The balancing act Creating healthy dependency and connection without losing yourself

Nedra Glover Tawwab

Book - 2026

This self-help guide explores how individuals can achieve balance in personal relationships while maintaining a clear sense of self. Therapist Nedra Glover Tawwab examines patterns such as codependency, enmeshment, avoidant and anxious attachment styles, and hyper-independence. She provides strategies for setting healthy boundaries, exploring personal identity through therapeutic tools, and fostering supportive social connections. The book offers guidance on identifying personal needs, managing conflict, and cultivating trust and harmony in relationships with partners, family members, friends, and other important people.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 158.2/Tawwab (NEW SHELF) Due Apr 17, 2026
  • The spectrum of unhealthy dependency
  • The causes and effects of unhealthy dependency
  • The fear factor : connecting or disconnecting
  • How the past can show up in our current bonds
  • The hyper-dependent person and relationships
  • The challenges of enmeshed relationships
  • The hyper-independent person and relationships
  • Embracing vulnerability and support
  • Pursuing surface versus deep connections
  • Balancing independence and connection
  • The importance of care in love
  • Sustaining relationships
  • Understanding our many parts.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This pragmatic guide from therapist Tawwab (Set Boundaries, Find Peace) outlines how to forge relationships that balance connection with independence. The first half of the book unpacks the roots of unhealthy relationships, among them childhood trauma, mental health challenges, and insecure attachment styles (the ways in which people approach close relationships, often rooted in early experiences with caregivers; those with an "anxious" attachment style, for example, can find it tough to form close connections due to ingrained distrust). To improve their relationships, readers should clearly ask for help when they're having a crisis, balance time alone with time spent together (those who struggle with solo time can find new hobbies or learn to be "alone together"), and recognize that not all relationships require the same level of closeness. Tawwab bolsters her lucid advice for analyzing relationships that aren't working with plenty of practical tools, including conversational scripts, question prompts, and bulleted lists. Readers who feel dissatisfied with their social lives would do well to take a look. (Feb.)

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