- Secure attachment: People with a secure attachment style feel comfortable with intimacy and seek out close relationships. They have a positive view of themselves and others and are able to regulate their emotions effectively.
- Anxious attachment: People with an anxious attachment style are often preoccupied with their relationships and worry about whether their partner will be available and responsive. They may be clingy or demanding in their relationships and struggle with emotional regulation.
- Avoidant attachment: People with an avoidant attachment style are uncomfortable with intimacy and may push others away when they get too close. They often have a negative view of themselves and others and struggle with emotional regulation.

Attachment theory
Attachment theory is a psychological framework that explains how early childhood experiences shape our ability to form and maintain relationships throughout our lives. It was first developed by British psychoanalyst John Bowlby and later expanded upon by American psychologist Mary Ainsworth.
At its core, attachment theory proposes that our attachment style – the way we connect and relate to others – is based on the quality of our early childhood relationships with our primary caregivers. These relationships shape our expectations of how others will respond to us, and how we should respond to them in return.
There are three main attachment styles:
About Jón Ágúst Guðjónsson
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