Könyv Anxious Attachment R. V. Langford

Anxious Attachment

The Psychology of Why You Fear Abandonment and How to Build Genuine Security

Szerző: R. V. Langford
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Beszállítói készleten
Küldés 9-15 napon belül
5 852 Ft
Your fear of abandonment is not a personality flaw. It is a calibrated nervous system response. This...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
214
EAN
9798183536690
Enbook ID
52994840
Súly
294
Méretek
152 x 229 x 11

Teljes leírás

Your fear of abandonment is not a personality flaw. It is a calibrated nervous system response. This is the science of why, and what it means.

If you have been told you are too needy, too sensitive, or too much in relationships, and if that description has landed with a recognition you cannot argue away, there is a scientific explanation for what is happening. The anxious attachment pattern is not a character deficit. It is the documented output of an attachment system that learned, in the earliest years of life, that closeness is uncertain and that the only way to keep it is to monitor for its loss continuously.

This is not a guide to becoming less clingy. It is a rigorous, research-grounded account of the anxious attachment pattern: its developmental origins, its neurobiological signatures, its interpersonal dynamics, and the specific conditions under which it moves toward security.

What this book covers:

  • Why the anxiously attached nervous system reads ordinary ambiguity in a partner's behaviour as evidence of threat, and why this reading is automatic rather than chosen
  • How hyperactivating strategies, as documented by Mikulincer and Shaver, amplify attachment signals and proximity-seeking behaviour in ways that are largely counterproductive
  • What the protest cycle is: the predictable sequence from perceived distance through protest behaviour through exhaustion through despair, and why it repeats across relationships rather than being learned out of
  • What rejection sensitivity research reveals about why anxiously attached people perceive rejection in ambiguous signals with a speed and certainty that bears no relationship to the actual likelihood of rejection
  • Why reassurance-seeking produces short-term relief and long-term maintenance of the anxious state, and how this mechanism works physiologically as well as relationally
  • What the HPA axis and cortisol research shows about the biological cost of sustained relational threat monitoring in anxiously attached adults
  • What the evidence on secure base priming reveals about how and why anxious attachment moves toward security

R. V. Langford draws directly on the research of Bowlby, Mikulincer, Shaver, Downey, Feldman, and the neuroscientists who have mapped the physiological consequences of attachment anxiety, producing the most research-precise account of this pattern available to the general reader.

Readers who recognise the pattern and want the science behind it, rather than a quiz result or a communication skills programme, will find what they are looking for here.