In this episode of Evolving Beings, we explore the deep psychological link between childhood enmeshment, differentiation, and insecure attachment styles in adult relationships.
I break down how growing up without healthy emotional boundaries creates a lack of differentiation — the ability to stay connected to yourself while remaining connected to others — and how this imbalance leads to anxious and avoidant attachment patterns later in life.
You’ll learn:
- Why secure attachment is rooted in differentiation.
- How anxious and avoidant attachment function as coping strategies for the same psychological imbalance.
- Why anxious and avoidant partners are often magnetically drawn to each other.
- How mother–son enmeshment commonly leads men to develop avoidant attachment.
- Why partners of mother-enmeshed men often become exhausted, overfunctioning, and self-sacrificing.
- What healing actually requires for both anxious and avoidant partners.
We’ll also explore why the anxiously attached partner is often the one who initiates healing and how differentiation can either inspire the avoidant partner to grow or clarify the need to move toward more secure and reciprocal love.
Whether your partner grows with you or not, this episode emphasizes the most important work:
Rebuilding your relationship with yourself, cultivating psychological balance, and preparing for mature, emotionally available love.
In upcoming episodes, we’ll go deeper into what differentiation looks like in practice and how to begin rebuilding a secure attachment from the inside out.