Survival styles are not diagnoses or fixed personality categories.
They represent intelligent nervous system adaptations to early disruptions in attachment and relational safety.
Each style reflects:
- A core developmental need
- A compromised capacity
- A specific nervous system organization
- An adaptive identity structure
1- Connection Survival Style
Core need: To feel bonded and connected
Compromised capacity: To remain autonomous within connection
Typical organization:
- Fear of abandonment
- Over-adaptation
- Difficulty being alone
- Loss of identity outside relationships
Core dilemma:
“If I differentiate, I lose connection.”
Therapeutic movement: Staying connected without abandoning oneself.
2- Attunement Survival Style
Core need: To be seen and recognized in one’s needs
Compromised capacity: To recognize and express personal needs
Typical organization:
- Difficulty identifying desires
- Minimizing personal needs
- Sensitivity to disappointment
Core dilemma:
“My needs are too much or inconvenient.”
Therapeutic movement: Developing the capacity to feel and articulate needs.
3- Trust Survival Style
Core need: To rely on a dependable caregiver
Compromised capacity: To trust without feeling vulnerable or dominated
Typical organization:
- Rigid self-sufficiency
- Difficulty asking for help
- Control or superiority postures
Core dilemma:
“If I depend, I lose power”.
Therapeutic movement: Integrating strength with vulnerability.
4- Autonomy Survival Style
Core need: To assert will and boundaries
Compromised capacity: To express healthy aggression
Typical organization:
- Difficulty saying no
- Suppressed anger
- Compliance or defensive independence
Core dilemma:
“If I assert myself, I lose love.”
Therapeutic movement: Expressing will without breaking connection.
5- Love–Sexuality Survival Style
Core need: To differentiate attachment from sexuality
Compromised capacity: To experience intimacy without confusion or shame
Typical organization:
- Confusion between love and sexual intensity
- Seduction as relational strategy
- Shame linked to desire
Core dilemma:
“Love requires performance or fusion.”
Therapeutic movement: Integrating love, desire, and safety.
A Global Perspective
It is important to remember:
- Most individuals embody a combination of styles.
- These adaptations were intelligent and protective.
- They ensured survival.
- They become limiting when they rigidify.
In NARM®, the work is not about fixing personality. It is about:
- Supporting nervous system regulation
- Clarifying early identity adaptations
- Restoring choice
- Strengthening connection to self
Healing does not mean becoming someone else. It means restoring flexibility where adaptation became fixed.
