nielsen, J., Lunn, S., Lauritzen, L., & Poulsen, S. (2024). The relationship between attachment needs, earned secure therapeutic attachment and outcome in adult psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 92(7), 410–421. https://doi.org/10.1037/ccp0000900
- Burgess Moser, M., Johnson, S. M., Dalgleish, T. L., Lafontaine, M.-F., Wiebe, S. A., & Tasca, G. A. (2015). Changes in Relationship-Specific Attachment in Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 42(2), 231–245. https://doi.org/10.1111/jmft.12139