Why Your Dog or Cat Feels Like Your Child (and What They Actually Feel Back)
Attachment theory and oxytocin explain why pets feel like family—and how to love them deeply without humanizing them.

Some bonds don’t feel casual. The kind you have with your dog or cat can feel oddly similar to the love you’d have for a child—and no, that doesn’t automatically mean you’re being dramatic.
There’s a real psychological and biological reason your pet feels like family, and it goes way beyond “they’re just cute.”
Why your dog or cat feels like your child: attachment theory
Back in the 1960s, psychoanalyst John Bowlby introduced attachment theory to explain why babies form intense bonds with their caregivers. It wasn’t just about affection—it was about safety. A child attaches to the person who becomes their secure base: the one who protects them, comforts them, and helps them feel okay in the world.
What many pet owners don’t realize is that a similar attachment pattern can form between humans and animals.
Your dog or cat can treat you as their reference figure—the one they look to when they’re unsure, stressed, excited, or simply checking that everything is normal. If you’ve ever noticed your dog following you from room to room, or your cat appearing the moment you sit down, that “I need to be near you” behavior often has an attachment-flavored explanation.
The oxytocin effect: the “love hormone” works on both sides
Attachment is the emotional story. Oxytocin is the chemical one.
Oxytocin is often called the “love hormone” because it’s linked to bonding and closeness. Humans release it during warm social moments—think hugging a partner, cuddling a baby, or feeling safe with someone you trust.
And yes, it can rise with pets too.
Spending time together, petting your dog or cat, and even sharing quiet attention can trigger oxytocin release in you. The really sweet part is that it’s not one-sided: they can experience oxytocin changes in those same bonding moments, which helps explain why the connection feels so mutual.
Eye contact and bonding: what the research suggests
A well-known study by Nagasawa and colleagues (2015) found something fascinating in dogs: . In other words, a simple gaze didn’t just feel meaningful—it was tied to measurable changes in the body.



