Tag Archives: needs
Examining the Effect Unmet Childhood Needs Have on Adult Relationships
Our early relationships with caregivers shape our attachment style — our expectations for how relationships work. If your childhood needs weren’t fully met, you may have developed an insecure attachment style that sabotages your adult relationships. These childhood experiences shape how we view relationships, forming the internal working models of attachment we carry into adulthood. When your childhood needs for love, nurturing, and security are unmet, building healthy relationships as an adult can be difficult. Here is how our unmet childhood impacts our adult relationships.
Common Unmet Childhood Needs That Affect Relationships
Lack of Affection
Did your parents express affection openly while you were growing up? If not, you may struggle to show affection in your adult relationships. Physical touch and verbal affirmations are important for development, and their lack can affect your ability to be intimate with partners. Try to express affection, even if it feels unnatural at first. With practice, it will get easier.
Feeling Unheard
Children need to feel heard and understood. If your family didn’t allow you to share your thoughts and feelings, you probably felt lonely and unimportant. As an adult, you may be reluctant to open up to others or have difficulty listening without judgment. Work on improving your communication skills through active listening and speaking your truth with compassion.
Lack of Encouragement
Our self-esteem is profoundly shaped by the encouragement we receive in childhood. If you lack cheerleaders, you may doubt yourself and your abilities. Practice positive self-talk, celebrate your wins, and look for a partner who believes in and lifts you. You deserve to feel encouraged and supported.
Unreliability
If the adults in your life were unpredictable or undependable, you likely developed an anxious attachment style. You may cling to partners, fear abandonment, or have trouble trusting that your needs will be met. Look for reliable and consistent people with whom to build secure attachments. You can heal from an unreliable past through healthy relationships and learn to trust again.
How Unmet Childhood Needs Impact Adult Relationships
Intimacy Issues
Some people don’t receive enough affection, validation, or quality time with their caregivers as kids. As adults, they may struggle to open up to romantic partners or have trouble sustaining emotional intimacy because they never learned how. Don’t be afraid to communicate your needs to your partner and ask for the intimacy and affection you’ve always wanted.
Trouble Compromising
Not having your needs met as a child can make compromising within relationships difficult. You may feel resentful when you don’t get your way or feel anxious about not controlling outcomes. Practice active listening, be willing to understand other perspectives, and find mutually agreeable solutions. Learn to speak up for yourself while also respecting your partner’s needs.
Difficulty Trusting
If your childhood needs for safety, security, and reliability weren’t met, you may have trouble trusting your partner or being vulnerable in relationships. But don’t lose hope! Make sure to date someone who proves themselves trustworthy and communicates openly. As the relationship progresses, try opening up in small ways and look for signs that sharing more of yourself is safe. With time and patience, trust can be rebuilt.
Self-Esteem Problems
Not having your needs met as a child can damage your self-esteem, making you more prone to jealousy, control issues, or codependence in relationships. Work on loving yourself, setting boundaries, and not relying on your partner for validation. Pursue your interests and accomplishments to build confidence from the inside out. Learn to feel secure on your own two feet and have healthier relationships.
While changing the past is impossible, you can shape your future. If you had unmet needs growing up resulting in an attachment disorder, the first step toward healing is recognizing the need for healing. Book an appointment with us today so we can support you on this journey.
Why Insecurity Is Affecting Your Relationship and What To Do About It
You know that nagging feeling — the one telling you you’re not good enough for your partner? That’s insecurity talking. Insecurity can poison even the healthiest relationships, making you doubt yourself and your partner. It’s normal to feel insecure in a relationship from time to time. But chronic insecurity can damage the foundation of trust and intimacy you’ve built. If your partner frequently doubts themselves, you, or the relationship, it’s essential to understand why.
How Insecurity Negatively Impacts Your Relationship
Insecurity inevitably seeps into a relationship. It makes you question your partner’s feelings and motives, even when there’s no reason to doubt them.
1. Constantly Seeking Validation
Feeling insecure means constantly seeking validation from your partner. While reassurance is normal in a healthy relationship, needing it daily or multiple times a day is exhausting for your partner and makes you seem needy. It also prevents real intimacy from forming.
2. Having Trouble Trusting
When you’re insecure, you have difficulty trusting that your partner’s feelings for you are honest and lasting. You may accuse them of things they haven’t done or worry they will leave you for someone else. This lack of trust damages the foundation of your relationship and may even become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
3. Depending on Your Partner for Happiness
Relying on your partner to make you feel happy and secure puts an unrealistic burden on the relationship. No one person can be responsible for another’s happiness and security. When you make your partner the center of your world, you lose your sense of self and independence, causing resentment.
4. Comparing Yourself to Others
Feeling insecure often means comparing yourself to others and worrying you don’t measure up in your partner’s eyes. But the truth is, your partner chose to be with you for who you are — flaws and all. Comparing yourself to others only makes you feel worse and damages your self-esteem and the relationship.
Tips to Overcome Insecurity as a Couple
1. Communicate Openly
Talk to your partner about your feelings of insecurity. Let them know specifically what triggers your doubts and anxieties. Hearing them reassure you can help put your mind at ease. Make sure the lines of communication stay open — if new concerns arise, express them immediately instead of bottling them up.
2. Reassure Each Other
Give your partner frequent compliments, affection, and words of affirmation. Hold hands, tell each other you love them. Physical intimacy leads to emotional intimacy and security. Also, express your commitment to the relationship and future together.
3. Learn to Love Yourself First
The foundation of any healthy relationship is self-love. When you accept and appreciate yourself, you will be in a much better position to find a caring partner who loves you for who you are. However, many people struggle with insecurity and a lack of self-esteem, which can seriously damage relationships.
4. Address the Root Cause of Your Insecurity
Your insecurity likely stems from past experiences that caused you to doubt yourself. Maybe you had critical parents, bullying, or unhealthy relationships. The first step is acknowledging how these experiences impacted your self-worth. Speaking to a therapist or counselor can help you work through these issues.
5. Challenge Negative Self-Talk
Notice your negative thoughts about yourself and try to reframe them in a more positive, realistic way. For example, if you think, “No one will ever love me,” change that to, “I am worthy of love, and there are caring people who will appreciate me.” Speak to yourself with compassion and encouragement. Over time, the negative self-talk will fade.
6. Set Boundaries
Don’t let your insecurity cause you to become overly accommodating or a people-pleaser. Prioritize your needs while respecting your partner’s. Say “no” when you need to, and don’t be afraid to express your feelings. Healthy boundaries will boost your confidence and lead to better connections.
Avoid blaming each other, and focus on open communication. If you need help achieving this, book an appointment with us today.
How Insecurity Can Affect Your Relationship
Even if they don’t admit it, every person is insecure about something. We all would like to change something about ourselves, even if we don’t admit it out loud. We may not like our physical appearance or some part of our personality.
Additionally, it’s common to feel insecure about the people in our lives. You might question the intentions of your partner or a new friend. Maybe you grapple with questions such as, “Why haven’t they left me yet,” and catastrophize the event of your partner leaving, even if there’s no evidence of that occurring.
While we all have insecurities, they can impact our relationships. Here are a few ways and, most importantly, how to deal with them.
Insecurity and Its Impact On Relationships
Constant Need for Reassurance
It’s normal and completely human to feel the need for validation occasionally. After all, we all want to know that we are loved, appreciated, or any number of things. But how often are you doing this? Does it seem as if you are the one constantly asking for reassurance about your own worth with your partner?
This could be a sign of many things. One, it is a classic sign that, in some ways, you are insecure about your relationship or your place in your partner’s life. Alternatively, it could indicate that your partner isn’t communicating with you. Also, how often are you giving your partner the same reassurance?
Regardless of the situation, this creates an imbalance in the relationship when it seems one-sided versus a partnership.
Codependency
When you rely on someone else for happiness, you lose some of your independence. This can also lead to a risk of the relationship becoming codependent.
When you are insecure about your relationship or yourself, you will turn to your partner to seek validation. As we mentioned earlier, that’s completely fine. However, when you cannot find a good give-and-take, it can put a lot of strain on the relationship.
Sometimes, one partner relies more on the other, but it should never be one-sided.
Conflict
Inevitably, insecurity leads to arguments and tension in a relationship. When one partner constantly needs reassurance, it adds consistent pressure on the other person to do so. High tensions in a relationship can affect the relationship by causing a couple to argue about absolutely everything.
Insecurities can lead to toxic behaviors that are fueled by jealousy. For example, due to insecurities in a relationship, you might unintentionally cause arguments. When one person is constantly doubting the other, it can put a wedge between them. One of the consequences of this could be that trust is lost.
How to Deal With Insecurity
If you are dealing with insecurity in your relationship, it is likely making you feel as if the relationship is doomed. However, even though insecurity is present in the relationship, that does not mean the relationship is toxic.
While insecurities may not harm the relationship, they can cause some of the issues we listed above and more if they become out of control. Dealing with insecurities, whether it is with ourselves or our partners, is a deeply personal experience. When it comes to our own insecurities, we often don’t want to face them due to the root cause of why they are occurring. And knowing your partner has insecurities is just as challenging because you don’t want to bring them up and hurt their feelings.
If you aren’t sure where to start, don’t hesitate to reach out to us for couples counseling. Therapy can help you tackle the issues that are causing problems in your relationship as well as strengthen your connection with each other.
Wants and Needs
I’ve been asked (or maybe I’m just talking about it this week) on the difference between needs and wants.
When I was a new mom and I was wondering how the heck I would take care of 2 kids (a baby and a toddler) at the same time while I was breastfeeding one and the other has never left my side, arggghhh!! I was given the best advice:
Babies have needs, toddlers have wants, decide who needs you more!!
Wow, that was so powerful, quotable and helpful because when you’re sleep deprived and not knowing what you’re doing, how do you do it all? Um, you take turns, take a breathe and figure it out.
So, I was thinking about this again with my clients this week. I had some great conversations about it and how we can think about what we need in our relationships compared to what we want.
What I believe my needs are
Trust
So important to me to be able to trust my partner. This takes on a different meaning for me because I can trust him not to cheat on me, but I can’t always trust that he will do what he says. I need someone that will do what they say and say what they will do.
Emotions
I’m a therapist and anyone that’s with me needs to know that talking about emotions is important to me. I need to work through things, get rid of the upset feelings and get to the true emotions behind what we’re talking about. Guess I can call them triggers as well.
Co-Parenting
Yes, there can only be one parent that is working at a time, but there are two parents that need to be parenting all the time. Even though I work, and so does he, I need to feel as if our children are both of our responsibilities all the time. Work in progress here.
Talking
This is huge for me and I need this so much. I need to talk things out and work out what needs to be worked out. The silence is a killer for me. Huge need is to talk.
Let’s switch to some of my wants
Plans
I’m a planner and I like to have plans made. Something about having plans made is soothing to me and lets me get excited about things and helps me stay calm. My partner is a “spur of the moment” kinda guy so this is always a work in progress.
Vacations
I’m putting this in the wants section because it’s not a need. I do enjoy going away, seeing new things and of course planning it all!
Healthy Lifestyle
This is a need for me and I do this personally to stay sane, but it’s a want in my life because I can’t make anyone do anything solely for me. Maybe it’s a want/need!
In Summary
I’m going to stop there because I can add a lot more wants but in reality, I’m okay with getting my needs met. My needs are my core and when I get my needs met, I’m happy and content with my relationship.
How about you? Do you know your wants and needs? Do you need help distinguishing them Let’s hear from you and how you distinguish the two.