The Virtual Couch

They Said All the Right Things (and Nothing Changed): The Anxious-Avoidant Trap w/Mackie Overbay

Mar 31, 2026
Mackie Overbay, daughter of the host who recently navigated a painful breakup, shares candid lessons from her twenties. The conversation unpacks “mouth sounds” — persuasive words without follow-through. They explore anxious-avoidant attachment, why familiar pain feels like love, the power of consideration, and Mackie’s breakup playbook: feel it, trust impermanence, and choose yourself over settling.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Why Mouth Sounds Feel Real But Change Nothing

  • "Mouth sounds" are convincing verbal apologies that lower tension but often don't lead to real change.
  • Tony explains both partners project different realities onto the same comforting words, so talks feel resolved without behavioral follow-through.
INSIGHT

How Anxious And Avoidant Nervous Systems Find Each Other

  • Anxious and avoidant attachment patterns are childhood-shaped nervous-system responses that attract each other as 'familiar opposites'.
  • Tony outlines Jill (anxious) and Jack (avoidant) origin stories showing why vigilance and withdrawal feel like home.
ANECDOTE

Believing Mouth Sounds Because Words Are Her Love Language

  • Mackie recounts believing a partner's words because she's a words-of-affirmation person and assumed words meant action.
  • She explains that led her to repeatedly trust mouth sounds despite missing behavioral follow-through.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app