Bowlby identified the pattern through clinical observation of adults whose early caregiving had been characterized by emotional unavailability — parents who were physically present but emotionally distant, who rewarded independence and discouraged expressions of need, or who responded to the child's distress with impatience or withdrawal. The child learned that reaching out activated pain rather than comfort and developed a strategy of radical self-sufficiency as the safer alternative.
The strategy works, in a narrow sense. The compulsively self-reliant adult often achieves considerable external success — her capacity for solo performance is genuine, her output is high, her apparent stability is impressive. The costs are visible only to those who know where to look: chronic loneliness that the person cannot name, relationships characterized by surface intimacy and underlying disconnection, a vulnerability to depression and burnout that tracks with the relentless depletion of resources the person refuses to replenish through help-seeking.
The specific danger of AI for the compulsively self-reliant person is that the technology confirms her working model at every turn. The AI is always available, never judges, never requires vulnerability, never demands reciprocity. For the person whose working model says 'I must do this alone,' the AI does not require revision of the model — it reinforces it. Segal's productive addiction maps onto this pattern with uncomfortable precision: the builder who cannot stop working with AI, whose life domains are shrinking around the work, who has found in the tool a perfect substitute for the relational engagement she has spent a lifetime avoiding.
The challenge for organizations is that compulsively self-reliant employees often appear to be thriving with AI. They adopt the tools quickly. They produce at extraordinary volumes. They become internal exemplars of successful adaptation. But the adaptation is not genuine — it is the intensification of an existing defensive pattern, and it accumulates costs that will manifest in burnout, relational breakdown, and eventual collapse when the internal reserves the person has refused to replenish finally fail. The organization that celebrates these employees as models is not seeing what it thinks it sees.
Bowlby introduced compulsive self-reliance in the third volume of Attachment and Loss (1980) as a specific pattern of defensive adaptation. Mary Ainsworth's later classification of avoidant attachment in infancy — and the extension of avoidant patterns into adult attachment by Mary Main — provided the empirical foundation for understanding the developmental trajectory.
Contemporary research on adult attachment by Kim Bartholomew, Phillip Shaver, Mario Mikulincer, and others has documented the pattern's prevalence and its specific vulnerabilities under stress conditions.
Defensive strategy. Compulsive self-reliance is not independence but a defense against the expected pain of rejected requests for help.
Masks distress. The surface competence of the compulsively self-reliant person conceals underlying attachment injury that the defensive structure exists to hide.
Rewarded by AI. AI tools specifically reward and reinforce this pattern — they are the perfect attachment figure for a working model that says 'I must do this alone.'
Appears adaptive. The compulsively self-reliant employee often looks like the organization's success story while accumulating invisible costs that emerge only at collapse.
Undermines earned security. The pattern is specifically resistant to the relational revision that earned security requires, because it has organized itself around the avoidance of relationship.