The Practice of Unconditional Relationship
The Path to Secure Attachment with Reality
I originally wrote this to give my coaching clients a framework for the work we do together. If you’re reading this and it resonates, whether or not we work together, my hope is that it offers guidance for your own journey toward wholeness. 🙏
I’ve written previously about spirituality as the movement toward secure attachment with reality—the foundational trust that allows us to meet whatever arises in life with openness rather than defensiveness. But I haven’t yet addressed the question that many readers have asked: How do we actually move in that direction? What is the practice that develops this security?
The answer is both simple and deeply challenging: the practice of unconditional relationship. This is the practice of bringing everything within consciousness—everything we are, conscious or unconscious—into relationship. Not into control, not into transcendence, but into relationship.
This practice is simultaneously the means by which we develop secure attachment with reality and the very expression of what that security looks like in action.
The Art of Unconditional Relationship
So what does it actually mean to practice unconditional relationship?
Unconditional relationship begins with extending open, curious presence to whatever is arising in this moment. Not the curiosity that wants to figure something out or change it, but the curiosity that arises from the desire to become more intimate with the truth of what’s here.
It means taking a basic stance that everything that I experience is worthy of coming into contact with. Worthy of understanding, worthy of curiosity, worthy of respect, worthy of inclusion, and ultimately worthy of trust and embrace.
This might sound straightforward, but it immediately reveals its complexity when we try to put it into practice. If I tell you to relate without an agenda, what do you do with the agenda that’s already here? If I suggest meeting your anxiety without trying to change it, how do you work with the part of you that desperately wants the anxiety to go away?
This is where the art lies. Unconditional relationship means trusting fully in what is here—including the parts that don’t want to trust, the agendas that want to change things, the defenses that want to protect us. When we notice the agenda-making mind, we offer relationship to that. When we catch ourselves trying to manipulate our experience, we meet that impulse with the same unconditional relationship.
The practice becomes recursive: we meet our conditional relating with unconditional relating. We welcome our lack of welcome. We accept our resistance to acceptance. This gradually transforms our relationship with reality itself.
Embracing the Cast-Off
Over time, we discover what we’re actually doing through this practice: we’re bringing the cast-off dimensions of our interior back into relationship. The aspects of ourselves we’ve exiled, the experiences we’ve turned away from, the feelings we’ve judged as unacceptable—these are what we’re learning to welcome home.
There’s a profound teaching encoded in one of the most radical dimensions of Jesus’s ministry: he went directly to those who were most cast off by society. The beggars, the prostitutes, the tax collectors, the lepers—those whom everyone else had turned away from. He sought them out, offered them relationship, and affirmed their intrinsic value.
This wasn’t only a teaching of compassion or social justice. It was a teaching about the nature of healing and wholeness itself.
What Jesus demonstrated in the social realm, we can practice in the interior realm. We can endeavor to meet that which has been most cast off within us and offer it relationship. The parts we’re most ashamed of, most afraid of, most convinced are the problem—these are precisely what we must embrace with the same quality of love and service that Jesus offered to the outcasts of his society.
Jung wrote that what we do not make conscious appears in our lives as fate.1 Joe Hudson speaks of the golden algorithm: how when you avoid an emotion, you invite that emotion into your life in exactly the way that you avoid it.
These dimensions of our interior—what we might call our disintegrated aspects—cause suffering not because they’re inherently problematic, but because they’re cut off from relationship. When parts of us are exiled, they don’t disappear. They express themselves sideways, through symptoms, through patterns we can’t understand or control.
This is the heart of the practice. Just as Jesus embraced those who were most cast off, we learn to offer that same quality of loving connection to the cast-off parts of our interior. This is how fragmentation heals and how the motivational system clarifies. This is how we move toward wholeness.
The Wisdom of Meeting Defenses
One of the most important insights about this practice is that our suffering and defensive structures aren’t obstacles to overcome but intelligent responses to be met with relationship. Reality unfolds like an onion when we approach it with genuine welcome rather than trying to force our way to the center.
When we begin to practice unconditional relationship, what typically arises first are our defensive structures—the ways we’ve learned to protect ourselves from our most cast-off parts. These defenses might show up as resistance, numbness, analysis, distraction, or a hundred other strategies. The natural tendency is to see these as problems, to try to get past them to the “real” material underneath.
But these defenses exist for good reasons. They represent our psyche’s attempt to create safety in situations where safety wasn’t available. Attempts to simply bypass them are often a failure of trust in the natural intelligence of our being. Instead, the practice of unconditional relationship invites us to offer these defensive structures the same quality of relationship we endeavor to offer everything else.
When our defenses feel genuinely seen, loved, and understood, they begin to soften on their own. Not because we’re trying to get rid of them, but because they finally feel safe enough to show us what they’ve been protecting. The vulnerability that lies beneath our defenses emerges safely when the defenses themselves feel unconditionally received.
This is why the path often looks like an onion unfolding. You meet the defense, you offer it relationship, it softens enough for you to see what it’s defending. You meet that layer, offer relationship again, and gradually what’s beneath becomes accessible. There’s a natural intelligence to this unfolding that we come to trust rather than trying to push our way to the “core” material.
This is why unconditional relationship functions as both a solvent for rigid structures and a container safe enough for our deepest material to be revealed. It challenges our protective patterns while simultaneously providing the safety that allows them to transform.
The Pitfall of Spiritual Performance
One of the most common ways this practice gets derailed is through a particular irony: the practice of unconditional relationship can itself become a strategy for avoiding relationship.
Internal Family Systems calls these “self-like parts”—aspects of ourselves that perform the qualities of unconditional relationship while operating from an unacknowledged agenda. These parts can be incredibly sophisticated, mimicking the language and behavior of true presence while genuinely believing they’re doing the work correctly.
A self-like part approaches anxiety with what feels like acceptance—”I’m here with you, it’s okay”—while underneath runs a current of “if I do this right, you’ll calm down.” It offers love to shame while secretly hoping the shame will transform into self-compassion. The agenda might be completely invisible until we notice the subtle disappointment when the anxiety doesn’t ease or the shame doesn’t shift.
These parts create a sense of effort or strain, even when using spiritual language about acceptance and flow. There’s often a quality of vigilance—monitoring to make sure we’re “doing it right,” checking whether the practice is working. Genuine unconditional relationship doesn’t monitor itself this way. It has a quality of effortlessness—not because it’s easy, but because it aligns with the natural movement of love rather than fighting against it.
When you recognize a self-like part, the practice becomes recursive: you offer unconditional relationship to the part that’s performing unconditional relationship. You become curious about what it’s protecting, what it’s afraid would happen if it stopped trying so hard. This is exactly the kind of cast-off material the practice is meant to embrace.
This pattern is particularly common in autodidactic healing communities, where people try to heal themselves using frameworks they’ve learned intellectually without the attunement of another nervous system to help them recognize when they’ve slipped into performance. Working with others—therapists, teachers, coaches, or friends—can help us recognize when we’re in genuine relationship and when we’re actually in another layer of defense pretending to be relationship.
Both Path and Fruit: The Double Movement
Part of what makes this practice so powerful is that unconditional relationship is both the way to and the fruit of secure attachment with reality.
On one hand, it trains our nervous system that it’s safe to experience whatever arises—that we have the capacity to meet our internal landscape with presence rather than avoidance. Over time, as we keep choosing relationship, something profound begins to stabilize: the recognition that we are safe to experience anything that arises.
On the other hand, the practice gradually reveals something about the nature of reality itself. When we stop trying to change our experience, we begin to discover what Buddhist traditions call Buddha-nature or basic goodness—the inherently trustworthy, intelligent, and compassionate ground of being that moves and infuses all things.
We practice offering relationship to all that we are—including what frightens us, what we judge, what we’ve spent decades avoiding. And through this practice, we eventually discover that all that we are is moved by a mysterious benevolence. Even that which we most suspected to be dangerous or wrong turns out to be moved by a deep and natural wisdom.
This isn’t something we need to believe or take on faith. It’s something that clarifies itself through the practice of unconditional relationship. When we learn to meet reality without defensive filters, we begin to perceive dimensions of value, meaning, and trustworthiness that were previously invisible to us.
When we can see this we become undefended. We experience deep safety. This is secure attachment with reality: the recognition that we can open fully to what is because what is includes us, moves through us, cares for us.
But we only discover this safety by practicing relationship before we fully believe it. We extend welcome while still afraid. We offer curiosity while still defended. We choose relationship even when every fiber wants to turn away. This is the art and the practice.
The practice thus moves us toward secure attachment with reality from two directions: we develop the capacity to meet whatever arises, and we discover that what arises is fundamentally worthy of being met.
The Radical Humility: We Are Vaster Than We Know
The path of unconditional relationship is profoundly humbling. Over and over again, we may think we’ve clarified our interior, think we understand what moves us—and then reality pushes us to look at what we haven’t yet been in relationship with.
This is partly because the depths of our interior extends far beyond our personal history into collective patterns, ancestral burdens, cultural conditioning, and more. But it’s also because reality itself seems to have an insatiable drive toward wholeness. The cosmos longs to bring things into higher-order wholeness and complexity. It wants to integrate, to return all the cast-off parts, to bring everything into intimate relationship and communion.
Reality creates situations that require us to face what we’ve been avoiding. This isn’t punishment—it’s love. It’s the universe seeking, through us, a greater integration, a greater wholeness.
Our selves will be progressively decentered, just as we were decentered from our position at the center of the solar system. The separate, individuated, protected self that Western culture takes for granted is a historical anomaly. As the language of parts work enters our culture, we’re being prepared for further decentering.
The truth is more wondrous and humbling: we are not single agents but living orchestrations of nested intelligences—from cellular networks to collective consciousness—each pursuing goals within their own horizons. Developmental biologist Michael Levin’s research shows this scientifically: what happens in cancer, for instance, is cells disconnecting from the larger bioelectric network, reverting to their unicellular past and pursuing only their own survival. When we practice unconditional relationship, we’re endeavoring to participate in the coordination of intelligences from the molecular to the cosmic. This is the never ending horizon of the path of unconditional relationship.
The Accelerating Power of Attuned Relationship
While it’s possible to learn unconditional relationship on our own, working with another nervous system—whether a therapist, spiritual guide, or trusted friend—can meaningfully accelerate the journey.
We evolved to unfold in relationship with attuned caregivers. When we experience genuine unconditional relationship from another person, our nervous system learns something that can’t be taught conceptually: what it feels like to be completely welcome, exactly as we are. This felt experience becomes a reference point we can gradually extend to ourselves.
When someone meets our shame, fear, or defensive patterns with genuine curiosity and care—without trying to fix or change us—our system begins to internalize this quality of presence. We discover that it’s possible to be with our difficult experiences without being overwhelmed by them, and we begin to trust that our internal landscape can be navigated safely.
Once we’ve learned this groove from another nervous system, it becomes much easier to extend the same quality of presence to ourselves. The practice shifts from an intellectual concept to an embodied capacity—a way of being that we can eventually access even when we’re alone with our most challenging experiences.
The Natural Rhythm of Transformation
This practice develops gradually over months and years, but within that gradual development, there can be times of more dramatic shifts. These typically occur when we finally offer genuine unconditional relationship to certain load-bearing structures in our psyche—fundamental patterns or core wounds that organize much of our inner experience.
When these deeper patterns finally feel met with authentic relationship, something profound can reorganize. The defensive structures that formed around these core wounds begin to soften, creating space for new ways of being. This isn’t something we can force or schedule; it emerges naturally when the conditions are right.
These moments of reorganization can feel like breakdown or breakthrough, depending on our perspective. Often they’re both—the old structures dissolving while new ones emerge. The key is to continue offering unconditional relationship throughout the process, trusting that our system knows how to reorganize itself when it feels safe enough to do so.
Between these moments of dramatic shift, the practice is quieter but no less important. Each moment of meeting our experience with genuine welcome strengthens our capacity for this way of being.
The Pathless Path
There is no endpoint where we “achieve” the capacity for unconditional relationship and can then move on to something else. This is not a technique to master but a way of being to embody. The practice is inexhaustible because reality is inexhaustible, because the depths of what we are extend infinitely.
This can be both humbling and liberating. Humbling because it means we’ll continue to discover new layers of conditional relating, new defensive patterns, new ways our system tries to control or manipulate experience. Liberating because it means the practice itself is inexhaustible—there’s always another invitation to deepen, another opportunity to choose relationship over reactivity.
In this way, the practice becomes a form of devotion—not to an external deity or ideology, but to the inherent value and trustworthiness of reality itself. It’s a way of saying yes to existence, even when existence includes tremendous pain, uncertainty, and loss. And in that yes, something profound begins to open: the recognition that we are not separate from the reality we’re learning to trust, but expressions of its own movement toward greater intimacy with itself.
This is the fruit of unconditional relationship: not simply secure attachment with reality, but the recognition that we are reality loving itself through us—each moment of genuine welcome a celebration of the sacred dimension that has been here all along, waiting to be seen.
And yet, for all its infinite depth, the practice reduces to something remarkably simple: this moment’s choice to welcome what’s here. Not tomorrow’s transformation, not next year’s awakening, but right now—can I offer relationship to what’s arising? Even when it’s difficult. Even when I don’t want to. Even when part of me is convinced this will never work.
That choice, repeated over and over, is the whole path.
Addendum: How Life Invites Us Into Practice
The practice of unconditional relationship doesn’t require seeking out pain or manufactured intensity. Life itself continuously presents opportunities to bring what’s unconscious into relationship. Here are some of the ways these invitations appear:
Choice Points & Confusion
When you face a decision and genuinely don’t know what to choose, this often signals something unconscious seeking inclusion. In wholeness—when everything relevant is in relationship—we operate in a kind of flow with life. Choices become clear not through analysis but through integration.
So when confusion arises, rather than forcing a decision, you can turn inward with curiosity: What part of me hasn’t been included in this? What’s asking to be brought into relationship? Often a shift happens and the choice clarifies itself through the integration of what was cast off.
Dreams & Evocative Images
Dreams that particularly move us—whether disturbing, beautiful, or simply resonant—are often touching something waiting to be brought into relationship. Rather than analyzing dream symbolism, you can work directly with the felt sense of the images. What in you recognizes itself in that dream figure? What’s the quality or energy that wants to be known? Dreams are the psyche’s way of presenting what’s ready to be brought into deeper relationship.
Patterns of Suffering
Recurring pain—whether anxiety, shame, loneliness, or any persistent difficulty—indicates something asking for relationship. These patterns are signals. Rather than trying to eliminate the suffering, you can become curious about what it’s protecting, what it’s pointing toward, what deeper material it guards. The suffering itself becomes the doorway.
Triggers in Intimate Relationship
Perhaps nowhere is the invitation clearer than in our intimate relationships. When someone triggers a strong reaction—anger, defensiveness, collapse—this is a direct pointing to material that’s been exiled. These moments are incredibly fertile for practice.
Rather than focusing on changing the other person or defending your position, you can turn toward what’s been activated with genuine curiosity. What just got touched? What part of me felt threatened, unseen, or hurt? Intimate relationships become a continuous practice ground.
The key is recognizing that you don’t need to create conditions for practice—life is already providing them. The practice is simply in how you meet what’s already arising.
Philosophical foundations: This piece draws upon several wisdom traditions explored in my Lineages of Inspiration article, which outlines the key influences shaping my understanding of human transformation.
Work with me: I offer one-on-one guidance helping people develop secure attachment with reality through deep unfoldment work. If this resonates, explore working together
“The psychological rule says that when an inner situation is not made conscious, it happens outside, as fate. That is to say, when the individual remains undivided and does not become conscious of his inner opposite, the world must perforce act out the conflict and be torn into opposing halves.”
— Carl Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self



so so many gems here, so clearly and often also poetically stated. i have a feeling i'll be sending this one to clients as well
So beautifully and clearly said. Your devotion to this path is a gift to the world. Thank you, my love ❤️