Psychologist Eduardo Santos

How to Overcome Attachment trauma in same-sex relationships

Complete guide with signs, consequences, and paths to healing

Eduardo Santos
By Psychologist Eduardo Santos · Published April 7, 2026

Attachment trauma is a wound that forms early in life when the relationships we depend on for safety, comfort, and love are unpredictable, frightening, or absent. These early experiences create a template — a working model of what relationships are, what we can expect from others, and what we are worth — that shapes every significant relationship in our adult lives.

Attachment trauma does not require dramatic abuse. It can result from parents who were emotionally unavailable, inconsistent in their love, frightening in their anger, or simply unable to attune to their child's emotional needs. The wound is not always obvious, but its impact on adult relationships is profound.

Understanding your attachment patterns with compassion — not blame — is the beginning of healing.

Signs of attachment trauma in same-sex relationships

  • !You alternate between desperately needing closeness and feeling overwhelmed when you get it
  • !Perceived rejection or abandonment, even minor, triggers disproportionately intense emotional reactions
  • !You struggle to trust partners despite evidence that they are trustworthy — the fear of being hurt feels constant
  • !You either cling to relationships even when they are harmful (fear of abandonment) or keep people at a distance to protect yourself (fear of intimacy)
  • !Your emotional responses in relationships often feel out of proportion to the immediate situation — as if older wounds are being activated
  • !You struggle to ask for what you need, either because you fear being a burden or because you fear rejection

What to Do

  1. 1Seek attachment-focused therapy: approaches like EMDR, somatic therapy, and attachment-based psychotherapy are specifically designed to heal attachment wounds
  2. 2Learn about your attachment style — secure, anxious, avoidant, or disorganized — to understand your patterns with compassion rather than judgment
  3. 3Practice noticing when your present-moment reactions are being amplified by old wounds: 'is this about now, or is this about then?'
  4. 4Gradually build experiences of secure attachment — in therapy, in safe friendships, and eventually in romantic relationships — that begin to update your working model
  5. 5Be patient with yourself: attachment patterns developed over years and are not changed quickly

Develop Your Emotional Superpowers

Psychologist Eduardo Santos' complete method.

I Want to Break Free Now

Psychological Impact

Unaddressed attachment trauma perpetuates relationship cycles that confirm the original wound: the person with abandonment trauma behaves in ways that sometimes push partners away; the person with avoidant attachment pushes away the intimacy they also need. These patterns are not character flaws — they are outdated survival strategies that need updating.

The good news: the brain is plastic, and attachment patterns can change. Therapy, secure relationships, and intentional practice can all contribute to earned secure attachment, regardless of the wounds of early experience.

When to Seek Professional Help

If your relationship patterns cause you repeated pain, if you recognize yourself in descriptions of anxious or avoidant attachment, or if your early experiences were marked by significant loss, neglect, or instability, please consider attachment-focused therapy. This work is among the most transformative available in the mental health field.

Your early wounds do not define your future. Healing is possible, and you deserve relationships that feel safe.

— Psychologist Eduardo Santos

Develop Your Emotional Superpowers

In the e-book Superpowers Against Abusive Relationships, Psychologist Eduardo Santos teaches how to transform self-esteem and self-confidence into tools of protection and liberation.

I Want to Break Free Now

149 five-star ratings on Doctoralia · 7-day guarantee

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main signs of attachment trauma in same-sex relationships?
The main signs include: You alternate between desperately needing closeness and feeling overwhelmed when you get it; Perceived rejection or abandonment, even minor, triggers disproportionately intense emotional reactions; You struggle to trust partners despite evidence that they are trustworthy — the fear of being hurt feels constant; You either cling to relationships even when they are harmful (fear of abandonment) or keep people at a distance to protect yourself (fear of intimacy). Recognizing these patterns is the first step to seeking help.
How to deal with attachment trauma in same-sex relationships?
The fundamental steps are: Seek attachment-focused therapy: approaches like EMDR, somatic therapy, and attachment-based psychotherapy are specifically designed to heal attachment wounds; Learn about your attachment style — secure, anxious, avoidant, or disorganized — to understand your patterns with compassion rather than judgment; Practice noticing when your present-moment reactions are being amplified by old wounds: 'is this about now, or is this about then?'; Gradually build experiences of secure attachment — in therapy, in safe friendships, and eventually in romantic relationships — that begin to update your working model. Professional support is strongly recommended.
Is it possible to overcome attachment trauma?
Yes. Your early wounds do not define your future. Healing is possible, and you deserve relationships that feel safe. With adequate support — professional and social — recovery is not only possible but the path to a fuller life.
Important notice: The content of this article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not replace evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment by a qualified mental health professional. If you are in an abusive situation, please seek specialized help through your local domestic violence resources.
Psychologist Eduardo Santos

Psychologist Eduardo Santos

Clinical psychologist focused on emotional health, relationships, and self-esteem. 149 five-star ratings on Doctoralia. Author of Superpowers Against Abusive Relationships.

About the author →