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Attachment Styles: How Our Early Bonds Shape Our Adult Friendships

Attachment Styles: How Our Early Bonds Shape Our Adult Friendships

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In this candid and gently curious episode of Growth Through Friendship, Juliet and Angela dive into the world of attachment styles—those early relational patterns that can subtly shape how we love, connect, distance, or overwhelm ourselves and others as adults. What starts with some light teasing about parking badly quickly settles into a thoughtful look at why we behave the way we do in friendships.

They explore the four main attachment styles—secure, anxious, avoidant, and disorganised—unpacking how they show up in children and how those early responses often echo into adulthood. From fears of abandonment to needing distance, from craving closeness to shutting down emotionally, Juliet and Angela reflect on the ways these patterns can influence communication, expectations, and even the pace of friendships.

With honesty and humour, they question whether attachment styles have become a trendy online identity (“Oh, that’s just my attachment style”) and discuss the difference between awareness and using labels as excuses. They explore how certain friendships can feel overwhelming, why some people push away when others get too close, and how past relationships can illuminate present-day dynamics.

This episode isn’t about diagnosing or boxing anyone in. Instead, it’s a grounded conversation on recognising subtle relational habits, understanding why we respond the way we do, and—most importantly—how self-awareness can deepen connection rather than limit it.

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