Attachment theory reveals how our earliest relationship patterns shape the way we experience emotional infidelity throughout life.
The Four Attachment Styles and Emotional Infidelity
Secure attachment: Associated with lower emotional infidelity risk and better recovery. Comfortable with emotional closeness and support-seeking.
Anxious attachment: Hyperactivation of the attachment system amplifies emotional infidelity. Fear of abandonment intensifies distress.
Avoidant attachment: Deactivation suppresses acknowledgment of emotional infidelity, delaying treatment. Appears fine while suffering.
Disorganized attachment: Most associated with severe emotional infidelity, particularly trauma-related conditions.
How Attachment Patterns Develop Through Emotional Infidelity
Early caregiving experiences create internal working models — unconscious expectations about relationships that directly influence emotional infidelity vulnerability.
Changing Your Attachment Style for Better Emotional Infidelity Outcomes
Attachment patterns are changeable through therapy, particularly attachment-focused approaches, and through 'earned security' from healthy relationships.