Three Different Types of Attachments.
What’s your Attachment Style?
Research shows that young children develop one of three
attachment styles to their parent, or main caregiver. This affects the way they
attach to their partners in adulthood. The three types of attachment are:
A1.
Secure attachment
- Securely attached children become upset when their
caregivers leave, and are happy when they return.
- When frightened, they seek comfort from the parent or
caregiver.
- Contact initiated by a parent is readily accepted by
securely attached children; they greet the return of a parent with positive
behavior.
- Although these children can be comforted by others in the
absence of a parent or caregiver, they clearly prefer their parents to
strangers.
- Parents of securely attached children tend to play more
with their children.
- They react more quickly to their children’s needs and are
generally more responsive to their children.
- Studies have shown that securely attached children are
more empathetic during later stages of childhood. They are also described as
less disruptive, less aggressive, and more mature than children with ambivalent
or avoidant attachment styles.
- As adults, those who are securely attached tend to have
trusting, long-term relationships
- Other key characteristics of securely attached individuals
include having high self-esteem, enjoying intimate relationships, seeking out
social support, and being able to share feelings with others.
A2.
Ambivalent attachment
- Children who are ambivalently attached tend to be
extremely suspicious of strangers.
- These children display considerable distress when
separated from a parent or caregiver, but do not seem reassured or comforted by
the return of the parent.
- In some cases, the child might passively reject the parent
by refusing comfort, or may openly display direct aggression toward the parent.
- They never know whether they can trust their parent to be
there for them in time of need.
- As adults, these individuals often find it hard to get
close to others. They constantly worry about their partner not genuinely caring
about them, reciprocating their feelings.
- This leads to frequent breakups in relationships as they
doubt their partner’s love, and he or she often seems cold and distant to them
(even though, objectively, this might not be true).
- These individuals feel especially distraught when a
relationship ends. They feel rejected, abandoned, and often unwanted and
unloveable.
A3.
Avoidant attachment
- Children with avoidant attachment styles tend to avoid
their parents and caregivers.
- This avoidance is especially pronounced after a period of
absence.
- Although these children may not overtly reject attention
from a parent or caregiver, they do they look for comfort from or contact with
them, either.
- Children with an avoidant attachment show no preference
between a parent and a complete stranger.
- As adults, these individuals tend to have difficulty with
intimacy and close relationships.
- They do not invest much emotion in relationships and
experience little distress when a relationship ends.
- They often avoid intimacy by using excuses (such as
needing to work long hours).
- Research has shown that these adults are also more likely
to engage in casual sex.
- Other common characteristics include a failure to support
partners during stressful times and an inability to share feelings with their
partners.
+ comments + 1 comments
Superb blog!!!! I have read this post & gain so much info from your post, That's truly big help for me, keep sharing like this....Home Care in Atlanta
Post a Comment