Relationship Real Talk: Understanding Attachment vs. Love (2024)

You might feel like you can’t live without them. Is it really true love, or the nearness of them that you’re falling for?

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Pop culture teems with so-called “love songs” that more likely express attachment than love. You can throw a dart and hit questionable lyrics. Are the fervent feelings an outpouring of loving sentiment or a cry of codependency? Hard to tell.

If you’re feeling chronically anxious in your relationship, understanding the difference between mutual love, healthy attachments, and unhelpful attachments might be the first step in growing toward something lasting, together.

How you feel and act in the relationship is probably the best indicator of whether the strong emotions you feel are love or attachment.

Love evokes fond feelings and actions toward the other person, particularly. Attachment is driven by how you feel about yourself with the degree of permanence and safety someone gives you, based on your past relationships.

In other words, with love, your person is “the one” you have feelings for. With attachment, your significant other could be replaceable, it’s how they satisfy your needs that gives them your attention.

Emotional attachment vs. love

A 2020 study of 83 young adults who claim to be “in love” described the differences between infatuation, emotional attachment, and love.

Study authors explain:

  • Infatuation is an all-consuming feeling that quickly and intensely flourishes at the beginning of love. It can be positive or negative, with features including:
    • anxiety
    • euphoria
    • nervousness
  • Emotional attachment is a positive, comforting feeling of bonding that develops gradually, with features including:
    • calmness
    • comfort
    • happiness
    • security
  • Love is a multifaceted concept, marked by a combination of infatuation, attachment, and cognitive changes, with features including:
    • heart pounding (physiological affects)
    • caregiving (behavioral affects)
    • euphoria and anxiety (mixed feelings)
    • enhanced attention toward, and memory of, beloved-related details (cognitive affects)

According to the American Psychological Association (APA), love evokes the following feelings:

  • deep fondness
  • happiness in the beloved’s presence
  • commitment to the other’s well-being
  • awareness of how words and actions affect the love object

Love comes in many forms:

  • sexual
  • platonic
  • parental
  • partnered

This 2021 review of romantic love develops a working definition. Romantic love:

  • occurs at all stages of life
  • spurs behaviors reflecting a desire for long-term mating with the subject
  • helps people choose and attract partners, engage in sex, and become couples
  • frequently turns into a deeply committed relationship, even if sexual companionate love fades

The APA describes attachment as originating in the bonds between babies and their caregivers. As adults, the impulse to seek out relationships that feed your needs remains.

Attachment refers to how you relate to others. Your earliest bonds highly influence your relational style, including:

  • what you expect from people
  • how you interpret relationships
  • how you behave in relationships

There are four attachment styles:

  • anxious attachment
  • anxious-avoidant attachment (marked by a volley of panic and withdrawal)
  • disorganized attachment (marked by a frequently unpredictable and disruptive infant-parent relationship)
  • secure

The top three are referred to as insecure attachment styles. Ideally, secure attachment leads to love in a healthy relationship.

This review of emerging evidence suggests that attachment needs may guide the selection of partners more than the feeling of having found love.

Aromanticism and asexuality within love and attachment

There are an array of relationship orientations under the “A” in LGBTQIA+ that encompass versions of secure attachment and intimacy.

Those who are aromatic are as likely as those who are romantic to feel love and show emotional investment in their beloveds. Similarly, folks who identify as asexual are absolutely able to enjoy meaningful, secure attachments.

Positive emotional attachment can develop into love, as mentioned above. But negative attachments can both cause or be caused by mental health conditions.

Codependency

Codependency involves putting others’ needs above your own to the point that you lose sight of what your needs are. There’s an element of control and what many refer to as the “need to feel needed.”

If the following signs apply to you, you may be in a codependent relationship:

  • can’t say no
  • lie for your loved one
  • apologize excessively
  • take the blame to avoid conflict

Anxiety

If feeling anxious is just as strong a sentiment as other amorous emotions that come to mind while thinking of your entire relationship (or past relationships), you may be experiencing symptoms of an anxiety-based mental health condition.

Conditions involving anxiety and unhealthy attachments include:

  • attachment anxiety
  • anxious-avoidant attachment
  • separation anxiety
  • dependent personality disorder

Need for power and control

If an extremely unhealthy attachment style — whether stemming from a relationship involving narcissism or manipulation — leaves no room for love, you cannot change it.

The following are signs of domestic violence:

  • exclusively controls finances
  • isolates you
  • exploits your insecurities
  • physically, verbally, or sexually abuses you

If you think you’re in a domestic violence situation, immediate help is available. You can call the 24/7 National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.

How to overcome unhealthy attachments

  • Emotional detachment doesn’t always mean breaking up. Detachment may mean avoiding situations that are too enmeshed or establishing new boundaries for yourself and your partner.
  • Consider emotionally focused therapy (EFT) to pinpoint and unlearn certain detrimental relationship patterns.
  • You can be open to changing attachments styles, too. Just because you may develop an insecure attachment style doesn’t mean time, therapy, or a relationship with a secure partner can’t help you trade up.
  • Despite warm feelings, if the relationship brings out the worst in one or both of you, you might look to these tips to end a toxic relationship.

Was this helpful?

Healthy attachment and love can lead one into the other or coexist as relationships evolve from infatuation to romantic love, to companionate love.

Love is multifaceted and radiates outward toward a person irreplaceable to you. Attachment is more self-serving and echoes inward what sense of security and satisfaction someone (or something) gives you.

Emotional attachment places sentimental value on a person (pet, or object!).

If you realize you’ve developed an insecure attachment style stemming from your earliest childhood memories, and extending over different types of relationships, you may also wish to discuss concerns with a therapist.

Whatever past relationships have etched into you, it’s possible to experience requited love in the present.

Relationship Real Talk: Understanding Attachment vs. Love (2024)

FAQs

Do I love them or do I have attachment issues? ›

Difference between love and attachment

Love evokes fond feelings and actions toward the other person, particularly. Attachment is driven by how you feel about yourself with the degree of permanence and safety someone gives you, based on your past relationships.

How do you know if it's attachment or love? ›

'Attachment love' is different. You want to be around the person not because you want to spend time with them but because you miss how they care for you. Attachment is about missing the ego boost that the other person gives you rather than missing the person. Real love can make you feel like you can do anything.

Can you be emotionally attached but not in love? ›

Being emotionally attached to someone isn't the same as being in love. It's a common misconception that can lead to unnecessary heartache and confusion. Emotional attachment can feel intoxicating, like a powerful magnetic pull towards another person.

What is more important love or attachment? ›

We do want to note: While today's researchers may believe that secure attachment can be necessary for a healthy relationship, it is not generally considered necessary for love. It can be possible to be in love with someone—no matter what their or their partner's attachment style may be.

How to know if it's love or attraction? ›

If you are attracted to someone, you won't be able to stop thinking about that person. Attraction can in fact turn into obsession sometimes. And that can make you behave crazy. However, things like this do not happen when you are in love.

Am I still in love or just comfortable? ›

Emotional distance: Finding yourself emotionally detached from your partner, unable or maybe even uninterested in sharing your thoughts and feelings, and experiences may be an indicator of diminishing love. Lack of interest: Are you no longer interested in your partner's life and well-being (or vice versa)?

Can you love someone without attachment? ›

We can have people we love in our lives and have possessions, but not attach ourselves so tightly to them as if we own them. Love without attachment means being aware that our possessions can break, get stolen or change, and that sadly people can leave or die.

Do I love him or am I just lonely? ›

How do you feel when you're apart? Love: Sure, you miss your partner, but you're comfortable and secure when you're on your own. Loneliness: You feel anxious, empty, and lost when your partner is not around.

How to detach from someone you love deeply? ›

Begin by acknowledging your emotions without judgment. Allow yourself to feel whatever arises: sadness, anger, or longing. Then, establish clear boundaries to create space between you and the person. This might involve limiting contact, avoiding triggers, or even unfollowing them on social media.

How do people with attachment issues act? ›

Signs of disorganized attachment issues typically include: Difficulty regulating emotions, including extreme mood swings, dissociation, and numbness. Feeling overwhelmed and disconnected from one's own feelings and needs. Problems forming close relationships and trusting others.

Am I really in love or just attached? ›

When you're in love, you feel a deep sense of joy and contentment. When you're attached to someone, you have a persistent feeling in your gut that something is missing. There's an emptiness. You can't put your finger on it exactly, but you do know you just don't feel fulfilled.

How do you know if it's attachment or not love? ›

You know you're attached when you feel obsessed over someone and you have the urge to possess them. It's as if you're dependent on that person to make you feel good. And because of that, attachment can seem selfish. Conversely, love feels freeing and selfless.

Who gets more attached in a relationship? ›

While it might be assumed that women are more emotionally attuned and attached in relationships, the reality is that men can also experience deep emotional connections. Before a man gets emotionally attached, it is usually a long and complicated route.

How do you know if you have an attachment disorder? ›

Attachment disorder symptoms typically include difficulties forming healthy relationships, developing a positive sense of self, and regulating emotions. If a childhood attachment disorder goes untreated, these symptoms may extend into adulthood, known as an adult attachment disorder.

Am I in love or obsessed? ›

Obsession is a feeling of intense infatuation while love is a feeling of strong affection. Someone who is obsessed often has a need for constant contact, acts possessive, and ignores their partner's boundaries.

Does attachment issues mean you get attached easily? ›

If your parents weren't emotionally available or your needs weren't met as a child, you might get attached easily because you're afraid of being abandoned. People with anxious attachment styles crave intimacy but worry that others don't want to be with them.

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