Anxiety in Relationships
Anxiety often shows up as hyper-vigilance and fear of disconnection.
Common patterns
- Constant reassurance-seeking (“Are we okay?”)
- Overthinking tone, timing, or texts
- Difficulty tolerating uncertainty or emotional distance
- Fear of abandonment → clinging or people-pleasing
- Interpreting neutral behavior as rejection
Impact on the relationship
- One partner feels “never enough”
- Conflict escalates quickly due to fear, not facts
- Emotional exhaustion on both sides
Core wound: “I might lose you.”

Trauma in Relationships
Trauma doesn’t live in the past—it activates in the present.
Common patterns
- Fight: defensiveness, anger, criticism
- Flight: emotional withdrawal, avoidance, shutting down
- Freeze: numbness, dissociation, going blank
- Fawn: appeasing, over-accommodating, losing self
Impact on the relationship
- Partners argue about the present but react to the past
- Mismatch of needs for closeness vs. safety
- Cycles of pursue–withdraw or attack–retreat
Core wound: “I’m not safe.”
ADHD in Relationships
ADHD is not a motivation issue—it’s a regulation issue.
Common patterns
- Emotional intensity or rapid mood shifts
- Forgetfulness that feels like not caring
- Interrupting or difficulty listening under stress
- Rejection Sensitivity (deep hurt from perceived criticism)
- Struggles with follow-through and consistency
Impact on the relationship
- One partner feels overwhelmed or criticized
- The other feels misunderstood or “always failing”
- Escalation happens fast, repair feels slow
Core wound: “I’m too much—or not enough.”
When These Overlap (Very Common)
Anxiety + trauma + ADHD often stack, intensifying cycles:
- Anxiety fuels fear
- Trauma fuels reactivity or shutdown
- ADHD fuels impulsivity and emotional flooding
The result?
Big reactions, missed intentions, and painful misattunement—despite genuine love.
What Actually Helps
- Naming the pattern instead of blaming the person
- Slowing the nervous system before problem-solving
- Learning regulation skills (not just communication skills)
- Repairing after conflict—not avoiding it
- Building safety, predictability, and emotional clarity
Nancy Travers is an Orange County Counseling professional. If you need safe, effective
counseling services, please get in touch. You can reach her here: