Free Resource · Individual Growth · Wholistic Mental Health Care

Breaking Anxious Attachment PatternsA 7-Week Personal Challenge

This guide is yours — not your partner's. Seven weeks of daily practices, grounded in attachment research and neuroscience, that build on each other until the new pattern runs quietly in the background of your life.

Written by an HPCSA Registered Counsellor · Grounded in attachment theory and neuroplasticity research
66
median days for a new behaviour to begin feeling automatic
335
maximum days recorded. You are not behind — you are building
2–5
months most health habits take to feel established

Download Your Free 7-Week Challenge

Seven weeks won't heal it. They're enough to begin.

Your anxiety in relationships didn't form in a season — it formed over years of experiences that taught your nervous system connection was unreliable. That learning is deep, and changing it is slow. This guide gives you the first seven weeks: daily practices that build on each other until the new pattern runs quietly in the background of your life, instead of running you.


What's Inside

Seven weeks, each one building on the last

WEEK 1

Understanding Your Pattern

Seeing anxious attachment clearly, with curiosity instead of shame — as an adaptation, not a flaw.

WEEK 2

Recognising the Trigger

Catching the moment between the trigger and the reaction, so you can choose instead of being carried.

WEEK 3

Sitting with Space

Letting distance exist without immediately closing it — and discovering it's survivable.

WEEK 4

Releasing Reassurance

Beginning to build safety that doesn't depend entirely on what your partner says or does.

WEEK 5

Inner Safety

Building an internal anchor so you can receive connection better, not just need people less.

WEEK 6

Connect Without Pursuing

Offering connection in its purest form — warmly, openly, without requiring a specific response.

WEEK 7

Trusting the Quiet

What secure actually feels like — and how to keep building earned security beyond the guide.

Each week's practices carry forward — by Week 7 you're living the whole accumulated pattern.

Grounded in real research, not generic advice

Every practice in this guide is drawn from attachment theory, neuroscience, and clinical research — not pop psychology.

The threat response is fast

Neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux's research shows threat responses are processed before the thinking brain can evaluate whether they're real — which is why pausing has to be practised.

Self-compassion changes anxiety

Kristin Neff's research found people who can offer themselves warmth during distress show significantly lower anxiety and greater relationship satisfaction.

Security can be earned

Mary Main's studies confirm adults can move from insecure to secure attachment through consistent new relational experience — it's slow, but it's real and permanent.

Who this is for

This is for you if…

  • You recognise anxious patterns in yourself — checking in too often, fearing distance, needing reassurance
  • You're ready to do this work on yourself, independent of your partner
  • You want daily, structured practices rather than abstract insight alone
  • You're willing to commit to weeks, not days — real change is slow and this guide is honest about that

This isn't for…

  • A quick fix or a one-time read — the practices need repetition to work
  • Situations involving safety concerns, abuse, or coercion — please seek professional support directly
  • Something to do instead of therapy, if deeper patterns need more than a guide can hold

Sumarie Engelbrecht
About the Practice

Written by Sumarie Engelbrecht

This guide was written by Sumarie Engelbrecht, Founder and Owner of Wholistic Mental Health Care. Wholistic specialises in premarital and couples counselling, grounded in Gottman-informed and attachment-based approaches — practical, evidence-based, and never reductive.

HPCSA Registered Counsellor · PRC 0042480

Common questions

What is anxious attachment?

Anxious attachment is a relational pattern that develops from inconsistent early caregiving, where the nervous system learns to constantly monitor for signs of abandonment. It often shows up as checking in frequently, seeking reassurance, and reading distance as danger.

Can you heal anxious attachment on your own?

Research on earned secure attachment shows adults can move from insecure to secure attachment through consistent new experience, self-reflection, and sometimes therapy. This guide gives you a structured starting point — for many people, professional support alongside it makes the work more sustainable.

How long does it take to change an attachment pattern?

Research suggests a median of 66 days for a new behaviour to feel automatic, and up to 335 days for complex patterns. Attachment work is among the most complex change a person can undertake — this guide is built around seven weeks as a genuine beginning, not a full timeline.

What are signs of anxious attachment in relationships?

Common signs include frequent reassurance-seeking, difficulty tolerating a partner's need for space, reading silence or distance as rejection, and pursuit that can feel like pressure to the other person — even when it comes from genuine love.

Is this guide for individuals or couples?

This one is yours alone — it's designed for individual, personal work on your own attachment pattern, independent of your partner. It pairs well with couples-focused resources, but doesn't require your partner's participation.

Seven weeks won't heal it. They're enough to begin.

Your anxiety in relationships didn't form in a season — it formed over years of experiences that taught your nervous system connection was unreliable. That learning is deep, and changing it is slow. This guide gives you the first seven weeks: daily practices that build on each other until the new pattern runs quietly in the background of your life, instead of running you.


What's Inside

Seven weeks, each one building on the last

WEEK 1

Understanding Your Pattern

Seeing anxious attachment clearly, with curiosity instead of shame — as an adaptation, not a flaw.

WEEK 2

Recognising the Trigger

Catching the moment between the trigger and the reaction, so you can choose instead of being carried.

WEEK 3

Sitting with Space

Letting distance exist without immediately closing it — and discovering it's survivable.

WEEK 4

Releasing Reassurance

Beginning to build safety that doesn't depend entirely on what your partner says or does.

WEEK 5

Inner Safety

Building an internal anchor so you can receive connection better, not just need people less.

WEEK 6

Connect Without Pursuing

Offering connection in its purest form — warmly, openly, without requiring a specific response.

WEEK 7

Trusting the Quiet

What secure actually feels like — and how to keep building earned security beyond the guide.

Each week's practices carry forward — by Week 7 you're living the whole accumulated pattern.

Grounded in real research, not generic advice

Every practice in this guide is drawn from attachment theory, neuroscience, and clinical research — not pop psychology.

The threat response is fast

Neuroscientist Joseph LeDoux's research shows threat responses are processed before the thinking brain can evaluate whether they're real — which is why pausing has to be practised.

Self-compassion changes anxiety

Kristin Neff's research found people who can offer themselves warmth during distress show significantly lower anxiety and greater relationship satisfaction.

Security can be earned

Mary Main's studies confirm adults can move from insecure to secure attachment through consistent new relational experience — it's slow, but it's real and permanent.

Who this is for

This is for you if…

  • You recognise anxious patterns in yourself — checking in too often, fearing distance, needing reassurance
  • You're ready to do this work on yourself, independent of your partner
  • You want daily, structured practices rather than abstract insight alone
  • You're willing to commit to weeks, not days — real change is slow and this guide is honest about that

This isn't for…

  • A quick fix or a one-time read — the practices need repetition to work
  • Situations involving safety concerns, abuse, or coercion — please seek professional support directly
  • Something to do instead of therapy, if deeper patterns need more than a guide can hold

About the Practice

Written by Sumarie Engelbrecht

This guide was written by Sumarie Engelbrecht, Founder and Owner of Wholistic Mental Health Care. Wholistic specialises in premarital and couples counselling, grounded in Gottman-informed and attachment-based approaches — practical, evidence-based, and never reductive.

HPCSA Registered Counsellor · PRC 0042480

Common questions

What is anxious attachment?

Anxious attachment is a relational pattern that develops from inconsistent early caregiving, where the nervous system learns to constantly monitor for signs of abandonment. It often shows up as checking in frequently, seeking reassurance, and reading distance as danger.

Can you heal anxious attachment on your own?

Research on earned secure attachment shows adults can move from insecure to secure attachment through consistent new experience, self-reflection, and sometimes therapy. This guide gives you a structured starting point — for many people, professional support alongside it makes the work more sustainable.

How long does it take to change an attachment pattern?

Research suggests a median of 66 days for a new behaviour to feel automatic, and up to 335 days for complex patterns. Attachment work is among the most complex change a person can undertake — this guide is built around seven weeks as a genuine beginning, not a full timeline.

What are signs of anxious attachment in relationships?

Common signs include frequent reassurance-seeking, difficulty tolerating a partner's need for space, reading silence or distance as rejection, and pursuit that can feel like pressure to the other person — even when it comes from genuine love.

Is this guide for individuals or couples?

This one is yours alone — it's designed for individual, personal work on your own attachment pattern, independent of your partner. It pairs well with couples-focused resources, but doesn't require your partner's participation.

Individual & Couples Counselling · Wholistic Mental Health Care

Ready for SupportBeyond the Guide?

Attachment work is slow, serious, and worth doing with support. Wholistic offers individual counselling for this exact kind of attachment-informed work, alongside couples retreats for partners doing it together — all held by HPCSA Registered Counsellors.

Learn About Our Support →
© Wholistic Mental Health Care · Sumarie Engelbrecht · HPCSA PRC 0042480 wholisticmhc.com

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