Why You Keep Repeating the Same Relationship Patterns — and How Attachment Styles Actually Change (with Thais Gibson)

为何你总是重复相同的关系模式——以及依恋风格实际上是如何改变的(与Thais Gibson)

Relationship Renovation | Couples | Love | Advice | Intimacy | Communication | Marriage

2026-01-09

43 分钟
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Why do couples swear they’ll “do better next time” — and then fall into the exact same fights again? In this episode, we’re joined by Thais Gibson, leading attachment theory expert and founder of The Personal Development School, to unpack why relationship change often doesn’t stick — and what actually works at the subconscious and nervous system level. We talk about how attachment styles, core wounds, and nervous system responses quietly drive conflict, shutdown, and disconnection — even when both partners deeply care. Thais shares practical tools for rewiring attachment patterns so couples and individuals can move toward secure attachment, emotional safety, and real connection. If you’ve ever felt stuck, triggered, or discouraged because insight alone hasn’t changed your relationship, this conversation will give you hope and concrete next steps. In This Episode, We Cover:Why insight and “trying harder” don’t change relationship patternsHow attachment wounds form — and why they repeat in adult relationshipsThe difference between subconscious vs. unconscious patternsWhy couples fight about surface issues (like laundry or tone) when the real pain runs deeperHow anxious, avoidant, and fearful-avoidant attachment styles experience conflict differentlyThe role of the nervous system in emotional shutdown, defensiveness, and reactivityA step-by-step tool for rewiring core attachment wounds using memory, imagery, and emotionWhy affirmations often fail — and what works insteadHow partners unknowingly validate each other’s deepest fearsWhat secure attachment actually looks like in real relationships (not perfection)Key Takeaways:You’re not broken — your nervous system learned patterns to surviveMost relationship conflict is driven by subconscious meaning, not the present momentAttachment styles can be rewired, not just managedEmotional safety changes behavior faster than logicSecure attachment is a skill, not a personality traitAbout Our GuestThais Gibson is a globally recognized expert in attachment theory and the founder of The Personal Development School, where she has helped millions of people understand and rewire their relationship patterns. Her work integrates neuroscience, attachment theory, and practical tools for lasting emotional change. Resources Mentioned:Free Attachment Style Quiz: https://www.personaldevelopmentschool.comYouTube: Thais Gibson – Personal Development SchoolInstagram: @thepersonaldevelopmentschool Who This Episode Is ForCouples who feel disconnected but still careIndividuals stuck in repeating relationship patternsAnyone curious about attachment theory beyond surface-level explanationsPartners who want real tools — not just insight Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/he-said-she-said/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
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  • Today, if you not only wanna learn more about attachment theory,

  • but also have some very direct, practical tools to close that gap in your relationship,

  • stay tuned, we 're interviewing an expert, Thais Gibson.

  • Hello all, and welcome to the Relationship Renovation Podcast.

  • I am Tara Kerwin.

  • And my name is EJ Kerwin, and we are super excited to welcome Thais Gibson to the podcast today.

  • Thais is a leading expert in attachment theory, and she 's the founder of The Personal Development School,

  • where she 's helped millions of people better understand their patterns in relationships.

  • In this conversation, we 're going to explore how attachment,

  • emotional safety, and nervous system responses shape connection.

  • Welcome, Thais.

  • Before we started recording, we were talking like a lot of our audience loves the idea of like.

  • Oh my gosh, we can still get to secure attachment from like this place of like avoidance or anxiety.

  • And we're like, yes.

  • And now we have an expert in the field to talk about it.

  • But I do think like before we go there, what made you do what you're doing?

  • Oh my gosh.

  • I mean, how long do we have?

  • To be honest, I grew up in just a home where there was a lot of chaos,

  • a lot of ups and downs, a lot of fighting, a lot of tough things I saw at a young age.