Attachment.
I’ve been thinking a lot about attachment lately. Part of growth. Part of life. What is it?
In my mind, over-attachment in regards to relationship is a clinging to an outcome or expected course of action. We feel entitled to this.
You give me this, I get that. It feels justified. Ultimately though, attachment can lead to suffering if it goes unchecked. It’s unlikely that what we’re attached to can really fulfill all of our needs. That why we suffer.
Is attachment a choice?
Isn’t it just part of love or part of relationship? Can we separate love from attachment? I believe we can but I don’t think it’s easy. We often don’t realize it can be a choice to get overly attached.
Attachment is often confused with love. Let’s look at this a little deeper.
When we’re attached, we want to get something to feel ok.
Over-Attachment:
…..usually wants something
expects…
wishes…
If only…
if he did this….
when this happens…
why doesn’t she do this…
Wondering, asking, wanting someone or something to be different.
Wishing someone would change. Then I can be happy…then I’ll be safe in this relationship.
What are we really attached to?
Often we don’t even realize our inner attachments because they are beyond our conscious mind. They drive our behavior but they live in the unconscious.
It’s usually fear-based.
We typically want to feel loved, feel special, validated, liked, appreciated.
We want it from beyond ourself….We want it from someone else….
I need this from you to feel that.
I want your approval. I need you to see me. I need you to understand my point of view. I need to be right. I need to make you wrong so I get power. I want your affection. I want your attention. I want your love. I need to be understood and I need to understand you. I want respect and I want that from you.
We are attached to external gratification.
We are attached to feeling good but we are allowing the power to be in someone else’s hands.
We need them to do something in a certain way to feel ok.
They need to behave a certain way because they always have.
They should not change. They must not love me if they change. They might not need me if I see their behavior is different.
Expectations… wanting… clinging… hoping to be filled up. It is exhausting, futile and gives away our power.
What we don’t realize is that attachment is a choice we’ve made. It’s a set a of beliefs about what we think we need to feel ok.
Let’s continue.
What would it be like to love without attachment?
Wow is that possible? Would I even want that?
Loving without any expected outcome?
Sounds scary. Sounds vulnerable. Risky. Not exactly logical or responsible. Maybe it’s crazy.
Maybe it looks like this:
Love freely,
Love anyway.
Love when not loved back and love when it’s hard.
Love when they don’t deserve it.
How does that feel?
Lighter, more empowering. Be love instead of begging for it.
Attachments put our ok-ness in someone else’s power.
Let’s consider that perhaps we can do this for ourselves.
Let’s fill our own cup. We can be in our own power.
Let’s entertain the thought that everything we want we already have within us. What does that feel like?
What more is there to want when you have it all? When you feel complete, you don’t need to look to others to fill a hole or to feel ok.
Maybe try this on….
Be in this expansive state of consciousness, a place of fullness, and see how your relationship changes. If you are Whole in yourself, you don’t need anything. See how powerful you are. Be love instead of grasping or clinging. Try loving with out over- attachment of a certain wanting or needing something from that person.
When you’re willing to step aside of judgement and possessiveness, see what’s really there. You just might feel the love flow through… the love you’ve been yearning for.
It’s right there. Within you.

My clients ask me, “What is the best way to heal my gut?”