Attachment & Faith
How you were loved growing up taught your heart a pattern. That pattern has a name: your attachment style.
A pattern is not who you are. It is something your heart learned — and hearts can learn again.
This can affect…
"Stop confusing the Holy Spirit with your messed up nervous system."
Many people's attachment style unfortunately makes it harder for them to realize what is God's voice.
Which voice sounds like you?
"I'm afraid of being left — or of letting Him down."
- Reads God's silence as rejection
- Constant fear that God is disappointed
- Reassurance-seeking, compulsive sign-seeking
- Scrupulosity, fear-based "callings"
- Over-dependent
"I can only count on myself."
- Intellectualized, emotionally distant faith
- Numbing or relief mistaken for peace
- Likes control. Fears surrender & vulnerability
- Dismisses emotional conviction
- Discomfort with closeness
- Struggles to receive love
"I want love — and I fear it."
- Swings between closeness and withdrawal
- Terror of God; feels unworthy of love
- Chaotic discernment, drawn to extremes
"I am loved. I am safe."
- Experiences God as loving and trustworthy
- Discernment stays calm. Fear isn't hijacking perception
- Repents without collapsing into shame
Most of us are a mix. Not sure? Take a quiz →
Basic Steps for Your Brain
Even seminarians are seen by professionals — but if you're having trouble accessing one, do these practices in the meantime.
Anxious
- Stop earning
Nothing you do earns God's love, and nothing makes Him stop loving you — not even sin.
Sin wounds your friendship with Him — and Confession mends it, every time. His love never leaves, even mid-fall.
Your prayers were never "earning," either. They're love spending time together — the only work left is letting yourself be loved.
- Name the panic
Fear can feel like God rushing you. But God's voice brings peace, not panic — He came to Elijah as a whisper, not the storm (1 Kings 19).
So when a feeling rushes or scares you, slow down. You don't have to judge it alone — bring it to a confessor or someone wise you trust.
- Reframe God
If the grown-ups who raised you were harsh — or just stretched thin — God can start to look that way too. And sometimes fear has no one to blame at all; it still isn't the truth about God.
This isn't about accusing your parents. It's about letting God show you His real face as Father — and letting Mary, Jesus's own mother, be a mother to you too.
- Heal from scrupulosity
Scrupulosity is false guilt: a broken alarm that screams "sin!" when there is no fire. The fear is real; the sin is not.
How do you tell real guilt from the alarm? Real guilt points to one clear thing and rests after Confession; false guilt stays foggy and is never satisfied.
Bring the feelings to God as they are — no cleaning them up first. The Scrupulosity page goes deeper →
Avoidant
- Sit with fear
Don't shut down. Stay with the fear and ask why closeness feels so dangerous to you.
- Stay open
Stay teachable: let God's plan reshape yours. He provides beyond your logic, so He's safe to lean on even when leaning feels unsafe.
- Risk in prayer
Let prayer touch your heart, not just your head. Numbness that feels like peace is still numbness.
- Love anyway
Avoidance means leaving early so you can't be left. Aim higher: love fully, and trust God to hold you if love is ever taken away.
Disorganizedalso called fearful-avoidant
- Seriously prioritize therapy
This wound runs deep, and it deserves real help. Seeing a trauma-trained therapist isn't weakness — it's the bravest first step. Find a Catholic therapist →
- Name the wound
Understand what happened to you, with a guide beside you. A good therapist helps you open this gently, at a pace you can bear.
And if you've been sorting it alone for years, you haven't ruined anything. You've been carrying it without help — and that can change.
- Rebuild the Father
Jesus taught us to call God "Father." But if your own father was absent or unsafe, that very word can sting.
Healing what 'father' means to you is central — and God is patient while it heals.
- Let the healer in
Healing needs the Healer. Stay in safe, steady relationships — and God is perfectly steady.
Securewhere we're all headed
- Trust in steps
Do small things that take real trust, then bigger ones. Each one gives God room to prove He can be trusted.
- Name the worst case
Say your worst fear out loud and look at it. Most of its power drains away.
- Choose hope
Make choices from hope, not fear. And ask God for open hands: loving good things without gripping them.
(Open hands aren't the opposite of secure attachment — a heart that knows it's safe can finally hold gifts loosely.)
- Take action
Walking beats overthinking. Move, say no to the next temptation — just the next one — and trust God to redirect you.
Life Changing Books
Attached
A short, friendly book on why you love the way you do. (Amir Levine & Rachel Heller)
Find the book →