How Insecure Attachment Keeps Us Attracted To People Who Are Wrong For Us (& How To Break The Cycle)

2024 ж. 24 Нау.
175 776 Рет қаралды

• Attunement: How Secure...
• Toxic Shame: What It I...
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  • Please Note: I do not have a telegram account and will not contact you privately for any reason. If someone reaches out to you based on a comment you have left claiming to be me, this is a fraudulent account.

    @heidipriebe1@heidipriebe1Ай бұрын
    • I received that before too

      @mariagoldstein5494@mariagoldstein5494Ай бұрын
    • Hello Heidi, how can I hire you to work with my partner and I?

      @Jaguarsnake@JaguarsnakeАй бұрын
    • Nooo not the fraudulent telegram acc. Also Ur content is really good! Recommend it to all my anxious and avoidant friends 🥰

      @jamie-1608@jamie-1608Ай бұрын
    • Nooo not the fraudulent telegram acc. Also Ur content is really good! Recommend it to all my anxious and avoidant friends 🥰

      @jamie-1608@jamie-1608Ай бұрын
    • I learned to just purse my lips& make a sucking motion.

      @debbievoss3496@debbievoss3496Ай бұрын
  • It's so unfair. You're born not receiving the love and care required as a human being, and spend the rest of your life searching for (and never receiving) that same love and care 😢secure people don't know how lucky they are. To be loved all their lives

    @whiggygirl@whiggygirl2 ай бұрын
    • Yeah thats true. I wonder if theres any benefits to having insecure attachment? Maybe other than you can write great music and poetry haha

      @ourbeach4001@ourbeach40012 ай бұрын
    • Don't compare yourself to others. You're not a victim.

      @seanthegod4585@seanthegod4585Ай бұрын
    • @seanthegod4585 how do you know I'm nit a victim? You have no idea who/what caused my issues. For the record, I don't EVER view myself in that light, anyway. But just for once in my 42 years on earth, I am choosing to recognise the unfairness of my situation, and sit with that a while. It ISN'T fair, and who are you to tell me otherwise?? This is MY pain, and my life and I'll deal with it how I see fit, and if others feel the same as me, that's also their choice

      @whiggygirl@whiggygirlАй бұрын
    • It was probably meant empowering. Like try to learn and rise above the insecure attachment and striving to become secure, happy and fullfilled and content. I myself im striving for this too, btw im a mixture of anxious preoccupied and fearful avoidant. But mostly anxious but im activly working to become secure.

      @Saar114@Saar114Ай бұрын
    • @@whiggygirl you proved my point, thanx. Stay miserable.

      @seanthegod4585@seanthegod4585Ай бұрын
  • “You’re denying parts of yourself, and those parts that you’re denying might actually be the things that, if you stepped into them, would make you the most attractive to other people.” I find this to be incredibly encouraging. Thank you Heidi ❤

    @juan_castellanos19@juan_castellanos192 ай бұрын
    • Me too. It's exciting to go into the next relationship unapologetically as ourselves. I made a few lists so that I can give my inner-self that relationship that I've unconsciously craved: - Things I genuinely love to do and talk about - How I like to feel loved - How someone makes me feel safe being my authentic self - What am I actually physically attracted to

      @simonwilson7581@simonwilson75812 ай бұрын
    • I’m denying the part of myself that hates being around people. I deny my urge to drink and smoke daily. Those desires are way more authentic than any desire I have to be nice to the public. I don’t think stepping into those things would be helpful although it would be radically authentic.

      @MasterTFast@MasterTFast2 ай бұрын
    • @MasterTFast, I don't think she's referring to self sabotaging habits bro

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • @@MasterTFast I’m glad you brought this up. Because it’s inherently important to own those parts of ourselves that we know others wouldn’t approve of…and accept them. I actually believe it’s why sometimes the best bonds are between bar buddies or drunken partiers…until that is that vice has its way. Our own personal love for particular vices IS still who we are but there’s a second element to all she spoke about here and that vices may bond but they eventually destroy, wear down or prohibit growth. I used to smoke cigarettes and I’ll tell you that even today I think I’d REALLY love to have a puff, until I realize that no I wouldn’t out of the sheer fact it would mean I’d hurt other parts of myself in doing so- namely my health (which is already failing and on the miserable side). I’d also say there’s a large part of myself that REALLY would absolutely LOVE to wildly fuck the guy I have a crush on, but I know from experience what I think I would really love to do actually turns into a friggin total nightmare (STD’s, unwanted pregnancy, personal shame from being undisciplined) ,..so I don’t. Sacrifice has a lot to do with love. But she’s just talking about authenticity here. And you certainly CAN bond very strongly with someone else also given to those vices. It just doesn’t mean it would be a good bond. The real question is- are you truly being authentic in saying you want to drink and smoke daily? Like ACTUALLY do that? I doubt it. Ask yourself instead what it is specifically you believe is the reason why you really want to drink and smoke daily…. Do you feel more relaxed? Do you feel warmth from these activities? What are you gaining from them? What’s so enjoyable and desirous about it? For me I discovered smoking was a safe way to gain social ‘’warmth’’ WITHOUT having to have the dangers of a real relationship with another. I was taking artificial warmth of the bud, the red hearth of the cigarette and pulling it straight into my chest rather than ‘’risking’ genuine warmth straight to the heart from ‘’scary’’ relationships which I couldn’t control. I have heard with drinking, people are trying to escape a problem deep inside they don’t want to look at OR do not believe is even solvable anymore and drinking is like a pain medication to help the pain go away for just a while. That whatever they’re accepting as unchangable is an irritant and drinking is the only escape provided.. Obviously there’s nothing wrong in these desires inherently, but the method in alleviation is disastrous for good growth. I mean, I could piss on my newly sprouted tomato plants because I have no water to give them, but eventually it’s just going to cause rot and destruction. I HIGHLY doubt I’m desirous of seeing my plants go to rot when I planted them to grow up and bear good fruit for me to eat and be nourished by my work. So get to the ROOT of the NEED and seek better solutions from there. Remember she’s talking about AUTHENTICITY. Can you be authentic or realistic when you’re seeking easier less direct alternatives for desired outcomes? No. I do like your comment though! I think it’s an excellent question. Glad you said it!!

      @sonofhibbs4425@sonofhibbs4425Ай бұрын
  • I like how she always uses "we" and "us" and "I" when explaining secure and insecure, instead of "you"

    @cherrychan1525@cherrychan1525Ай бұрын
  • "In a secure partnership, it's not at all about solving each others' problems, it's about enjoying each others' problems."

    @suzanne2680@suzanne26802 ай бұрын
    • Enjoying Problems?

      @D.M.S.@D.M.S.Ай бұрын
    • Approaching problems as a lesson to be learned & not as just nuisances and inconveniences of life. It's like being appreciative that both people can be mature enough to realize that life comes with problems, yet it's good to have someone to support you along the way. ​@@D.M.S.

      @cjayw@cjaywАй бұрын
    • 👏

      @testing1-2three@testing1-2threeАй бұрын
    • @cjayw, "support you along the way" this is how insecure attachments form is from one person refusing to give support.

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • That sounded particularly insane to me

      @alexae1367@alexae1367Ай бұрын
  • She don't miss, she just doesn't miss

    @tnicholask1069@tnicholask10692 ай бұрын
    • Every time and aligned

      @kaiaminako8146@kaiaminako81462 ай бұрын
    • she rly doesn't

      @meowraiu2@meowraiu22 ай бұрын
    • It is fucking scary at This point

      @emilgadenielsen9895@emilgadenielsen98952 ай бұрын
    • she stepped into her authentic self, that's why she's so good. Also, notice, how amazing her hair looks? she used to dye it blondeish. It's like a metaphor.. ❤

      @ebbyc1817@ebbyc18172 ай бұрын
    • She painfully edits so she has perfectly attuned eye gazing and you notice.. her hair 😅

      @ENSO-wildsound@ENSO-wildsound2 ай бұрын
  • Heidi, coming from a psychology backround and currently writing my master’s thesis, I want to pay you utmost respect. How you presented this content is groundbreaking and beyond eyeopening. So many more people should get to see this! Thank you 🙏🏼

    @helensiebeneich9106@helensiebeneich9106Ай бұрын
    • Agreed. Heidi is truly gifted. She breaks things down wayyy better than most people can.

      @kc7476@kc7476Ай бұрын
    • Wow! Nailed it!!

      @mightymom1691@mightymom169123 күн бұрын
    • Wen student is ready ...teacher will appear

      @jinxme@jinxme21 күн бұрын
  • Ok, one more: I am so relieved to realize these are LEARNED strategies that are causing problems for us and we CAN change!!

    @christineecheverri4194@christineecheverri4194Ай бұрын
    • Yes, the book "Fearful, Avoidant in Love" talks about "earned secure" attachment. A ray of hope for some

      @AdAsteris@AdAsteris22 күн бұрын
  • Cool video, My relationship of 5 years ended a month ago. The love of my life decided to leave me, I really love her so much I can’t stop thinking about her, I’ve tried my very best to get her back in my life, but to no avail, I’m frustrated, I don’t see my life with anyone else. I’ve done my best to get rid of the thoughts of her, but I can’t, I don’t know why I’m saying this here, I really miss her and just can’t stop thinking about her

    @bartholetbay412@bartholetbay41212 күн бұрын
    • its difficult to let go of someone you love, i was in a similar situation, my relationship of 12 years ended, but i couldnt just let her go i did all i could to get her back, i had to seek the help of a spiritual counselor who helped me bring her back

      @michael-gg2rh@michael-gg2rh12 күн бұрын
    • Amazing, how did you get a spiritual counselor, and how do i reach her?

      @bartholetbay412@bartholetbay41212 күн бұрын
    • Her name is Shelly renee white , and she is a great spiritual counselor who can bring back your ex.

      @michael-gg2rh@michael-gg2rh12 күн бұрын
    • Thank you for this valuable information, i just looked her up now online. impressive

      @bartholetbay412@bartholetbay41212 күн бұрын
  • Your framing around anxiously attached people being afraid to show confidence because then they will no longer be someone who requires care and will be abandoned, is an excellent insight. I had never seen it that way. But it explains a lot about why codependent people in my life don't seem to be capable of becoming secure. The anxious person requires that they stay needy and incapable so that the avoidant person can maintain their role of rescuer. Neither of them is willing to give up even an inch of that dynamic. Once I became secure and started expressing my ability to confidently do my own thing and set boundaries I lost the most anxious people in my life. I have no problem with that.

    @flowmovementtherapy2096@flowmovementtherapy20962 ай бұрын
    • Were you anxious or avoidant?

      @flowerchasethesunshine9063@flowerchasethesunshine9063Ай бұрын
    • I'm not afraid to show confidence for fear of abandonment. I'm afraid that my needs will always be labeled as wrong or bad and never be met in the only person who can meet them. There's certain needs that can only be met in others - sex, companionship, loyalty, etc. If you can meet all of your needs on your own, relationships would be pointless. We all need each other and no one is independent. I'm tired of being labeled as needy or codependent just for acknowledging the basic human need to connect and wanting just baseline levels of it

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • ​@@smokingcrab2290well said

      @JakeKlineMusic@JakeKlineMusicАй бұрын
  • When we are operating from a place of strategy to be perfect for the other person, we get hurt by rejections even if we didn't like them because we are disappointed in ourselves for not being good enough as our fake version. We also get upset that the other person wasn't going to be a fake version of themselves to mould into us just to make the relationship survive. I've been through this many times when I didn't even like them or even hated them but then I feel so deflated when they leave.

    @simonwilson7581@simonwilson75812 ай бұрын
    • Yea! This is heavy stuff for me! I was always looking for the person to complete me, as in make me OK. That’s just getting from a negative number to zero. We need to be looking for the person who brings us higher into positive territory.

      @parkimedes@parkimedesАй бұрын
    • Totally. I spent 2 years finding the what caused me wanting to be recognized all the time. It took the last 6 months to finally get answers, with help, and now getting used to my more authentic self. The rest will happen naturally, I believe. Most importantly I want to always be self aware and autonomous in my purpose. No more looking it up at the partner. It got me from abuse of substances and to really care for myself. It is super powerful.

      @IjzermanPieter@IjzermanPieterАй бұрын
    • This right here 🤦‍♀️ how many times have I been disappointed someone I wasn't even truely into did not fall in love and fight for me...

      @user-bw8yo3hn8s@user-bw8yo3hn8sАй бұрын
    • The worst is feeling like no one will ever love you even as you are because all you've had is rejection and disappointments even from the people you've given yourself the most to

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • @@parkimedes no. That’s not what she said. You’re still in a mode of USAGE of another. The other person should not be looked to for them to bring you into a higher good. You are only to be looking toward yourself to gain a higher good and then, only then will you find a good match.

      @sonofhibbs4425@sonofhibbs4425Ай бұрын
  • Your videos make me cry a lot because I get to hear from someone else that my unmet needs aren't fundamentally wrong, its just a matter of aligning myself with someone who knows they aren't wrong. It really hurts since I don't know how or where to find that person.

    @Mind_Crimes@Mind_Crimes2 ай бұрын
    • I'm not sure whether you are healing the "I'm wrong" fundamental belief yourself or whether you have done the work and are just waiting to align with someone who is compatible with you. Reconnect with your self, really focus on nurturing yourself and giving yourself the love you are craving. Then, trust yourself and the universe (if you believe in this) and let go. You never know when you could run into someone who can shake up your life in the best way possible! Wishing you the best on your journey ❤

      @prajnajois4065@prajnajois40652 ай бұрын
    • I feel you! Where are these magical stable healthy people??

      @katayna_girl8468@katayna_girl8468Ай бұрын
    • @@katayna_girl8468you can be one of them , once you healing is done.

      @kesardesai@kesardesaiАй бұрын
    • Put this in your dating profile. You'd be surprised at who might resonate

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
  • When I read Memoirs of a Geisha about 25 (?) years ago I recognized myself as the geisha. I tried, and was really good at, becoming exactly what they wanted and needed. I’ve 4 serious proposals and pre-proposed to ( if that’s a term) at least 5 times. Married twice. Single now for 4 years. Both parents Narcissistic Personality Disorder. In addition to addiction, neglect, abandonment, physical abuse, etc. I’ve been in the healing process for the past 4 years, I hope to have a loving healthy relationship someday. I jokingly tell people that I don’t have baggage what I have is a huge set of luggage. lol

    @angierox6964@angierox6964Ай бұрын
    • 'A huge set of luggage'! That made me laugh, TY. ;) You're not alone. At least you are aware.

      @mariasunshine6968@mariasunshine6968Ай бұрын
    • Healing is brave and I hope you get everything you need. ❤

      @cinnflowergirl@cinnflowergirl25 күн бұрын
  • Anxious - I'm not ok, others are ok. I need other person to complete me. Avoidant- others are not ok, I'm ok, I need to help others to be in a relationship. Secure - Everyone are ok, I need to find someone who adds value to my life. We tend to seek what's familiar, i.e, inauthenticity in case of insecurely attached. WE DON'T SEEK WHAT WE WANT, WE SEEK WHAT'S FAMILIAR.

    @spoorthikr@spoorthikrАй бұрын
    • Avoidant is more along the lines of: I'm okay, but others will say I'm not okay, I need to protect myself from others

      @lyndsaybrown8471@lyndsaybrown847121 күн бұрын
    • Secure is not everyone is okay, its id rather be alone than be with the wrong person for me.

      @AlisonChristian-bq4ws@AlisonChristian-bq4ws9 күн бұрын
  • You sound like a surgeon of attachment styles 😊

    @lilyghassemzadeh@lilyghassemzadeh2 ай бұрын
  • While my parents "didn't know any better" they are just exactly as they were, and I get to spend the rest of my life watching these videos and being in treatment. The process of this healing is life-long and utterly disabling. (there's only so far a bird can fly born with one wing)

    @Voyzeck26@Voyzeck262 ай бұрын
    • I call BS on "didn't know any better." If they could turn it off and on depending on who was watching, they knew. That's the tell. 😢

      @cc1k435@cc1k4352 ай бұрын
    • @@cc1k435 Yep. There's also acknowledging you did something wrong and apologizing.

      @aimeem@aimeem2 ай бұрын
    • Idk. I'm not you so if this doesn't fit I understand. But I don't think you are a "bird born with one wing". More like a bird who was only taught to walk, and so has atrophied and weak wings. We have the wings, just as everyone has a full range of emotions and ability to feel secure, but we were never able to exercise these assets due to environmental pressures. However, even if it's hard, and the wings are never quite right, and we occasionally find ourselves still walking on the ground, that doesn't mean we can't still learn to fly anew. We'll always remember, and our early attachment will always be a part of us, but these are skills we all have an innate ability to learn. But you're right, learning as an adult is so much harder than as a kid, not to mention all the unlearning that must happen. Maybe healing will be life long, and I agree it is disabling. I'm mad at my parents about it too, even if it really was done unintentionally. But even so, we can rewire much of this, it just takes time and effort and most importantly help.

      @granth9942@granth99422 ай бұрын
    • You're stuck in the victim stage because you're scared of getting your needs met

      @rishaan775@rishaan7752 ай бұрын
    • @cc1k435 For sure! My dad could always turn off a rage attack like a light switch if the phone rang or someone came to the door.

      @HereForTheCatContent@HereForTheCatContent2 ай бұрын
  • We need a “love” button KZhead, sometimes a like isn’t enough.

    @MoneyqrowsonME@MoneyqrowsonME2 ай бұрын
  • I have found that I've been the authentic one in the last couple relationships I've been in, and the women I dated started having the facade drop after 6 months or so of being together. It's hard being on the receiving end of someone who is being the person they think you want to see, or the person they wish they were, or maybe even the person they want to be but aren't quite there yet. Everyone is hurt when you're not your authentic self.

    @truhartwood3170@truhartwood31702 ай бұрын
    • I've also been here. The rug pull was terrible and hurtful and I didn't know what to do. Thankfully I'm in therapy, I watch this channel and PDS. they've really helped me overcome the pain of that rug pull after I fell in love with who they pretended to be

      @letsgooooooo111@letsgooooooo1112 ай бұрын
    • I was so naive I once though it was because we were so compatible that we didn’t fight for the first few years😮

      @generaldilvry69@generaldilvry692 ай бұрын
    • @@generaldilvry69 I thought this too, only I was the one being authentic and not putting on a facade. I truly enjoy relationships where we have healthy debates understand each other's perspectives, but agree to disagree on matters and don't fight. To me, it feels very healthy. Years later, I found out the agreeing to disagree supposedly was her not having a voice. And she thought fighting about petty nonsense is supposedly more healthy? 🤷‍♂

      @user-hx3kd1zn7f@user-hx3kd1zn7f2 ай бұрын
    • I've learned later that I have an anxious attachment, which I think was made worse by being with an avoidant. The first couple times she took off, I thought it was weird. I didn't understand the behavior, but didn't chase her because I knew it was her problem to deal with. As I got more anxious with time, a push pull dynamic started.

      @user-hx3kd1zn7f@user-hx3kd1zn7f2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-hx3kd1zn7f​I am in this exact same situation. It is so painful. We've come to a point in which we pretty much take turns to chase the other and then pull away. It's horrible and so difficult to let go of when you get those tiny moments of "compatibility" to feed the next weeks of push-and-pull. Just typing it feels so toxic.

      @aicerg@aicergАй бұрын
  • Heidi this video blew my mind. You are removing all of our blindfolds, one by one. It's SO SIMPLE - how were we all living in such a fog? 🤦‍♀️

    @patriot-hj5vx@patriot-hj5vxАй бұрын
  • Month 4 of having of my anxious heart shattered and the worst mental health crisis of my life. Thank you Heidi for gently helping me traverse the darkness.

    @brunodj15@brunodj152 ай бұрын
    • Don't ever engage with an avoidant again. These people are terrorists.

      @Alexandermhinton@AlexandermhintonАй бұрын
    • Be kind to yourself ❤.

      @crownedmelaninqueen@crownedmelaninqueenАй бұрын
    • It'll only make you stronger and wiser. You got this ❤

      @MissBluebirddays@MissBluebirddays8 күн бұрын
  • I can totally see you developing a relationship guidance tool that asks one question at a time and, based on the answer to that question, guides a person to not only know themself but offers resources to be accessed that will help to fill in areas of deficit before the next question is accessed - a sort of mentorship program that will finally result in someone who is ready to enter a relationship securely. You have so much to offer and I so appreciate that you are sharing what you love to do. I take your book suggestions seriously and am currently reading 6 Pillars of Self Esteem. I have been avoidant and shame-bound for decades but hope to turn that around now that I recognize it. Thank you for what you have given to me. ❤

    @BB-ct4dt@BB-ct4dt2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you for doing the work 🌸🫶🏻🙏🏻 Happy healing.

      @LoveeeeelyM@LoveeeeelyM2 ай бұрын
    • Yes please. A tool like this would be great. I am having trouble learning my true authentic self because of so many layers of conditioning that I have.

      @brucearmstrong2864@brucearmstrong28642 ай бұрын
  • I'm anxious and fell for an avoidant , and she destroyed me into pieces , this knowledge must must be spread , so no one has to go through hell , like we did 💔

    @elrisitas1927@elrisitas19272 ай бұрын
    • Yes!! Broadcast this video on all the TV channels for 24 hours

      @simonwilson7581@simonwilson75812 ай бұрын
    • Sorry to hear about your heartbreak ❤ fortunately Heidi's videos are available for free here for anyone that needs them. Unfortunately heartbreak will probably be something that most of us encounter on our healing journey. We probably can't prevent suffering altogether, but we can promote that as a door for self-discovery.

      @Cojrak@Cojrak2 ай бұрын
    • Just going through it💔

      @ditaz2378@ditaz23782 ай бұрын
    • avoidants are emotional terrorists

      @Alexandermhinton@AlexandermhintonАй бұрын
    • @@Cojrak 💚

      @elrisitas1927@elrisitas1927Ай бұрын
  • I'm anxious attachment transitioning into secure. I've done a lot of work the last 2 years thanks to your videos and others on YT. For the first time ever, I don't bother getting into a serious relationship without having a discussion about compatibility first. And I'm not afraid to be transparent. Like duhhh it makes so much sense but I never thought about that before. I thought a strong emotional attachment=love and boy does that cause problems hehe. :)

    @ourbeach4001@ourbeach40012 ай бұрын
    • Right. My mind was blown when i realized you can have very strong emotional attachments and still maintain space. Maturity is releasing the "we must be fated" narrative in favor of loving these attachments from afar.

      @patriot-hj5vx@patriot-hj5vxАй бұрын
    • " I thought a strong emotional attachment=love and boy does that cause problems hehe." This was me for the longest time, finally recovering as well

      @joshuapjung@joshuapjungАй бұрын
    • What's the point of getting into a relationship if you're not going to be upfront about your expectations?

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • Can you go into detail the kind of work you’ve done for yourself to heal your anxious attachment?

      @adamoconnor5966@adamoconnor5966Ай бұрын
    • @@adamoconnor5966 I’m not OP, but for me the core work I had to do was related to my mom and learning a little more how she raised me. She basically conditioned me to be emotionally detached, and would shut down with any emotion I expressed. Basically any emotion was too much. Too happy or too sad? She would blame. She was quite abused herself growing up and never resolved things. First step is recognizing the source of the problem. It is not you! It is not the men or women you are dating! It is the conditioning you received growing up. Then once you can see the source of the problem, now you have won half the battle, because you will be able to start working with a therapist or good friends to overcome the habits. Secondly, I actually do credit my return to Christian faith as a large catalyst in the process. It is not the entire thing, but it helped me to recognize Im not alone and the struggles we have are actually a part of our general spiritual maturing and should not be seen as a reason to fall into despair.

      @joshuapjung@joshuapjungАй бұрын
  • Couldn’t click faster! Love your videos

    @maddievic2@maddievic22 ай бұрын
    • I love her videos too! How can my partner and I hire her to do attachment work with us?

      @Jaguarsnake@JaguarsnakeАй бұрын
  • I identify with both insecure-anxious and (earned) secure. I love attachment theories, but also feel like because it's a heuristic model it tends to be somewhat categorical, with tightly defined categories. I feel there are transitional states per the theories of Donald Winnicott (transitional phenomena) and W.R.D. Fairbairn (infantile dependency, quasi-independence, mature dependency). I would like to see attachment theory evolve through placing styles on a spectrum or becoming a dimensional model rather than hewing to a descriptive/categorical model. But I understand sometimes analysis has to be simplified into ideal types to sort of capture elements of the world by encapsulating core dynamics. Just wanted to share this thought.

    @ericm.1659@ericm.16592 ай бұрын
  • This is probably one of the most important videos I've ever watched. Naturally, I'm not alone in this experience, which means you are helping to make the world a better place. God Bless You. 🙏🏻

    @3ggyt0ast@3ggyt0astАй бұрын
  • Heidi, you have an amazing way of distilling a topic, of breaking it down into its most basic parts and succinctly communicating the result. I really appreciate the organization, enthusiasm and effort that you put into all your videos; I want to thank you so much, especially, for this one.

    @nothanks5846@nothanks58462 ай бұрын
  • I listened to this over and over. I have been in therapy as I was very much an anxious attachment type person. I had a very dysfunctional childhood and was also bullied. I went into a dysfunctional marriage with an avoidant who was also emotionally abusive. When he left me and the kids, I started to work on myself physically and emotionally. I lost 50 pds, got braces, and read and listened to podcasts about relationships. I feel like I am finally whole and able to have a healthy relationship but it's the how that is still a struggle. What to look for, what questions to ask... this helped me immensely. Thank you, Heidi. 🙂

    @buttermuffin1196@buttermuffin1196Ай бұрын
    • He didn't meet your needs and then he left you. Avoidants suck

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
  • reminds me of that one miley cyrus song "I know that you're wrong for me, gonna wish we never met on the day I leave"

    @BrainDiarrhea@BrainDiarrhea2 ай бұрын
    • lol there’s another one, even if it's unhealthy, then I don't give a damn 'Cause even if it kills me, I'll always take your hand

      @sacmalamabrutus@sacmalamabrutus2 ай бұрын
  • I feel like i get rejected by women when showing my true feelings. Each time i do, the women just disappear... I'm trying to heal this. Watching video's like this made me realise there is nothing wrong with me, i didn't do anything wrong or anything i just presented my honest self. The women were definitely avoidant which i also struggle with. I've been living with a closed heart perhaps that's why i am interested in my fellow avoidants? Now that i opened up my heart i feel more honest connections but still trying to fix my insecurity so we can have a great relationship :D

    @marcus716@marcus7162 ай бұрын
    • Speaking of this, i got rejected again yesterday 🤣 but this time it was without me being vulnerable

      @marcus716@marcus716Ай бұрын
    • @@ProtectedAndHappy Thank you for your wisdom. I've come to realise i wasn't fully authentic with my romantic interests. I've always been hiding the 'soft' part of me because of fear of rejection. Things like showing desire and emotionality, showing i care, etc because i've falsely believed these are the reasons for my rejection. Maybe i've felt attracted to avoidant women because i deep down feel like im needy and that just proves it. Now that i've realised it, i believe my dating life will be much better.

      @marcus716@marcus716Ай бұрын
    • Another thing i'd like to add is: i have met a friend who is fully in touch with his softer side and i saw how people liked him because of it instead of getting disgusted. Same with women. The woman i'm interested in is also soft and she likes soft men too. That made me realise there is no need for hiding and being insecure. It's just a deep grained belief that sensivity = rejection

      @marcus716@marcus716Ай бұрын
    • If you're a man, 99% of your romantic interests will reject you. It's just how the odds are. Unless you're a 6 foot tall wealthy 9/10 gigachad. Then the statistics greatly increase.

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • @marcus716. It also depends on how it’s “presented” so to speak. I don’t want anything too deep/heavy within the first 3 months. And as a female I do find it a turn-off if the man is very soft before really knowing him. I’m not talking about serious stuff like he loses someone, a pet or becomes unemployed etc. Life changes. Obviously those situations are hard and support is needed. Many women simply prefer men that aren’t soft when there’s no apparent reason to be. Personally I find it a little annoying if he’s soft but not the type to make a difference in the world by being kind to those around him whether it’s strangers or not - if it’s just navel gazing. Nah. Sometimes the “softness” can be an act to try to appear more attractive and women sense that. Be happy and do fun things in the beginning of dating - observe her and find out if she’s even someone for YOU and then the softer sides can come naturally and won’t be a repellant as they might be in the beginning

      @jollymollyramram9702@jollymollyramram9702Ай бұрын
  • This is one of your most BRILLIANT videos. It SO clearly describes the false front I've put forth in my relationships. You have been one of the biggest influences on my journey of becoming secure. Thank you Heidi, from the bottom of my heart. ❤

    @aliseoliver3537@aliseoliver35372 ай бұрын
    • Agreed.

      @seanthegod4585@seanthegod4585Ай бұрын
  • This video made me realize how many progresses I made from being anxious to being secure in a relationship… I am still leaning anxious sometimes, but I have learnt to use and appreciate space and tolerate discomfort. Beautiful video as always

    @IanuaDiaboli@IanuaDiaboli2 ай бұрын
    • Same here! Hang in there! ❤️

      @brucearmstrong2864@brucearmstrong28642 ай бұрын
    • Can you guys tell me how you'll started ?

      @smilealways4978@smilealways4978Ай бұрын
    • @@smilealways4978 I needed therapy to “unlock” some factual and emotional memories, read some self-help books namely “Adult children of emotionally immature parents”, “Attached” etc, and also learnt that I have ADHD, which contributes like crazy to my emotional dysregulation. Also what often helps me is journaling with some shadow work prompts, you find them overall on the internet, also in Heidi’s videos.

      @IanuaDiaboli@IanuaDiaboliАй бұрын
    • I understand "space" but theres no way the relationship will ever be secure until you establish mutual trust and relationship agreements with the avoidant person that ensure the both of you are meeting each other's needs. If you're not getting your needs met, it doesn't matter how comfortable you are with space. The uncertainty and instability will kill you inside.

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
  • Your articulateness is a treasure. Thank you for all your study, learning, and shared discourse.

    @MichaelDavis-mw1vs@MichaelDavis-mw1vsАй бұрын
  • This is probably the most mind-blowing video I think I've come across in my healing journey. It will probably be what I reflect on as being the turning point to finally become secure and in a healthy relationship. ❤

    @simonwilson7581@simonwilson75812 ай бұрын
    • unlikely

      @Alexandermhinton@AlexandermhintonАй бұрын
  • I like to go really deep but finding a partner who wants to do the same is really hard. I can still enjoy being round them but their refusal to go deep is very frustrating and has led me to outgrow them 😢

    @roxy7255@roxy72552 ай бұрын
    • I have the same issue

      @brendabahr4736@brendabahr4736Ай бұрын
    • Such a fascinating comment. "I like to go deep" aka let me just tell you how it is...🤣 Accepting people where they're at is a thing. "Outgrowing" is another term for I'm bored you're not entertaining me enough. 🙄

      @Prawnstar.@Prawnstar.Ай бұрын
    • Prawnstar clearly you haven’t met anyone with significant trauma bpd or npd. Their defences to protect the wound is so strong and prevents them from going deep. Yes most people leaving someone with a personality disorder have outgrown them, some have the ability to do inner work some do not.

      @roxy7255@roxy7255Ай бұрын
    • @@roxy7255 So what you're saying is everyone you've met has pretty much had a personality disorder of sorts? 🤣 I don't buy that it's "really hard" to find someone without a personality disorder. I've been employed in the mental health field for well over a decade. I'm well versed in all of the things you mentioned. I'm also familiar with b.s. when I hear it. 🙄

      @Prawnstar.@Prawnstar.Ай бұрын
    • No, my comment was referring directly to my experience with someone with a personality disorder. Instead of bullying people in Heidis video comments how about you listen to them. You are clearly a person who isn’t able to go deep or do any inner work.

      @roxy7255@roxy7255Ай бұрын
  • I agree with the part about hiding your authentic love of psychology and excitement for fear of rejection. I am struggling with getting out of the cycle of shame and hiding my true personality. Usually i am really uplifted by your videos but today i feel heavy because i know i have a lot of work left.

    @jessicalinger7689@jessicalinger76892 ай бұрын
  • New Heidi Price just dropped?!?!?! You make my life make sense! Thank you for your insight and clarity! I love you

    @spencerkerkhof8356@spencerkerkhof83562 ай бұрын
  • This video is the last missing piece of my romantic pazzle dance, but finally - thanks to your articulated choice of words and clear Unique perspective- only at the age of 36 kissing 37, I now realize where my unhappiness and toxic pattern stems from in a way that I can make sense of it and explain it, not only to myself, but also in my incompatible relationships. Alone time is in my horizon, for sure, and Im not afraid to acknowledge it out loud! Haidi, you are so special and good in your field of choice, so please don't ever stop, because your service actually makes a collective differance in the world- thank you so much!!!! Such an importent message to hold for the people. Peace and love from Israel, 🦋🙌🏽🤍

    @user-rb3vw2ti5e@user-rb3vw2ti5eАй бұрын
  • This is one of the most helpful videos out there on CPTSD. It's very clear that you put a lot of time and efforts into making them which doesn't go unnoticed! I cannot thank you enough for helping us who can't afford/have access to trauma informed therapy. Love that you have healed and now celebrate the 'analysis' part of you. A tiny suggestion is that such anecdotes from your own life are much more relatable and impactful rather than the fictional instances. Cheers!

    @deeshareshmi8338@deeshareshmi83382 ай бұрын
  • Hi Heidi - would you be willing to do a video on the unique chaos of 2 fearful avoidants in relationship? Or, a video on people who attract each other because they think they can solve each others’ trauma? Thank you for all you do.

    @user-td2zn9hs6d@user-td2zn9hs6d2 ай бұрын
  • I was kinda doing the exercises during the video and I have a gripe with the Front Porch Test because although I can feel close to people easily and be vulnerable I can't get to that point of intimacy until I feel confident they feel the same way back. I also have limerance for romantic partners and I can make myself believe I'd want that person there on the Front Porch with me regardless how incompatible we are

    @hipnhappenin@hipnhappenin2 ай бұрын
  • 31:00 is so validating. My ex who broke up with me in February was avoidant and he would question why I liked to watch people like you and other self growth/help KZheadrs, read books about self improvement, and even sometimes questioned the things he'd thought my therapist "taught" me. He had no desire to self reflect and it baffled me that he saw my interest as something negative rather than something positive I was bringing to the relationship. He framed it like I couldn't think for myself and it was toxic for me to listen to other people vs. listening to people in my life (which I do listen to the people in my life, him included, which looking back logically makes no sense). I just thought it was insane he wouldn't want a partner who was always interested in bettering herself and probably wants a doormat of a partner instead.

    @grace.1123@grace.112310 сағат бұрын
  • What resonated was the piece about being compatible and how it connects to the types of convos people like to have together and ‘solve’. I like going deep into topics about thy self too, and if peeps don’t dive in with me, then they aren’t my peeps. We can talk about the weather, but only briefly please because I’m seeking connection and substance. This was an excellent vid!!!

    @Michael-tn9wp@Michael-tn9wpАй бұрын
  • I dont know if its my trauma or nervous system or what, but Im finding every video has information for me about what support or parenting I didnt get and Im finding that her words are blurring for me cognitively and my brain is having trouble digesting everything. But because I know this is so important to understand and fully emotionally digest, so it can settle in my gut, I slowed the video down to force myself to hear every word. This is helping. Just a tip incase anyone else feels the same.

    @user-vh3gn3xq7s@user-vh3gn3xq7s17 күн бұрын
  • Just wowed by your clarity and ability to outline subtleties and show a path forward. So many creative ideas. At 66, I have finally learned how to be authentic, which has made me much more relatable - and surprisingly funny! You are providing significant value in your talks!

    @susansagun7077@susansagun7077Ай бұрын
  • This is crazy that this video popped up because I was just searching on chatgpt about what careers would be good for someone who...loves analyzing, investigating, seeing connections where most others don't and self development and learning new things in all areas of life, etc. I do love analyzing and exploring deeper in myself and others, but I was always told when I was little that I do too much, talk to much...etc so I stopped. And now I am finding myself again and I am learning to fully accept it, which hasn't been too hard but I also don't get into relationships because I do better by myself but perhaps it is because I didn't have compatible people in my life. Thank you Heidi for sharing all the information you do because it always speaks true to me!

    @INTPinnerWorld@INTPinnerWorldАй бұрын
  • Wow. This was an eye opener for me. I'm a DA and I've always gone into relationships thinking that I could help them fix their problems.

    @stephaniestrickland8668@stephaniestrickland8668Ай бұрын
  • Hi Heidi, I’ve been listening to your videos this past month or so and this is my first time commenting. Thank you for encouraging that we can find opportunities and moments, new relationships and communities to re-familiarize myself with the authentic version of me. As a fearful-avoidant person, I tend to want to hide all my faults and struggles from others, and unfortunately find myself repulsed by another close one’s struggles. I then idealize, even idolize someone whom I find worthy, either potential romantic interest or even in friends and work environment. I could go on and on.. I feel so weak and naive on the one hand also hopeful and impatient on the other. Please keep coming back, you are a great resource and a role model.

    @pearlpark7259@pearlpark72592 ай бұрын
    • I hear you! I'm also FA

      @whiggygirl@whiggygirl2 ай бұрын
  • Once again I find myself answering the criteria for securely attached in some ways and insecurely attached in others. So I listen for all the various parts of myself!!

    @Judymontel@Judymontel2 ай бұрын
    • How beautifully put regarding the different parts. I am stealing that ❤

      @user-rv3ce8xs5y@user-rv3ce8xs5yАй бұрын
    • No one is 100% secure. Security is an illusion. Even the most secure people are lying and all relationships have moments of insecurity. If someone says they're secure they're either 1. Holding all the power in the relationship, or 2. They're getting all their needs met.

      @smokingcrab2290@smokingcrab2290Ай бұрын
    • @@smokingcrab2290 What you say reminds me of something I used to tell people about support systems - that everyone needs and has one, and the only people who say they manage without one just don't see it, but it's there or they wouldn't have survived.

      @Judymontel@JudymontelАй бұрын
  • You always speak about the topics that hit home. I know this about myself, I even catch it fairly early. But it's so hard to Stop quick Attachment with potential partners that are wrong for me. More than frustrating.

    @BruceLeon83@BruceLeon832 ай бұрын
  • I avoid to express my needs because up to that point I can say 'they didn't know' Once they have that information, I always end up hurting at least twice as much in the end. There's always the end, so far. Whether they had that info or not. And when they had it, it hurt more.

    @justb4116@justb41162 ай бұрын
  • this is the first video i’ve seen of you and i feel so connected thru the love of psychology, i feel more seen and in tune with the universe day by day 😌

    @gilyatone@gilyatoneАй бұрын
  • This is the best explanation of attachment in adult relationships I have heard so far

    @quynhvu2381@quynhvu2381Ай бұрын
  • Wow! Envisioning this world where who I truly am is coveted is bliss! So liberating! I can finally relax & be me. I found out that I DO have discernment of who adds value and who doesn't. I just had to always please and appease to belong and to get sort of accepted. What a relief! I'm going to do that visualisation a lot, hihi.

    @SparklingDiva1111@SparklingDiva1111Ай бұрын
  • I recently got the courage to leave my toxic, kinda narcissistic boyfriend of 3,5 years. I gained self-respect and overcome depression and some other struggles. Now I started going on dates again and I realised that my type has changed drastically. I’m now more into people who genuinely seem nice and wholesome. Before that I was attracted to guys who have high status jobs etc. Besides that I tried to be more myself and don’t really try to impress people anymore.

    @tagtraumerin5077@tagtraumerin5077Ай бұрын
  • As always, I love Heidi's content. I was blown away by this video and feel like I need to watch it on repeat for the next 30 hours to get it into my brain at a deeper level. Much gratitude! 🙏🏻

    @EmBeaucrea@EmBeaucreaАй бұрын
  • Heidi Priebe: Crushing/Dismantling/Obliterating/[Insert your gerund of choice here] dysfunctional relationship patterns, one video at a time.

    @larrychoiceman@larrychoiceman2 ай бұрын
  • 20:00 onwards - those in a secure relationship genuinely respect each other's way of reasoning and showing up emotionally and have compatible values around using their resources of time, energy and money

    @SK-lj1ql@SK-lj1qlАй бұрын
  • I was never really able to hide my authentic self growing up, and as a result I was rejected and abandoned so much that I learned to be alone and embrace my authentic self knowing that no one will ever want me or want to be around me.

    @rebeccasimmers9363@rebeccasimmers9363Ай бұрын
  • This video should be compulsory for all humans 💛

    @rindiefaurie8938@rindiefaurie8938Ай бұрын
  • I feel like there are parts of myself that have become more secure and parts of my self that are still rooted in narratives that support insecure attachment. This feels so conflicting. I feel strong and authentic but insecure and uncertain at the same time.

    @ashleyanderson8445@ashleyanderson8445Ай бұрын
  • Truly helping so many people advance their emotional intelligence 👏👏👏

    @chiaraA.@chiaraA.Ай бұрын
    • bright triad

      @StrategyCats@StrategyCatsАй бұрын
  • You are exceptionally talented and intelligent and so generous Heidi. Im a fearful avoidant who has worked so hard the last years and finally entered a secure relationship. Thanks to your teachings on attunment my soul has been set free and ive showed up authentically and only received love and accaptence from him and in turn from myself❤️

    @SoFine163@SoFine1632 ай бұрын
  • Your content is what my evolving self has been in need of. Thank you for your effort and expertise!!! Much love and blessings

    @TaylorLumpkin-sb6ko@TaylorLumpkin-sb6ko2 ай бұрын
  • I was once told by close mentor type friend RIP Pete. He said my parents may have ruined my childhood but I am responsible for my adulthood. So here I am viewing this and exposed to attachment theory only three months! 20 yrs after I was told that. Loonngg 20 yrs. Obvious anxious attachment here. I mean it describes me to a t so well I must be patient 0. Just wish I would have finally found out why I am the way I am. And I have tried everything and looked everywhere. Awareness just by itself has changed even some of my actual initial reacts that I’ve had for… well I’m 58. A lot of damage and heartache later, it is such a life changing moment of that awareness far outweighs being pissed having to wait so long unaware. Pete also told me to forget the word “if”. Im grateful Im on the right path, knowing it’s the right path. I will miss the one I love. My neediness help destroy the relationship. Just recently. Sorry Pete but I have to say it “IF” only I would have known sooner.

    @ahuber624@ahuber62429 күн бұрын
  • This is the first time I heard an explanation about this subject matter so clear I could literally map it to my own situation and have multiple aha moments in the process. Thanks Heidi!

    @jbdsvld8175@jbdsvld8175Ай бұрын
  • My mouth dropped open when you were saying insecure ppl have unmet needs that drive their partner choice. Mind blown. 🙌🏾

    @beyond-liberalism@beyond-liberalism2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video! I'm healing my avoidant attachment

    @marcus716@marcus7162 ай бұрын
  • Wow you have such an amazing gift of articulating these very complex things to make them understandable for us. It's having a huge impact on me. Super grateful!

    @colemeeker908@colemeeker908Ай бұрын
  • I believe this is what happened with my spouse when I first met her and we dated. I have heard of the phrase, called the false self before where you’re trying to impress someone with perhaps who you wish you were, but it’s not really who you are. there were so many good things and how she valued me and valued herself and her appearance and being a woman. However, after marriage, that good person seems to disappear and has never come back and despite me asking about it and desiring it I have been told That I imagined all that when I know I didn’t. I have been told that what I remember is wrong and how I feel is wrong and that I’m crazy or don’t remember anything right etc. It was like she put forth the false self to get me on the hook, and to hide the deeper things. Then later, when the deeper things were the every day things, I wondered what happened like I had been tricked or confused.

    @mokyan7@mokyan7Ай бұрын
  • It's extremely hard to ditch the social masks when you're surrounded by people who like the mask better than the face.

    @TheTrueUntrueNic@TheTrueUntrueNicАй бұрын
  • Hi Heidi, lve been on my healing journey from family scapegoat abuse. You have such a gift the way you contextualize your content. This clarified so many things for me. Thankyou!

    @janniealday1239@janniealday123929 күн бұрын
  • This girl is brilliant the way she articulates all this she's fantastic

    @NeilJSchwab@NeilJSchwabАй бұрын
    • She’s a woman. Language matters.

      @robisonbeth@robisonbethАй бұрын
  • Heidi, I've been listening to your channel for months now. I appreciate the time and effort it takes to put together high quality content such as this! If I could give this video a thousand likes I would as it's given me the courage to be authentic to the essence of who I am and to be able to recognize my progress on this journey. Thank you!

    @monicadehek5484@monicadehek54842 ай бұрын
  • This clarified a lot for me in relating to others. I am 67 and was raised by a mother who suffered from BPD. Shame was the foundation of my developmental years. However, I also love Developmental Psychology. It's so important to understand yourself and others before getting into a close relationship with others.

    @joanfolds476@joanfolds476Ай бұрын
  • Wow... I started watching your videos a few months ago and used to watch them again every once in a while (sometimes as a background noise so the information would slowly and gradually enter into my system hahah)... I watched this one again after a while and... I am feeling soooo proud of myself, noticing the big shift I made regarding attachment healing, noticing who I am currently attracted to... The difference comparing to a few month ago is astonishing!!! Thank you so much for your help Heidi! You definitely have been and still are part of my healing! Please keep posting these extremely precious videos!! We love them!!!

    @carmengarciaguillen392@carmengarciaguillen39211 күн бұрын
  • Girl, what an amazing video, you are a genius! I have never understood my patters as much as with your videos and also got the ideas of how to change. It seems that there is so hope now. I really wish you had a course or something similar for anxious attached people. I would by it directly! 😍

    @Daniele-jc6ku@Daniele-jc6ku2 ай бұрын
  • omg so true. I wish I had learned all of this much sooner! I'm working on showing up more authentically, accepting and loving myself. ❤️ I love that you present the information so clearly, it makes it really easy to remember. Ty!

    @yannahvale99@yannahvale992 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking that too but we really needed to experience the bad to realise the detrimental effects of not being our authentic selves.

      @simonwilson7581@simonwilson75812 ай бұрын
  • Can´t believe with how much clarity Heidi Priebe is able to describe what is going on. Thank you and Bravo!

    @thinktwice-me7ie@thinktwice-me7ie26 күн бұрын
  • Yeah now thinking about it.. I feel like i'm gonna get rejected for asking a woman out because i'm showing too much interest. Hmm.. watching this that probably means we were not compatible. Some ppl like spending a lot of time together others don't. Nothing wrong :)

    @marcus716@marcus7162 ай бұрын
  • She's brilliant and has helped me beyond imagination G.O.A.T

    @mariagoldstein5494@mariagoldstein5494Ай бұрын
  • Probably the most helpful video I’ve watched on attachment. Thank you

    @LOhaha94@LOhaha942 ай бұрын
  • My parents rejected my expression of autonomy. I wore a mask to avoid abuse. Its so automatic for me to hide and just act like a people pleaser. Not just in dating, either!

    @amber40494@amber40494Ай бұрын
  • Crazy how universe works. This morning I was journaling about this and was wondering how to move forward in life. Thank you for your incredible work ❤

    @katarinkasweet@katarinkasweetАй бұрын
  • Great video, Heidi. I need people to spell it out for me and this has done it very well indeed. I’ll be outlining and Venn diagramming it for months. Very very useful, indeed.

    @SB_McCollum@SB_McCollum2 ай бұрын
  • I would love a video on the difficulty of relationships for people who struggle with becoming attached at all. I can never tell if I like a person or if my lack of feelings is because of my own mental stuff

    @zachlester6112@zachlester61122 ай бұрын
  • You've brought to realization questions I've yet to consciously ask but the themes have been peripherally visible for some time. I've recently undergone a mass cleansing of experiences from my life with the goal of learning who I really am behind these masks I subconsciously operate from. I've recently discovered less than a month ago that I learned the only way to be accepted is to be someone I'm not. It has been a very lengthy period of burning the dead wood. It is very heart-warming to know that there really is in fact other people interested in analyzing others simply because it lights them up. Such an odd sensation to believe your whole life they don't exist only to realize they only didn't exist because I attracted the opposite situations. Thank you very much for your perspective Heidi, I sincerely appreciate your help!

    @keithboyer3908@keithboyer3908Ай бұрын
  • I am very grateful to you for the clarity with which you express concepts that are not easy to understand. Your videos made me understand many things that others had not explained to me so clearly. I wish you all the best!

    @Leonardovizziello@Leonardovizziello2 ай бұрын
  • I'm so disheartened. I am so in love with this woman, she is nothing short of phenomenal in every area save for one...our attachment style. We have all the same interests, values, hopes and dreams for the future and the physical compatibly is so perfect, ...out of this world. We spent months connecting on the levels that matter most before getting physical. Such a good idea, I never felt such love... ...but at the core of it all I am finding out that I'm an anxious attachment style with her, and she is avoidant with me. Thankfully we are also members of an unrelated support group in which we are working towards becoming better people. This has caused us to be open to changing our behavior and working towards change But it has also been so hard for me, it is almost like a broken heart multiple times per week. There are a few things she will do things though...that just boggle my mind...I was just ruminating a bit and man, some ghastly and brutally dismissive and 180 degree, ignoring, cold shoulder, or accusing me of trying to own her. I will often get ultimatums like "if my way isn't good enough for you..." Most of the time we are doing great, however, It is absolutely horrible at times, I hope we are going to be ok though and through open minds we can grow and find a happy medium. Because sometimes I want to just die and get the pain over with

    @mattgraves3709@mattgraves37092 ай бұрын
    • I've just been through something very similar for the past year. It is really hard & when everything finally imploded I grieved so much it was unbearable at times. After several months the pain is less, I've learnt A LOT about myself (and attachment theory) & I'm becoming more emotionally self reliant. I'm starting to be able to look back on it as a hard but very growthful experience & am not feeling my life is doomed because I'm not with this person I thought was so wonderful. I have watched dozens of Heidi's videos and honestly they have been my salvation. If you keep watching you'll get through to a place of greater understanding too. All the best to you.

      @francespotter7697@francespotter76972 ай бұрын
    • @@francespotter7697 Sorry that you went through it also, but glad to hear you are doing better. Thanks for that, that is hopeful

      @mattgraves3709@mattgraves37092 ай бұрын
    • ​@francespotter7697 Oh God. I'm in so much agonizing pain right now, from a very similar thing. One that just ended right out from under me, with no warning, and no care for the emotional turmoil or agony that I'm going through. That she knows I'm going through. After a very long time together! But I guess it helps reading comments like these. Even though I can barely breathe or think straight. So, thank you both.

      @johnnydi2231@johnnydi22312 ай бұрын
    • In the end the question is: "Will she work on herself or not?" If not, than both of you will suffer. And the other question is: "Do you love her or the version in your mind of her? You sound like me in the past when I put my partners on a pedestal... If a guy runs away/ igored me, it made me felt unworthy and I have done everything to be the perfect partner for them. Completely lost myself... Today I'm happy married and most important thing. I feel safe, being always myself and have peace. It's possible but a long and hurtful way... The wrong people have been like a drug...

      @ireefree2024@ireefree2024Ай бұрын
    • @ireefree2024 Thank you for your comment. That's good food for thought, and also encouraging that you made it through and are now happy. I'm so glad for you. Honestly, I know everything that I should feel or think, rationally. But I can't seem to force my mind or body to cooperate. And I feel so weak because of it. Yet, no matter how hard I try, my heart/ chest hurt. Like to the point of feeling I was about to have a heart attack a few times. And the tightness or pain in my chest & stomach just won't ease up, no matter what I try to tell myself. I know this is all about the ego or whatever. So I should be able to accept it or just ride it out. Which then just makes me feel even more pathetic. Again. And the cycle just keeps repeating! There's no one to talk to. No one that really cares or wants to dwell or commiserate with me. Which I get. Because who would wanna do that? But it just feels like I'm left with no real options. I just want out of this pain. This ridiculous, irrational, one-sided pain! Lol Thanks again.

      @johnnydi2231@johnnydi2231Ай бұрын
  • Hi Heidi! Another great video! Thanks

    @filipesimoes2524@filipesimoes25242 ай бұрын
  • I needed this! Amazing as always.

    @TKRyan2@TKRyan2Ай бұрын
  • THIS IS SO GOOD, Heidi. Thanks!

    @lungandfoot@lungandfootАй бұрын
  • You're such a great educator, Heidi. Thank you for all that you do!

    @user-ky7dk2jj9s@user-ky7dk2jj9sАй бұрын
  • Heidi nails it again. In one video, she connects the dots on concepts I have been piecing together for years. Grateful 🙏

    @user-bw8yo3hn8s@user-bw8yo3hn8sАй бұрын
  • Heidi you’re blessing us with the back to back uploads, thank you!!!

    @omonighoegi1921@omonighoegi19212 ай бұрын
  • Again, Heidi, your insight and careful, painstaking delivery is extraordinarily helpful. I'm so grateful, as many of us are. Please don’t stop - you're bringing immense relief and assistance to me and many others. 🙏🏾

    @jusbe47@jusbe472 ай бұрын
  • This is exactly the video I needed to see!! Love your channel!!

    @mariel799@mariel7992 ай бұрын
  • your videos are GOLD. thank you so much Heidi❤❤❤

    @rawipatyoswee5923@rawipatyoswee59232 ай бұрын
  • such a useful topic, thank you for covering this!

    @Tiweeeweee@Tiweeeweee2 ай бұрын
  • I just love this - Thank you❤️

    @frederikkapetersen8776@frederikkapetersen8776Ай бұрын
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