UncategorizedWhy Secure Attachment Feels Unsafe After Trauma
Illustration of two silhouetted figures gently facing each other with a glowing heart between them, while distant shadowy figures suggest discomfort and fear around secure attachment after trauma.

Why Secure Attachment Feels Unsafe After Trauma

When healthy relationships feel uncomfortable

Many trauma survivors report feeling bored, anxious, or unsettled in stable relationships. This reaction often reflects conditioning, not preference.

These reactions are often shaped by underlying attachment styles formed in unsafe or unpredictable relational environments.

Trauma recalibrates safety

For survivors of narcissistic abuse, chaos may feel familiar — and familiarity can be mistaken for connection.

Secure attachment may initially feel:

  • Emotionally flat
  • Unstimulating
  • Vulnerable
  • Unsafe

The nervous system and attachment

Secure attachment requires nervous system regulation. When the nervous system is dysregulated, calm connection may feel threatening.

Therapy and relearning safety

Trauma-informed, attachment-based psychotherapy helps clients gradually relearn what emotional safety feels like — without forcing closeness or dismissing nervous system responses.

This work often supports clients to:

  • Tolerate emotional safety
  • Differentiate calm from emptiness
  • Build secure attachment gradually

👉 Learn more about Attachment-Based Psychotherapy for Adults

If you’re unsure how these patterns apply to your relationships, you don’t need to decide anything yet.

👉 Start here to orient safely and explore support at your own pace

When you’re ready, you can also book a confidential consultation.

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