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Systemic Therapy and Attachment Narratives

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Title: Systemic Therapy and Attachment Narratives


1
Systemic Therapy and Attachment
Narratives
  • Arlene Vetere (and Rudi Dallos)
  • ACAMH
  • Northampton
  • University
  • July 3, 2014

2
Dynamic Systems
Many of the most intense emotions arise during
the formation, the maintenance, the disruption
and the renewal of attachment relationships. The
formation of a bond is described as falling in
love, maintaining a bond as loving someone, and
losing a partner as grieving over someone.
Similarly, threat of loss arouses anxiety, and
actual loss gives rise to sorrow whilst each of
these situations is likely to arouse anger. The
unchallenged maintenance of a bond is experienced
as a source of security and the renewal of a bond
as a source of joy. (Bowlby, 1980)
3
Our Need for a Secure Base
  • For not only young children, it is now
    clear, but human beings of all ages are found to
    be at their happiest and to be able to deploy
    their talents to best advantage when they are
    confident that, standing behind them are one or
    more trusted persons who will come to their aid
    should difficulties arise. The person trusted
    provides a secure base from which his (or her)
    companion can operate.
  • Bowlby, 1973, p407

4
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES
  • ATTACHMENT NARRRATIVE THERAPY
  • Why the 3 perspectives need each other?
  • Social Constructionist - Narrative practice
  • Attachment Theory
  • Systemic Theory and practice
  • Persons and families in social/cultural contexts
  • Competencies and resiliencies

5
SYSTEMIC THERAPY and ATTACHMENT NARRATIVES
Constructing Safety and Resilience
6
Implications for Therapy
  • Naming and regulating emotions
  • Standing in the emotional shoes of the other
  • Comforting and self soothing
  • Information processing
  • Transformations in representational systems

7
ATTACHMENT REPRESENTATIONS
The layers of attachment
  • PROCEDURAL MEMORY memory for how we do things
    compare systemic patterns / process (R)
  • SENSORY MEMORY visual images, smell, touch,
    auditory (R)
  • SEMANTIC MEMORY cognition, beliefs, attitudes
    (L)
  • EPISODIC MEMORY narratives, stories,
    inter-connected experiences (L and R )
  • INTEGRATIVE MEMORY reflection, meta-cognition,
    on-going monitoring of our speech and thought (L
    and R)
  • Right Brain Implicit Left
    Brain - Explicit

8
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9
Exploring Patterns of Comforting
  • When you were upset or frightened as a child
    what happened?
  • How did you get to feel better? Who helped you to
    feel better? How did they do this?
  • What have you learnt from this for your own
    family?
  • What do you want to do the same?
  • What do you want to do differently?
  • How do people comfort each other in your own
    family/relationship?
  • How do you comfort your children?
  • How do they comfort you?
  • What do you want your children to learn about
    comforting?
  • How do you hope your children will offer comfort
    to others in the future?
  • Can be held as a family or couple interview or as
    a one-to-one conversation explore the impact of
    substance use across the generations.

10
Change and Re-Organisation
Triangulation
  • MOTHER FATHER
  • Child also has an
  • attachment relationship with the
    parents relationships

Conflict/stress
CHILD Relationship with each parent Pulled in
to take sides Conflict in construing relationship
with each parent Conflict in understanding impact
on parents relationships is it my fault?
11
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12
Corrective and Replicative Scripts
  • This utilises ideas from John Byng-Hall that
    families make comparisons across the generations
    in terms of similarities and differences between
    how our own parents were with each other and us
    (the children) and how this is repeated or
    altered in the next generation. We can explore
    the relationship with, for example, substance
    use, and its impact on relationships, across the
    generations.
  • Importantly it allows us to work in a positive
    frame with the family in that we may construe the
    intentions of the parents positively, i.e. they
    have tried to repeat what was good or correct
    what they felt was unhelpful about their own
    experiences. This can then lead to a discussion
    of whether these attempts have been successful or
    not, and possibly how they might be altered,
    strengthened, elaborated etc.
  • What are your thoughts about how similar or
    different your relationship with each other and
    your children is to your parents (grandparents)
    relationships ?
  • What have you tried to make similar or different
    to either of these relationships?
  • What do you value vs feel critical about in
    either of your parents relationships?
  • Does what you have tried to repeat/change work?
    Is there anything that you want to alter,
    strengthen, abandon about what you have been
    trying to repeat or change?

13
Disfavoured as a child, hit by his
father..implicit memory of humiliations and
fear triggered
DAN SIEGEL EXAMPLE
DAUGHTER DAD Mommy cleans Daddy will do it
my teeth better insists.. .flight Insists.an
gry fight or freeze !
Im not a good enough father, broken my promise
to myself
Father hits daughter.. Fear Cycle repeats
Symmetrical escalation.. Mirroring her anger.
Neurological activation..mirror neurons
14
Empathy and the Therapeutic Alliance
  • Reaffirming and clarifying clients experiences
  • Modelling acceptance of all family members
    experiences
  • Slowing down the session, enabling people to
    process their experiences
  • Helping to organise different aspects of clients
    experiences into a more integrated whole
  • Comforting in response to a difficult emotional
    experience
  • Exploring the meaning of important and powerful
    human experiences

15
SYSTEMIC THERAPY - patterns and escalations
  • secretive
  • JOHN
    PARENTS
  • suspicious
  • FEEDBACK - PATTERNS are mutually maintaining
  • ATTACHMENT emotional needs, attachment
    insecurities may fuel the cycle
  • ESCALATION, e.g. polarisation of actions, beliefs
    and feelings

Emotion Attachment
16
DEVELOPMENT of ATTACHMENT
STRATEGIES
  • Attachment system triggered by DANGER ! !
  • Each parents response to childs fear, distress,
    comfort seeking .......
  • shapes the
    childs attachment pattern to that parent

17
ATTACHMENT STRATEGIES AS A CONTINUUM
Styles of protective defensive processes
  • DISMISSING/DE-ACTIVATING
    PRE-OCCUPIED
  • Learn that cannot rely on words and cognition
    inability and failure to predict. Increasingly
    rely on affective information. Split feelings of
    anger and vulnerability so display one and
    suppress the other. Cognitive defences may
    involve passive thinking, reducing complexity by
    blaming of others and avoiding consideration of
    own contribution, rationalising/justifying own
    actions
  • anger towards others
  • anxiety and vulnerability

Learn that expressing emotions cannot reliably
elicit comfort or caring defensive strategy
develops of distancing or excluding emotions.
Cognition is relied on and can be employed to
help omit or distort emotional information
inhibit affect, falsify, deny physiological
discomfort and pain - idealise, care for
others - deny need for others compulsive
reliance on self
18
ATTACHMENT ALWAYS TWO SIDED
  • Attachment always has TWO sides. Responses to
    non-availability of the attachment figures
  • PROTEST - anger (hope and despair)
  • and
  • VULNERABILITY sadness, fear, shame
  • One may be shown more than the other, or shown in
    rapid alternation.

19
ANGER AVOIDANT PATTERNS
  • Negative feelings and their expression are
    inhibited, e.g. child development
  • Intrusions negative feelings, such as anger may
    break through
  • Sense of shame and failure at expression of anger
  • Family history - may be pattern of inhibiting
    anger - fear that it is dangerous, uncontrollable
  • Strategies for managing the negative feelings are
    not developed leading to possible pathologising
    of the anger

20
ANGER ANXIOUS AMBIVALENT PATTERNS
  • Semantic understanding is inhibited
  • Emotions anger or vulnerability are exaggerated
  • Explanations are reduced in attempts to manage
    unpredictability
  • Simplified beliefs - eg, he is a cold fish
  • Strategies for processing negative affect, and
    understanding its consequences on others, are
    inhibited

21
ATTACHMENT NEEDS - MUTUAL
  • PARENT (care-giving seeking)
  • needs attachment needs
  • CHILD (careseeking giving)
  • Parents meet childs needs but also
    child meets parents needs

22
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23
Secure Attachment
  • what sustains our relationship is, Im
    extremely happy with her, and part of it has to
    do with the fact that she is at once completely
    familiar to me, so that I can be myself and she
    knows me very well and I trust her completely,
    but at the same time she is also a mystery to me
    in some ways. And there are times when we are
    lying in bed and I look over and sort of have a
    start. Because I realise here is this other
    person who is separate and different and has
    different memories and backgrounds and thoughts
    and feelings. Its that tension between
    familiarity and mystery that makes for something
    strong, because, even as you build a life of
    trust and comfort and mutual support, you retain
    some sense of surprise or wonder about the other
    person.
  • Barack Obama. The New Yorker, January 19, 2009,
    P50

24
Felt security in a relationship
  • Affect regulation (less reactivity, hyper-arousal
    under-arousal)
  • Support seeking
  • Information processing (curiosity, open, more
    toleration of uncertainty)
  • Communication (meta-communication, disclosing,
    collaborative, assertive, empathic)
  • Sense of self (elaborated, articulated,
    positive) (Mikulincer and Goodman)

25
Attachment Injury
  • A betrayal of trust/abandonment at a crucial
    moment of need
  • Like a form of relationship trauma defines
    relationship as insecure (you werent there for
    me!)
  • An impasse in recovery/repair process
  • Attachment significance is key, not content as
    such
  • The only way out is through
  • Acknowledgement, listening, appreciation,
    recovery and apology
  • Johnson (1998)

26
Attachment Injury Resolution
  • Help articulate injury and impact.
  • I promised myself Never again!!
  • Acknowledgement of hurt partners distress,
    elaborates on development of event
  • Hurt partner connects thoughts emotion,
    attachment issues into an expanded narrative
  • Other explains intent (owns responsibility if
    appropriate), expresses regret while staying
    attuned connected
  • Hurt partner asks for comfort
  • Other responds
  • Relationship redefined as a safe haven new
    narrative of recovery healing
  • Johnson (1998)

27
Internal Working Models
  • Beliefs and expectations about
  • Ones own and other peoples behaviour
  • Views of the SELF How loveable, worthy and
    acceptable am I?
  • How available and interested are others in me,
    and in caring for and looking after me?

28
COUPLE THERAPY Trauma responses and attachment
injury

29
FORMAT
WALKING AROUND IN DIFFICULT MOMENTS
  • Identify with the person, couple, family etc a
    difficult event, episode, pattern
  • Articulate the experience in the pattern for each
    person separately eg for both partners in the
    couple, or for family members, etc.
  • Direct focus to the critical and difficult part
    of the pattern, for example the outburst of
    anger, conflict, criticism, hurt feelings, etc
  • Identify the feelings, thoughts and actions at
    the critical moment in the episode (attachment
    triggers, threats and attachment injuries,
    resonances)
  • Therapist supports the other partner in listening
    and staying responsive, (with couples reverse the
    experience before inviting them to turn to each
    other)
  • Try to trace the thoughts and feelings that
    fuelled the action/connection to the persons
    underlying internal working model
  • Consider with them where their working model
    derives from, eg some previous history in the
    family?
  • Consider particular experiences of insults, shame
    and humiliation past attachment injuries etc
    that may also be a part of the working model

30
ATTACHMENT NARRATIVE THERAPY Steps to
Constructing Safety and Resilience
  • Integrating ideas from systemic, attachment and
    narrative approaches Work with both individual
    and systemic processes
  • Creating a Secure Base
  • Exploring Narratives, Attachments and Dilemmas
    within a Systemic Framework
  • Considering Alternatives
  • Future and Maintaining the Therapeutic Base

31
Creating a secure base
Reflection, containment and emotional
safety Supporting, building the therapeutic
relationship Validation and support-
acknowledging emotional risks, demands of
therapy, temptation to withdraw Clarifying,
context how we will communicate Establishing
sense of safety, pacing Identifying, exploring
and de-escalating unhelpful patterns of
interaction
32
Exploration - Narratives and Attachments within
a Systemic Framework
Identifying attachment dilemmas Identifying
attachment needs and wishes eg for reassurance,
underlying core patterns of feeling, thinking and
behaviour Discrepancies thoughts and
feelings, head and heart Divided loyalties
ambivalences in relationships Reflections on the
therapeutic relationship empathy and
listening Exploring problems, emotions and
competencies Access, illuminate, expand and
re-process emotional experiences
33
Considering Alternatives emotional risks and
change
Loosening Attachment Dilemmas Considering
alternatives unique outcomes Acknowledging
risks of change, Threats to perceptions of self
and others Relational and emotional risk
taking, in therapy and outside conflict
resolution Re-bonding consolidating more
satisfying interactions
34
The Future
Maintaining the Therapeutic Base
Shared narratives of healing Acknowledging
possibility of relapse temptation to retreat to
patterns of thinking and feeling Holding each
other in mind how we will think about each
other in the future What support will be able
to draw on in future consolidating
change Creating opportunities for future
reflection
35
EMOTIONAL SCULPTING
  • Sculpting with family members themselves, or
    sculpting with objects (coins, buttons, stones,
    figures etc )
  • PROMPTS (can use direct or circular questions)
    For example
  • Map the current attachment patterns,
    relationships who looks after whom, etc.
  • How does it feel to be, for example, at the
    centre, on the edge, between your parents, and so
    on?
  • Now that you and your brother are closer, how
    does that make you feel?
  • If you were to get closer to your mother what
    would that be like?
  • How do you think your sister feels being that
    distant from your father? And so on.....

36
Exploring Attachment Narratives Through the
Family Genogram
  • The relationship between the grandparents -
    questions about the grandparents relationship
    can bring out stories about the parents
    childhood experiences and prompt a consideration
    of how their own children experience their
    relationship (mother and father) questions can
    be contextualised with substance use
  • How would you describe your parents relationship
    - cold, warm, distant, passionate, conflicts?
  • What differences do you see in the relationships
    between mothers parents vs fathers parents?
  • In what ways are either of your parents
    relationships similar to your own?
  • Corrective and Replicative Scripts (Attachments
    and alcohol use)
  • What have you tried to make similar or different
    to either of these relationships?
  • What do you value vs feel critical about in
    either of your parents relationships?
  • Influence on the parents relationship with their
    own children - questions which invite the parents
    to consider how their own experiences have
    consciously or unconsciously influenced and
    shaped their relationships with their children
  • How do you see your relationship (mother and
    father in turn) with your children?
  • How are you different with your children to how
    your parents were with you?
  • Do you think you are closer or more distant to
    your children than your parents were with you?

37
Some Useful References
  • Dallos R and Vetere A (2009) Systemic Therapy and
    Attachment Narratives Applications in a range of
    clinical settings. London Routledge
  • Dallos R and Vetere A (2010) Emotions,
    Attachments and Systems. Context, 107, 8-10
  • Johnson S (2002) Emotionally Focused Couple
    Therapy with Trauma Survivors. New York Guilford
  • Vetere A and Dallos R (2008) Systemic therapy and
    attachment narratives. Journal of Family Therapy,
    30, 374-385
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