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An Introduction to Adult Attachment

An Introduction to Adult Attachment. Presented to the Child Development Initiative By Sheila Hayes Mar 31 2011. Sheila Hayes. Clinical Counsellor since 1996 Member IACP Masters in Educational Guidance and Counselling from Trinity College Masters Dissertation on Attachment Theory .

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An Introduction to Adult Attachment

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  1. An Introduction to Adult Attachment Presented to the Child Development Initiative By Sheila Hayes Mar 31 2011

  2. Sheila Hayes • Clinical Counsellor since 1996 • Member IACP • Masters in Educational Guidance and Counselling from Trinity College • Masters Dissertation on Attachment Theory

  3. Do These Personalities Types Sound familiar • Ursula • May have harsh unmodulated voice timbres, at variance with an imploring or pleading look in their eyes. • Beneath a self – sufficiency is a desire to be looked after. • In essence all container and no feelings • Cliona • The tone of voice is often rambling and monotonous and find it hard to come to the point and to shape their story. • Conversation is an attempt to maintain contact rather than to create dialogue. • Beneath the clinging behaviour is rage and narcissism and a huge fear of losing the secure base. • In essence all feelings and no where to contain them. • Nick • Huge trust issues, • Extremely sensitive • ‘Narcissistic’ needs, • Anxiety around rejection, control, ridicule and bullying (All References Holmes, J., 2001)

  4. Agenda • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  5. The Mother Child Relationship • Has always been a key question in Psychoanalysis

  6. 1890s - Freud, • Developed the Oedipus Complex • Maintained Psychological problems arose as a result of lack of resolution of the Oedipus Complex.

  7. 1930s Klein • Mother Child bond arose due to feeding • Kleinian Dependency Theory • Psychological problems arose • Not from lack of resolution of the Oedipus Complex • But from the act of weaning • The Freud / Klein view of the Mother-Child relationship was predominant up to the 1960s

  8. 1935 - Ethology and Lorenz • Konrad Lorenz • Studied goslings and ducklings who fed themselves • Proposed that a bond could develop without the intermediary of food. • Developed the term Imprinting • Where a duckling or gosling can attach itself to almost anything (such as a Wellington boot) • Received a Nobel prize in 1973

  9. Agenda: John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  10. 1957: Paper Presented to the British Psychoanalytical Society • “The Nature of the Child’s Tie to his Mother” • A child’s psychological wellbeing is heavily influenced by its relationship to its Mother and Wider Environment. • To address psychopathologies, these relationship have to be addressed • This paper is the foundation stone of what became attachment theory

  11. Reaction from The Psychoanalytic Society • It was dominated by the Freud / Klein View • Uproar • Received very critically • He left the society • Was unable to effect change in how children were treated in hospitals due to opposition

  12. Agenda: Elements of Attachment Theory • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources • Questions • References

  13. Bowlby’s Attachment Theory • Features of a healthy attachment relationship • Secure Base • Safe Haven • Proximity Maintenance • Separation Distress • See Circle of Security

  14. Circle of Security

  15. Attachment relationship formed between 6-8 months. • Bowlby stated that even if there is a long separation between the child and the mother after the bond has been formed, the bond will still be there and be recognisable in the child’s behaviour towards the mother.

  16. Bowlby and Working Models • A child has two unconscious working models (or mental maps). They govern • How the child views himself • How he views the world • Development of the working models is determined by the attachment relationship with his primary carer • Models can be • Positive • Negative • Multiple / Conflicting

  17. Impact of Conflicting Working Models • Bowlby maintained these were at the roof of Psychopathologies. • e.g. I’m afraid Dad will leave and I hope Dad will leave • Bowlby posited that conflicting working models were at the root of intergenerational Transmission of Neurosis.

  18. Agenda: Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  19. Strange Situation

  20. Experiment Details • Originally conducted in 1968 in Baltimore USA • 100 Middle class children • Defined protocol

  21. Strange Situation Video

  22. Results • Identified Attachment styles • One Secure • Two Insecure • One Uncategorised (13%) • Results have been replicated in dozens of studies around the world since

  23. Agenda: Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  24. Interest in adult attachment since the 70’s • Little known about it or whether attachment existed into adulthood • Adult attachment seen as more complex and difficult to measure • Thinking was that couples had to be studied • Realised that much of adult relationships exist in the mind • In how they think and feel about relationships • A lot of their relationships are invisible to an outsider

  25. 1985: Mary Main & the Adult Attachment Interview • Follow up longitudinal study in from 1979 to 1985 Berkeley to see the effect that parents had on the Strange Situation • Mary Main believed that earlier experiences do not just shape later behaviours they also shape a person’s beliefs and expectations about relationships • Developed the Adult Attachment Interview protocol • Identified four attachment styles • One secure • Three Insecure • The adult styles were similar to the child styles.

  26. The AAI Actual Protocol Itself Example: Question 2 • I'd like you to try to describe your relationship with your parents as a young child if you could start from as far back as you can remember? • Encourage participants to try to begin by remembering very early. Many say they cannot remember early childhood, • but you should shape the questions such that they focus at first around age five or earlier, and gently remind • the research participant from time to time that if possible, you would like her to think back to this age period. • Admittedly, this is leaping right into it, and the participant may stumble. If necessary, indicate in some way that • experiencing some difficulty in initially attempting to respond to this question is natural, but indicate by some • silence that you would nonetheless like the participant to attempt a general description.

  27. Example: Question 3 • Now I'd like to ask you to choose five adjectives or words that reflect your relationship with your mother starting from as far back as you can remember in early childhood--as early as you can go, but say, age 5 to 12 is fine. I know this may take a bit of time, so go ahead and think for a minute...then I'd like to ask you why you chose them. I'll write each one down as you give them to me.

  28. Example: Question 5 • Did you ever feel rejected as a young child? Of course, looking back on it now, you may realise it wasn't really rejection, but what I'm trying to ask about here is whether you remember ever having being rejected in childhood

  29. 18 Questions in Total • AAI assesses a person’s “state of mind with respect to attachment” and not whether a person is “securely attached” to a second person • The narrative is examined for material purposely expressed by the individual and for material the individual is unaware of • e.g., apparent incoherence and inconsistencies of discourse thereby aiming to assess elements of the attachment representation which are not conscious (working models are in the unconscious) • How the narrative is reported is as important as the narrative itself as it reflects the state of mind with respect to attachment( the AAI picks up on how we perceive relationships based on own attachment experience) • The AAI is scored based on • Descriptions of childhood experiences • Language used in the interview • The ability to give an integrated, believable account of experience and their meaning

  30. AAI contd. • Adults assessed via the AAI are not considered securely versus insecurely attached, but rather as being in a secure state of mind with respect to attachment • One person conducts and transcribes • Second person scores based purely on the written transcript.

  31. Agenda: Attachment Styles • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  32. Adult & Infant Attachment Styles: Secure / Autonomous - Secure

  33. Adult & Infant Attachment Styles: Dismissing - Avoidant

  34. Adult & Infant Attachment Styles: Preoccupied - Resistant / Ambivalent

  35. This work classified the third insecure style for children as verbal responses of parents matched the behavioural responses of the children in the unclassified 13% Adult & Infant Attachment Styles: Unresolved / Disorganised – Disorganised / Disorientated

  36. Key finding • Secure people are able to talk coherently about their earlier experience even though that experience was negative, they have integrated the events with the feelings of that period – have insight and ability to reflect (the main aim of therapy is to help a person get insight to their experience so integration can occur) • Ability to engage in meta cognition or to see one’s situation objectively distinguishes secure from insecure attachment experiences

  37. Agenda: Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  38. Studies on the Transmission Of Attachment Style • The AAI is the only measure which has been used to examine intergenerational transmission of attachment and the relations between adult attachment status, parenting behaviour and child outcome • Investigations of parental attachment classification and infant Strange Situation find 80% correspondence • Parent – child studies in infancy: comparison of kibbutz – reared infants who slept at home with their parents, and those who slept communally found 76% correspondence between maternal AAI and child Strange Situation for the home based dyads versus 40% for communal dyads • (Sagi, Aviezer et al., 1992) • Parent – child studies at school age: Mothers classified as secure were warmer, more supportive, and smoother in transitioning between activities than insecure mothers. Mothers classified as dismissing were more abrupt in transitioning between activities than preoccupied mothers. Observed child behaviour did not differ with respect to maternal classification. However, ratings of behaviour and affective symptoms by parents, teachers and the children revealed children of dismissing mothers had the highest levels of pathology. • (Crowell, O’ Connor, Wollmers, Sprafkin, & Rao, 1991)

  39. Studies on Transmission Of Styles Contd. • Parental security of attachment was associated with parents providing structure during the tasks • Secure fathers were warmer towards their preschoolers • (Cohn, Cowan, Cowan, & Pearson, 1992a) • Couples’ concordance for AAI and parenting style was also examined: insecure women married to insecure men were not as warm with their children as insecure women married to secure men. There was no difference between secure and insecure mothers who were married to secure men. • Spousal support may be helpful to ‘insecure’ mothers in interactions with their children.

  40. Agenda Couple Love • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  41. Romantic Relationships • In 1987 Hazen & Shaver produced a seminal study on romantic love • Pair - bond /romantic relationships assume the role of attachment figures in adult life where the partner becomes the secure base • There are four defining features of attachment bonds: proximity maintenance, separation distress, safe haven and secure base • Attachment in early life is asymmetrical - infants seek and derive security from care givers but do not give it in return, in pair bonds the care giving is reciprocal

  42. Physical Contact in Pair bonds • Striking similarities in the physical intimacy and prolonged face to face contact between infant and caregiver and in adult romantic partners • In almost every culture these intimate interpersonal exchanges are limited to parent – infant and pair bond relationships • (Eibl – Eibesfeld, 1975).

  43. Separation and Loss in Pair bonds • Bowlby noticed that separated children who were well cared for physically, showed striking similarities in how they responded to separation • There was a universal pattern of behaviour which he referred to as the “protest-despair-detachment” sequence • The same sequence of events can be seen in adults grieving for the loss of a spouse (including relationship breakups): • Initial anxiety and panic, followed by lethargy and depression and eventually by recovery through emotional detachment • (Hazen & Shaver, 1992; Parkes & Weiss, 1983; Weiss, 1975) • The loss is integrated in the inner world of the bereaved • Couples grieving for the loss of a child inevitably cannot provide a secure base for the other as each are overcome with grief. • This is one reason why divorce rates are so high after such a tragedy • (Holmes, J., 2001)

  44. Interactions in Romantic Couples • Secure men engage in more positive and supportive interactions with their spouses than do insecure men • (Cohn, Cowan, Cowan, & Pearson, 1992b; Ewing & Pratt, 1995; Kobak & Hazen, 1992). • Secure college females in a stressful situation sought and accepted more physical and emotional support from their partners than insecure women • (Simpson, Rholes, and Nelligan (1992) • Perhaps because secure men are disproportionately likely to be partners of secure women • (van Ijzendoorn & Bakermans – Kranenburg, 1996) • Secure men are more likely to be concerned for their partners’ well being and to provide more emotional support then insecure men

  45. Interactions in Romantic Couples • Where both partners were insecure there was more conflict • (Cohn et al. 1992b) • Lower levels of conflict and mutually focussed strategies for managing conflict are found in secure individuals • (Pistole, 1989) • Security in the relationship sets the stage for the development of a mutually rewarding relationships as each partner can venture out from the relationship and return back to the safe haven

  46. Influence of Relationship Experience on choice of partner • Working Models affect romantic relationships in the following way: • Individuals tend to select environments that fit their beliefs about self and others • e.g. A Preoccupied (Resistant or Ambivalent in infants) female and a Dismissing (Avoidant in infants) male are quite stable although not very happy. • The clingy anxious behaviour of the Preoccupied female confirms the Dismissing male’s belief that it is unwise to let others get too close, • The Dismissing male confirms the Preoccupied female’s belief that others are less concerned about love relationships than she is.

  47. Agenda: Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

  48. Dealing with Negative Affect • Secure • People can draw on support from another person(s) via the secure base and talk coherently about the issue • Insecure - Dismissing (Avoidant in infants) • People will stay near to a protective one, but not too near for fear of rejection or aggression • Intimacy is sacrificed in order that the affect is deactivated • Insecure - Preoccupied (Resistant or Ambivalent in infants) • People have been subjected to inconsistent responses when distressed and so cling to the care-giver even when no danger is present • There is hyper activation of responses and exploration and autonomy are jettisoned in return for security • Insecure - Unresolved / Disorganised (Disorganised / Disoriented in infants) • Unresolved attachments have no coherent response for self protection • Resort to defensive methods such as splitting, dissociation, role reversal and excessive controllingness • Most patients with severe personality disorder show insecure patterns of attachment in the AAI • (J Holmes, 2001)

  49. Self-esteem in adult attachment • Securely attached individuals can deal with negative affect • Insecure - Dismissing (Avoidant in infants) • In the Dismissing, self esteem is short- circuited within the self. • External validation has little impact, • Will do his best to be in control and to keep intimacy at bay as it threatens his self containing system of maintaining self-esteem • Insecure - Preoccupied (Resistant or Ambivalent in infants) • The Preoccupied depend on the proximity and the positive regard of the clung to figure, if they are critical or lost the Preoccupied will suffer • Insecure - Unresolved / Disorganised (Disorganised / Disoriented in infants) • The Unresolved will try to control the care – giver • In the case of a couple who are both securely attached, this leads to the development of a ‘third element’ which provides far greater security than each member of the couple can achieve on their own • This is the relationship itself and the pattern of mutual expectations that it implies

  50. Agenda: Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Review of Infant Attachment • John Bowlby and the 1957 Paper • Elements of Attachment Relationships • Mary Ainsworth and the Strange Situation • Development of the Adult Attachment Interview • Attachment Styles • Implications and uses of Adult Attachment • Intergenerational Transmission of Attachment Styles • Couple Love • Attachment Theory effect on Mental Health • Using Attachment Theory in Therapy • Resources & References • Questions

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