Title: Creating a Secure Base: Understanding Attachment Theory
1 Creating a Secure Base Understanding
Attachment Theory
- University of Utah Summer Institute
- Summer 2003
- Douglas Goldsmith, Ph.D.
- Executive Director
- The Childrens Center
2Attachment
- Emotional bond
- Behaviors promote proximity
- Motivational system to seek proximity
- Enhances feelings of security
- Motivates baby to take action when frightened
3Attachment
- To say of a child (or older person) that he is
attached to , or has an attachment to, someone
means that he is strongly disposed to seek
proximity to and contact with the that individual
and to do so especially in certain specified
conditions. Bowlby
(1988)
4Attachment in Action
- Anxiety provoking situation
- Exploration decreases
- Proximity seeking increases
- Infant regains security
- Exploratory system re-engages
5Attachment Behavior
- Attachment behaviour is any form of behavior
that results in a person attaining or maintaining
proximity to some other clearly defined
individual who is conceived as better able to
cope with the world. It is most obvious whenever
the person is frightened, fatigued, or sick, and
is assuaged by comforting and caregiving. Bowlby
1988
6Circle of SecurityMarvin, Cooper, Hoffman
Powell (2002)
- Childs Exploratory System and Needs
- The child can move off and explore, if he
believes and expects that the attachment figure
will be available if, or when, needed - Attachment System
- The child needs the attachment figure to be
available to protect, comfort, delight, and
organize his feelings when he becomes overwhelmed
7Attachment Classifications
- The strange situation
- Secure 65
- Avoidant 20
- Ambivalent 10
- Disorganized 5-10 (80 maltreated)
8Attachment Classifications
- The strange situation
- Secure 65
- Avoidant 20
- Ambivalent 10
- Disorganized 5-10 (80 maltreated)
9Secure (B)
- Uses mother as secure base
- Signs of missing mother
- Actively greets with smile or gesture
- Signals or seeks contact if upset
- Once comforted resumes exploration
- Solomon George (1999) p.291
10Avoidant (A)
- Explores readily
- Little visible distress when left alone
- Upon reunion, looks away or actively avoids
- May stiffen or lean away if picked up
- Solomon George (1999) p. 291
11Ambivalent (C)
- Distressed, fretful, passive
- Fails to explore
- Unsettled, distressed by separation
- Alternates bids for contact with signs of angry
rejection - Fails to find comfort from the parent
- Solomon George (1999) p.291
12Disorganized (D)
- Behavior lacks an observable goal
- Look fearful
- Behavior is bizarre
- May try to leave after the reunion or freeze
13 Secure Attachment Formula
- Always be bigger, wiser, and kind
- Whenever possible, follow the childs lead
- Whenever necessary, take charge
- Marvin, et al (2002)
14Attachment ProblemsBowlby
- A severely hurt child fails to seek comfort
- Signals that ordinarily activate attachment
behavior fail to do so - System controlling attachment, and the feelings
and desires associated, is rendered incapable of
being aroused
15Development of Relationships
- For a relationship between any two individuals
to proceed harmoniously each must be aware of the
others point-of-view, his goals, feelings, and
intentions, and each must so adjust his own
behavior that some alignment of goals is
negotiated.
16Development of Relationships
- This requires that each should have reasonably
accurate models of self and other which are
regularly updated by free communication between
them. It is here that the mothers of securely
attached children excel, and those of the
insecure are markedly deficient. - Bowlby (1988) p. 131
17Impact of Empathic Failure
- Whatever she fails to recognize in him he is
likely to fail to recognize in himself. In this
way, it is postulated, major parts of a childs
developing personality can become split off from,
that is, out of communication with, those parts
of his personality that his mother recognizes and
responds to, which in some cases include features
of personality that she is attributing to him
wrongly. Bowlby (1988) p.132
18Maternal Attributions
- Fixed beliefs that the mother has about the child
beliefs that she perceives as objective,
accurate perceptions of the childs essence. - Lieberman (2000)
19Positive Maternal Attributions
- When a mother sees her child as the cutest,
most intelligent, most endearing being ever
created, she is summoning from the depths of
herself the capacity for ecstasy that allows her
to put up with the inevitably annoying,
exasperating, or simply tedious aspects of
raising a child. - Lieberman (2000)
20Maternal AttributionsProtective Function
- Child feels adored
- Allow child to cope with self-doubts and feelings
of despair - Allow parent to better tolerate self-sacrifices
that are integral to the parenting process - Lieberman (2000)
21Negative Maternal Attributions
- Determine whether and how mother will respond
to, misinterpret, or ignore certain behaviors - Lieberman (2000)
22Cooper, Hoffman, Marvin Powell , 2000
23Cooper, Hoffman, Marvin Powell , 2000
24Cooper, Hoffman, Marvin Powell , 2000
25(No Transcript)
26Cooper, Hoffman, Marvin Powell , 2000
27Parental Empathic Understanding
- Parental empathic understanding involves the
capacity to see things from the childs point of
view within a balanced, accepting, and coherent
frame. - Oppenheim (2000)
28Assessment of Parents Point of View
- Interview questions
- Could you give me a thumbnail sketch of your
child? - Tell me about a time in the past two weeks when
you and your child really clicked. - Tell me about a time when you didnt.
- What gives you the most joy in your relationship?
- What gives you the most pain?
- Where do you turn for emotional support?
- Steele (2003)
29Assessment Secure Base
- Over the past two weeks can you think of a time
when your child was - Hurt?
- Frightened?
- Separated from you?
- What did your child do?
- How did you respond?
30Tips For Working With Parents
- Concept of Good Grandparenting
- Nurture
- Avoid being sidetracked by opposition
- Understand underlying feelings
- Develop coping strategies
- Focus on the childs sadness rather than anger
31Working with the Child
- Develop a secure base for exploration
- Relationship with a therapist may be a safer
beginning - Nurturing behavior must occur regularly and
anticipate the childs needs - Help child explore his/her past relationships
- Play therapy
- Projective games
- Sandtray therapy
32Working with the Child
- Utilize therapy groups to help broaden the
childs perception of self - Lifespace interviews
- Empathy training
- Teach the foster and biological parents about
child centered play techniques - Filial Therapy
- Utilize limit setting and natural consequences to
increase security
33Working with the Child
- Teach the foster and biological parents
communication techniques that deflect the childs
anger and hostility - How to talk so kids will listen and listen so
kids will talk. Faber Mazlish - Gradually reduce reliance on the therapeutic
process and focus on generalization of skills