Helping Women Learn To Love Their Authentic Selves

Main Office: 138 W. 25th St., New York, NY 10001

by Melanie Gibbons Taylor, LAC

January has a very specific energy. 

It’s hopeful. 
It’s motivating. 
And . . . . It’s also quietly panic-inducing. 

You have just survived the chaos of the holidays and now suddenly everyone is talking about goalsresolutionsbecoming their best self, and reinventing their entire personality by February! And if you’re anything like the people I sit with every day in therapy, your reaction might be one of the following: 

Here’s the thing most people don’t realize (but therapists absolutely do): 
 

As a couples therapist who specializes in attachment and relational patterns, I see this play out every January in my therapy sessions. People don’t struggle with resolutions because they lack discipline – they struggle because their attachment system is activated, and no one ever taught them how to work with it instead of against it. 

Yep. Even your goals are relational. 

Let’s talk about it. 

On the surface, resolutions are about habits: 

But underneath all of that? Resolutions are about worthsafety, and belonging

They’re about questions like: 

Those questions live squarely in the attachment system. 

Which means when January rolls around, your nervous system has opinions. (cue eyeroll here) 

If you’ve never heard of attachment styles, here’s the therapist-approved cliff notes: 

Let me be clear when I say this: No attachment style is “bad.” They are simply adaptive strategies you learned early on to stay safe in relationships. With that being said, it is important to note that they do influence how you relate to goals, change, and self-improvement. 

Let’s break it down. 

If you have an anxious attachment style, January can feel like a personal evaluation. 

You might: 

Anxiously attached folks often approach resolutions with the same energy they bring to relationships: 

“If I do this perfectly, I’ll finally be enough.” 

There’s often a quiet belief underneath the goal: 

“If I improve myself enough, I won’t be rejected.” 

When motivation dips (because it always does), it rarely feels like a normal part of being human – it feels like proof you’ve failed. And when failure feels threatening to your sense of safety or worth, your system jumps straight into avoidance or self-criticism to protect you. 

Quick reminder: 
Anxious attachment doesn’t need more discipline. 
It needs reassurance, flexibility, and goals rooted in self-trust instead of fear. 

If you lean avoidant, resolutions can feel… well, irritating. 

You might: 

Avoidantly attached folks often associate goals with pressure, control, or loss of autonomy. Somewhere in your nervous system is a voice saying: 

“If I commit to this, I’ll be trapped.” 

Rather than overcommitting, avoidant attachment tends to pull back and under commit. Self-improvement gets dismissed as unnecessary, even when there’s a real desire for growth, because pressure and obligation feel unsafe. 

Note from a therapist: 
Avoidant attachment doesn’t need to be forced into change. 
It needs choice, agency, and goals that feel self-directed – not imposed. 

Secure attachment doesn’t mean you love January or always stick to your goals. 

It means: 

Secure attachment allows for flexibility. It understands that change is non-linear and that effort doesn’t require perfection. 

And here’s the good news: secure attachment isn’t something you either have or don’t have – it’s something that can be developed, repaired, and strengthened throughout your life. 

Yes, even in adulthood. 
Yes, even if January usually wrecks you. 

This is where couples therapy and individual growth overlap in a big way. Sitting across from couples week after week, I’ve watched how attachment doesn’t just shape how we love – it shapes how we try to change. When couples learn to work with their attachment patterns instead of fighting them, both personal growth and relationship growth become more sustainable. 

Let me break it down for you. If your attachment system is activated around goals, it’s probably activated in your relationships too. 

The same patterns show up whether you’re: 

Self-improvement doesn’t happen in a vacuum. 
It happens inside a nervous system shaped by relationships. 

Let’s make January less dramatic and way more supportive – no emotional meltdowns required. This is self-improvement, not an episode of Survivor

For Anxious Attachment 

For Avoidant Attachment 

For Everyone 

Here’s what I wish more people knew: 

You don’t abandon goals because you’re lazy. 
You abandon them because something in your nervous system doesn’t feel safe. 

And safety isn’t about willpower. 
It’s about attachment. 

When growth feels supportive, we move toward it. 
When it feels threatening, we protect ourselves. 

If January usually feels heavy, overwhelming, or emotionally charged for you, nothing is wrong with you. 

Your attachment system is just doing its job. 

The work isn’t forcing yourself into change. 
It’s learning how to build enough emotional safety to grow without self-abandonment. 

And that – whether in relationships, self-improvement, or therapy – is where real transformation happens. 

If this blog hit a little too close to home… 
If you see your attachment patterns playing out in your goals and your relationships… 
If you’re tired of starting over every January… 

I am here to help! 

I specialize in attachment-focused therapyrelational trauma, and couples therapy, and I work with individuals and couples who want growth that actually lasts. 

✨ Book a consultation call 
Let’s talk about what support would look like for you this year. 

You don’t need a new version of yourself. 
You need a safer relationship with who you already are. 

And that’s something we can build – together.

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