Friendship Through the Enneagram: Needs, Triggers, and What Secure Connection Looks Like
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Jackie: On the web | On Instagram
Courtney: On the web | On Instagram
Friendship can be one of the most meaningful—and most misunderstood—relationships in adult life. While often treated as “less serious” than romantic relationships, friendship activates the same attachment systems in the nervous system and can surface deep needs around safety, trust, belonging, and repair.
In this episode, Courtney Bareman and I explore how friendship functions as an attachment relationship, why it can be so triggering even without romance, and how the Enneagram helps name what’s really happening beneath friendship rupture.
Together, we walk through:
- Why friendship activates attachment alarms
- How unspoken expectations create confusion and resentment
- What each Enneagram type truly needs in friendship
- Common triggers that lead to withdrawal, over-functioning, or silent rupture
- What secure friendship actually looks like in real life
- How honesty, boundaries, and repair build lasting connection
This conversation offers language for understanding friendship patterns—not to diagnose or pathologize, but to create clarity, compassion, and healthier connection.
Key Themes Discussed
- Friendship as an adult attachment relationship
- Nervous system responses in platonic connection
- Why friendship rupture often feels confusing or unresolved
- The difference between conflict and unmet attachment needs
- Moving from silent protection to direct request
- Repair as the foundation of secure friendship
Each Enneagram type brings specific needs into friendship—and specific sensitivities when those needs aren’t met:
- Type 1 – Needs respect and integrity; struggles with carelessness or imbalance
- Type 2 – Needs mutuality; struggles when giving isn’t reciprocated
- Type 3 – Needs appreciation without performance; struggles with vulnerability
- Type 4 – Needs depth and emotional honesty; struggles with minimization
- Type 5 – Needs space with reliable re-entry; struggles with emotional demand
- Type 6 – Needs consistency and trust; struggles with unpredictability
- Type 7 – Needs joy with emotional staying power; struggles with heaviness
- Type 8 – Needs loyalty and directness; struggles with indirectness or betrayal
- Type 9 – Needs peace, inclusion, and voice; struggles when conflict feels unsafe
Secure friendship isn’t about perfect compatibility—it’s about capacity.
- Capacity for:
- Honest communication
- Emotional regulation
- Clear boundaries
- Repair after rupture
- Naming needs directly
Most friendship breakdowns aren’t about what happened—they’re about the meaning made when needs go unspoken. The Enneagram helps bring those meanings into the open so connection can be rebuilt intentionally.
Reflection Questions
Take these into the week ahead:
- When I feel unsure in friendship, do I tend to pursue, withdraw, intensify, distract, or disappear?
- What is one direct request I could make instead of hinting, managing, or resenting?