Peer-reviewed psychological research on relationships. Three ways to begin:
Map your attachment pattern to one of six evidence-based archetypes.
30 peer-reviewed guides on attachment, communication, and recovery.
A personalised intervention plan from 48 clinical questions.
All content is grounded in peer-reviewed research. No account required.
Select two archetypes to see a detailed, evidence-based analysis of how they interact — their strengths, friction points, and growth path together.
Anchor provides safety; Seeker's anxiety can periodically disrupt it
Seeker's indirect protest behaviours create communication noise
Seeker's flooding can make resolution difficult without intervention
Seeker's emotional depth creates genuine connection when anxiety is managed
Stable with growth work; at risk if Seeker's anxiety is left unaddressed
This pairing works when the Anchor is patient and the Seeker is self-aware. The Seeker's hypervigilance to abandonment cues can be exhausting for the Anchor, who may eventually feel that no amount of reassurance is enough. The key dynamic is whether the Seeker can use the Anchor's stability as a corrective emotional experience rather than a trigger for escalating demands.
The Seeker needs to develop self-soothing skills (mindfulness, cognitive reappraisal) rather than relying entirely on the Anchor for regulation. The Anchor benefits from understanding that the Seeker's anxiety is a neurobiological pattern, not a personal accusation. Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) is highly effective for this pairing.
Research basis: Simpson, J.A., Rholes, W.S. & Nelligan, J.S. (1992). Support seeking and support giving within couples in an anxiety-provoking situation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62(3), 434–446.
Read the full profile for each archetype — including their Big Five traits, blind spots, and growth edges.