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AAMFT Consumer Update
Adult Attachment Relationships
Adult
intimate relationships can be understood through attachment
theory, which has been researched and validated in a
number of research studies over the last few decades. John
Bowlby, an English psychiatrist, observed as early as 1958
that human beings are biologically wired to seek and maintain
a few intimate relationships. He asserted that our need to
connect begins at birth and continues throughout life, and as
adults, we continue to need a special someone who will be
emotionally accessible and responsive to us. Most importantly,
attachment theory helps us understand how to create a secure
relationship, how a love relationship can become distressed,
and what interventions can help a troubled partnership.
What Should I
Know About Attachment Relationships?
Attachment
relationships begin developing at birth and our early
experiences as children shape our responses in current primary
relationships. Secure attachment results when caregivers
respond to their children’s cues and the child develops an
expectation that others will be there for them and that they
are loved. When there is unresponsiveness of an attachment
figure over time, people develop different attachment
strategies as a way to protect themselves in intimate
relationships and can become either overly anxious or more
distant and avoidant.
In an
insecure attachment strategy, one can become overly
preoccupied with the relationship or exhibit the opposite
reaction of withdrawing or investing less of oneself in the
relationship. The first strategy is characterized by blaming
or critical behaviors, whereas the second strategy is more
likely to involve an unemotional or dismissive stance. There
is a third attachment strategy that some individuals—who have
experienced either severe abuse or neglect as a child—can
develop and that is to both seek contact with the significant
other, but then reject the contact when it is offered.
Insecure attachment strategies, while useful in childhood
relationships, may not be needed in the adult relationship,
but will work to define the current relationship as insecure.
A distressed relationship will also reinforce and maintain
these strategies. It is important to remember that these
strategies can be modified and our experiences as adults can
shape and change our sense of security in relationships. An
emotionally responsive and accessible partner can influence
our sense of security and we can come to expect that we will
have our emotional needs met and that we are worth loving.
When Should I
Seek Help?
Adult
attachment difficulties will become evident in primary
intimate
relationships. The following are signs of relationship
distress:
-
Repeated
negative interaction that creates distance and distrust in
the relationship
-
Diminished
or nonexistent affection and/or sexual desire
-
Feelings of
loneliness or alienation in the relationship
-
Betrayal or
breach of trust in the relationship
-
Addictive
behaviors; for example drugs, alcohol, pornography, gambling
-
Lack of
connection or intimacy in the relationship over long periods
of time
Couples
should consider therapy when the relationship has become
unhappy or unfulfilling for one or both partners and the
continuation of the relationship is threatened. Couples
therapy that has an attachment focus can address directly
relationship problems and can provide a long lasting
successful outcome. Research
studies of Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) find that 70-75%
of couples move from distress to recovery and approximately
90% show significant improvements.
What is
Therapy Like?
There are
various forms of couple and marital therapy available and
couples can access help through consulting with a therapist
specifically trained in couple and family interventions that
are attachment based.
Typically,
therapy involves weekly sessions for both partners over a
series of, on average, 10-20 sessions. Generally, the
therapist helps the couple identify communication patterns
that are contributing to distress and insecurity in the
relationship. When the couple begins to identify their
patterns as their primary problem, and not each other, they
can then begin to develop more positive ways of interacting
with each other. Couples are helped in creating a secure
connection by learning to provide comfort, support, nurturance
and care for one another. The relationship then becomes a safe
haven where partners can turn to one another for love and be
both intimate and interdependent with each other. The end goal
of attachment-based couples therapy is to decrease the level
of negative interaction and increase the emotional closeness
and connection for the couple.
While it is
known that insecure and secure attachment exists in all
cultural, religious, and economic groups, and in both
heterosexual and same-sex unions, the way these relationships
are expressed will differ across these groups. A therapist who
is sensitive to these variances will be able to modify the
treatment to fit the particular needs of the couple.
Consumer
Resources
Online
ICEEFT
(International Centre for Excellence in Emotionally Focused
Therapy)
www.eft.ca/home.htm
Based in
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,
this
international organization provides Emotionally Focused
Therapy for couples and families and conducts leading
research. The center has links to various EFT centers located
across Canada and the U.S. that have similar goals and
functions.
(613) 722-5122; e-mail:
www.ocfi@magma.ca.
Books
Safe Haven Marriage. Building a Relationship You Want to Come
Home to,
by A. Hart and S. Hart-Morris, 2003. W. Publishing Group.
Love is Not Enough: Keeping Your Love Alive,
by J. Dragun, 2007. Canton Press.
Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love,
by S. Johnson (in press). Little & Brown.
The text of this brochure was written by Gail Palmer, MSW, and
Alison Lee, PhD.
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