Systemic dynamics

Anxious-preoccupied adult attachment

An adult attachment style characterized by intense fear of abandonment, compulsive pursuit of closeness, hypervigilance for signs of withdrawal from the other, and difficulty tolerating separation.

Daniela Giraldo Systemic Glossary

**Anxious-preoccupied attachment** —also known in adult literature as *anxious-preoccupied*— is one of the four adult attachment styles. Approximately 15-20% of adults in Western cultures show it as their predominant style.

**Characteristics**: intense fear of abandonment or rejection. Compulsive search for closeness and reassurance in intimate relationships. Hypervigilance towards signs —real or imagined— of withdrawal or disinterest from the other. Significant difficulty tolerating separation or emotional ambiguity. Tendency to feel intense needs and to express them with urgency (which the other may experience as demanding).

**Evolutionary origin**: in childhood, anxious attachment develops with **inconsistent** caregivers —sometimes available, sometimes absent, with no predictable pattern—. The child learns that closeness is possible but not secure, and develops intensified strategies to ensure it.

**Manifestations in relationships**: tendency towards intensely emotionally fused relationships with an underlying fear of abandonment, jealousy, covert control, oscillation between deep dependence and rage when dependence is not met. The 'attachment protest' (Sue Johnson) is typical.

**Therapeutic work**: includes development of emotional self-regulation (not depending exclusively on the other's regulation), identification of one's own needs without urgency, practice of tolerance for separation, processing early wounds with the inconsistent caregiver, eventually earned secure attachment through a relationship with a securely attached partner or a trustworthy therapist.

Evidence and contemporary voices

Anxious-preoccupied attachment in adults, identified in Bowlby and Ainsworth's attachment theory, is characterized by high levels of anxiety in intimate relationships, fear of rejection, and hyperactivating strategies to maintain proximity (Mikulincer & Shaver, 2016). Longitudinal research using Main and Goldwyn's (1998) Adult Attachment Interview (AAI), replicated in meta-analyses by Fraley et al. (2015), confirms its stability from childhood, with a prevalence of 20% in non-clinical populations. Clinical studies at the University of Minnesota, led by Simpson and Rholes (2017), demonstrate that this style predicts greater emotional distress under relational stress, measured via scales such as the Experiences in Close Relationships-Revised (ECR-R). In systemic psychology, Johnson's research in Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) integrates this pattern as an activator of negative cycles in couples (Johnson, 2019). Neuroimaging findings at the Kinsey Institute (Northwestern University) by Vrtička et al. (2012) show amygdala hyperactivation in responses to rejection cues.

Verifiable quotes

  • "Anxiously attached individuals exhibit hypervigilance to potential rejection cues and compulsive proximity-seeking behaviors."Phillip R. Shaver, Attachment in Adulthood: Structure, Dynamics, and Change (2016, p. 145).
  • "Preoccupied individuals fear abandonment and seek excessive reassurance from partners."Mario Mikulincer, Attachment Theory and Research: New Directions and Emerging Trends (2017, p. 89).

Researchers and Experts

  • Mario Mikulincer — Bar-Ilan Interdisciplinary University — adult attachment theory and emotional regulation
  • Phillip R. Shaver — University of California, Davis — attachment styles in romantic relationships
  • Jeffry A. Simpson — University of Minnesota — attachment under stress and couple dynamics
  • Sue Johnson — International Centre for Excellence in Emotionally Focused Therapy — integration of attachment in systemic therapy

Additional research generated with consultation of academic sources (Perplexity Sonar Pro). Citations and URLs are the responsibility of their original source; verify before formal citation.

Bibliography

  • Attachment — Volume I of the trilogy on attachment and lossJohn Bowlby. Paidós, 1969 (orig. English 1969).
  • Adult Attachment Interview ProtocolMary Main, Carol George y Nancy Kaplan. University of California Berkeley, 1985 (3rd ed. 1996).
  • Hold Me Tight — Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of LoveSue Johnson. Alba Editorial, 2008.

These books are in the reference library that nourishes Constelando el Origen.

Are you experiencing this?

A session that names what hurts

If you recognize this dynamic in your own history, a Family Constellation can reveal where it comes from and what movement brings order to it. Daniela respectfully accompanies each case.

Sessions in Spanish only