Getting Naked Review: Is Bertinelli Real?
My therapist dropped a bomb last month: “Your independence isn’t strength—it’s trauma.” I’d spent three years proud of needing nobody. Meanwhile, my best friend was reading her fifth codependency book, unable to make decisions without texting her partner first.
February 2026, and Nedra Tawwab just defined “healthy dependency” in her new book. Suddenly everyone’s realizing they’re at one extreme or the other. The self-help aisle finally admits that “I don’t need anyone” and “I need someone to function” are both problems.
I read all 10 major books spanning this spectrum. Applied their exercises. Had uncomfortable conversations. Here’s what actually helps you find that middle ground—and which books are just repeating 1980s codependency theories with new covers.
Quick Verdict: The 10 Books Ranked
Book Focus Pages Practical Tools Evidence Worth It The Balancing Act (Tawwab, 2026) Healthy dependency framework 272 ★★★★★ ★★★★☆ ★★★★★ Codependent No More (Beattie) Classic codependency 276 ★★★☆☆ ★★☆☆☆ ★★★☆☆ Set Boundaries, Find Peace (Tawwab) Boundary basics 256 ★★★★☆ ★★★☆☆ ★★★★☆ Rising Strong (Brown) Vulnerability balance 336 ★★★☆☆ ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents (Gibson) Origin patterns 240 ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ ★★★★★ Attached (Levine & Heller) Attachment styles 304 ★★★★☆ ★★★★★ ★★★★☆ The Disease to Please (Braiker) People-pleasing patterns 272 ★★★☆☆ ★★★☆☆ ★★★☆☆ Running on Empty (Webb) Childhood emotional neglect 276 ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ Facing Love Addiction (Mellody) Love addiction patterns 232 ★★☆☆☆ ★★☆☆☆ ★★☆☆☆ How to Be Yourself (Hendriksen) Social anxiety roots 288 ★★★☆☆ ★★★★☆ ★★★☆☆ Skip the list, read one? Get The Balancing Act by Nedra Tawwab. First book to map the full spectrum with practical middle ground.
Before spending $200 on books: hyper-independence and codependency are flip sides of the same attachment wound. Both come from learning relationships aren’t safe. One person walls off (hyper-independence). Another clings (codependency). Most of us do both, depending on context.
The books that help recognize this spectrum without picking a side and pathologizing it.
Nedra Tawwab’s February 2026 release finally names what therapy TikTok has been circling: healthy dependency. Not independence. Not codependence. The radical middle where you can need people without losing yourself.
Three zones:
She maps specific behaviors to each zone. Page 47’s assessment takes 10 minutes. I scored deep in hyper-independence. No surprise, but seeing it laid out hit different.
It’s heavy on examples from her therapy practice, and some “Sarah learned to accept help” stories feel sanitized. The chapter on work relationships needed more depth—most hyper-independence shows up professionally.
Week 1: Identified my “never ask for help” categories (moving, money, emotional support). Week 2: Asked a friend to help me move one box. Physically painful. Week 3: Let someone else plan dinner. Still practicing.
Melody Beattie’s 1986 book created the codependency movement. If you’ve heard the term, it started here. Originally for families of alcoholics, expanded to anyone who loses themselves in relationships.
The whole book assumes you’re a wife dealing with an alcoholic husband. Zero acknowledgment of hyper-independence. Treats independence as the goal, not balance. The “just stop caring so much” advice ignores trauma responses and nervous system dysregulation.
Historical context if you’re in Al-Anon. Skip if you’re under 40—better books exist now.
Lindsay Gibson explains how you got here. Emotionally immature parents create kids who either become their caretakers (codependency) or learn to need nothing (hyper-independence).
Less “how to fix it” and more “here’s why you’re like this.” But understanding the origin helped me stop blaming myself. The “observing ego” exercise (page 189) helps you watch your patterns without drowning in them.
Focuses on understanding, not changing. You’ll need other books for the “what now” part.
Amir Levine and Rachel Heller translate 60 years of attachment research. If you want science, not stories, start here.
Three attachment styles:
Treats attachment styles as fixed. New research shows they’re more fluid. Also assumes romantic relationships—less helpful for work or friendship patterns.
Nedra Tawwab’s first book. If codependents have no boundaries and hyper-independent people have walls, this teaches actual boundaries.
Harder for hyper-independent people than codependents. We’re good at boundaries—too good. The challenge is making them permeable. Chapter 9 on “rigid boundaries” helped, but needed more.
Not explicitly about independence vs. codependence, but addresses the core: shame and vulnerability. Both extremes avoid vulnerability differently.
Very abstract. Lots of “lean into discomfort” without specifics. If you need concrete steps, frustrating.
Jonice Webb focuses on what didn’t happen in childhood. Not abuse—absence. Parents who didn’t teach emotional connection.
Explains hyper-independence better than most books. If nobody responded to your emotions, you learned not to have them. Or at least not to need anyone for them.
Focuses on individual healing. Less helpful for relationship dynamics.
Codependency repackaged as people-pleasing. Nothing new. Skip.
From the 1990s addiction model era. Treats relationship patterns as addiction. Outdated framework, shame-heavy approach.
Good for social anxiety, tangentially related to hyper-independence. Not focused enough on attachment patterns.
Start with The Balancing Act, chapters 6-8 specifically.
Codependent No More for recognition, then Set Boundaries, Find Peace for tools.
Attached to understand your pattern, The Balancing Act for the middle path.
Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents plus Running on Empty.
Therapy. Specifically trauma-informed or attachment-focused. Books have limits.
After two months testing everything:
From The Balancing Act:
From Set Boundaries, Find Peace:
From Attached:
From Running on Empty:
Hyper-independence is often high-functioning depression. You’re not strong—you’re numb. Consider screening for depression alongside reading.
Cultural context matters. These books assume Western individualism. If you’re from a collectivist culture, the “healthy dependency” looks different.
Changing attachment patterns takes years, not months. Books start the process. Relationships finish it.
Sometimes the environment needs changing. If you’re surrounded by unsafe people, hyper-independence is protective, not pathological.
Reading about attachment patterns doesn’t change them. Like reading about swimming doesn’t teach you to swim.
The real work happens in relationships. Books give you language and awareness. Then you need safe people to practice with. Most of us try to change in isolation—exactly the problem we’re trying to fix.
YouTube educators:
Apps with attachment focus:
Subreddits:
Strong research: Attachment theory has 60+ years of studies. Secure attachment behaviors can be learned.
Moderate research: Boundary setting improves relationships. Childhood emotional neglect correlates with attachment issues.
Weak research: “Healthy dependency” is too new for studies. Codependency isn’t in the DSM-5—it’s a cultural concept, not clinical diagnosis.
Books help if you’re functional but struggling. If you’re in crisis—can’t maintain relationships or job—therapy first.
Types that help:
Books complement therapy. They don’t replace it.
February 2026: Everyone’s burnt out on extreme independence. The pandemic proved we need people. The self-care movement went too far into “you don’t need anyone.”
Now the pendulum swings back. But not to codependency—to interdependence. These books catch that wave. Some surf it well. Others wipe out.
Most people read about attachment, recognize their patterns, feel validated, change nothing.
The 20% who change do this:
The other 80% read all 10 books, try everything for a week, give up.
If you’re hyper-independent: Start with The Balancing Act. It’s the only book that doesn’t pathologize independence while showing its limitations.
If you’re codependent: Read Set Boundaries, Find Peace for tools, but also The Balancing Act to understand where you’re heading.
If you swing between extremes: Attached for the science, then The Balancing Act for integration.
If you want to understand origins: Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents explains everything without requiring you to blame anyone.
If you’ve tried everything: Your patterns developed over decades. They won’t change from a book. Find a therapist who understands attachment.
The truth nobody wants to hear: You probably know which pattern you’re stuck in. You might even know what would help. The hard part isn’t information—it’s tolerating the discomfort of change.
These books give you maps. You still have to walk the territory. And that territory involves other people, which is exactly what both extremes avoid in different ways.
Pick one book. Do the exercises. Find one person to practice with. Expect it to feel wrong. That’s how you know it’s working.
Read December 2025 - February 2026. Applied exercises from each book minimum 2 weeks. Currently practicing “healthy dependency” with moderate success and maximum discomfort. Your attachment patterns aren’t your fault, but they are your responsibility.