Title: Attachment theory in adulthood
1Attachment theory in adulthood
- Ian Mathews
- Senior Lecturer in Social work
2Attachment theory
- Do you remember
- The basic premise all children are born with
an innate need to feel loved wanted by their
parents. - If a child does not experience this it has a
sense of emotional hurt that results in the child
engaging in a range of behaviours designed to get
the parent to love the child. Bowlby (1969) - Million dollar question - does attachment
influence relationships in adult life? - What do you think?
- What did Bowlby think?
3Seminar 1re-visitedChildhood Adulthood
- Leaving home
- Wanting more time to yourself, more time doing
your own thing, increasing independence from
your parents - Spending less time with your parents increasing
amounts of time with your friends - Developing other significant relationships
- In other words, leaving home is
- more than setting up a separate residence. It
involves a highly significant psychological
emancipation process in which the young person
distances themselves emotionally from their
parents to at least some degree. - Bee (1994334)
4How is this represented in stage theory?
- Eriksons (1959) stage theory of early
adulthood - The struggle between Intimacy versus isolation.
- The challenge here is to experience intimacy yet
retain a secure sense of your identity - Success leads to the establishment of close
relationships with others - Failure leads to isolation of the development of
superficial adult relationships
5The changing nature of attachment in adolescence
early adulthood
- Proximity seeking in adolescents commonly want
to spend more time with their friends whilst
thinking of their parents as being a safe base (
a specific attachment figures/s). - Secure base over time this security transfers
onto a partner or spouse - Sense of self, sense of belonging increasingly
supplied by work colleagues friendship groups
rather than parents - The return of the Million dollar question -
does attachment influence relationships in adult
life?
6The influence of attachment on adult relationships
- Hazan and Shaver (1987) interviewed over 600
adults of varying ages asked them to choose
which of three descriptions best described their
significant relationship - They argued that the description chosen by the
person reflected the adults experience of
attachment in childhood - ( is there a problem here
7Hazan and Shaver research
- I am somewhat uncomfortable being close to
others I find it difficult to trust them
completely, difficult to allow myself to depend
on them. I am nervous when anyone gets too
close, and often others want me to be more
intimate than I feel comfortable with.
(avoidant chosen by ?) - I find it relatively easy to get close to others
and am comfortable depending on them and having
them depend on me. I dont worry about being
abandoned or about someone getting too close to
me. (secure chosen by ?) - I find that others are reluctant to get close as
I would like. I often worry that my partner
doesnt really love me or wont want to stay with
me. I want to get very close to my partner and
this sometimes scares people away.
(anxious/avoidant chosen by ?)
8And the consequences of these types of
relationship
- Research suggests that people end up in
relationships with partners who confirm their
existing beliefs about attachment relationships
(Brennan Shaver 1995) - Overall secure adults tend to be more satisfied
in their relationships than insecure adults. - Secure adults are more likely to seek support
from their partners when distressed. - They also provide more consistent support for
their partners - Insecure adults cited inability to trust as a
cause of breakdown in their relationships
9The experience of childhood attachment how
this transfers to parenting/adulthood
- What does research tell us
- A mothers attachment pattern measured during
pregnancy predicted their own childs attachment
pattern at 12 months in ? of cases ( Fonagy,
1994) - It would appear that both the experience of
attachment in childhood the experience of
attachment/key relationships affect the way
parents parent
10Does poor attachment in childhood lead to
psychological problems in adulthood?
- As adults, the preoccupying anger with
childhood attachment figures who let you down
continues as does the search for unconditional
love for the perfect relationship. - Schofield Beek (2006114-5)
11The social/trauma model of mental health
- Anger can be internalised leading to
- Self harm the need to relieve stress anger
- Suicide the need to end the pain
- Eating disorders the need to be in control
- Substance misuse ( alcohol/drugs) the need to
dull the pain - Depression
- Anger can be externalised leading to
- Domestic violence
- Child abuse
- General violence
- Inability to control anger
- Sally Plumb
12So what
- Children with a poor experience of attachment
are likely to - struggle with adult relationships
- replicate that poor experience with their own
children - experience psychological problems in adulthood
- But it is important to recognise that people can
do change not to be deterministic
13References
- Bee, H(1994) Lifespan development, New York,
Harper Collins - Bowlby, J (1969) Attachment Loss volume one
Attachment, London, Hogarth Press - Brennan, K.A Shaver, P. (1995). Dimensions of
adult attachment, affect regulation, and romantic
relationship functioning. Personality and Social
Psychology Bulletin, 21, 267-284. - Erikson, E (1959) Identity the life cycle, New
York, International Universities Press - Fonagy, P et al (1994) The theory practice of
resilience, Journal of Child Psychology
Psychiatry 35231-57 - Hazan, C Shaver, P. (1987) Romantic love
conceptualised as an attachment process, Journal
of Personality Social Psychology, vol 59 270-80 - Schofield, G Beek, M (2006) The Adoption
handbook, London, BAAF