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Author: David Howe

This is a GREAT book. Don’t be put off by the title, this is a theoretical book and not full of graphic details of abuse. It explains attachment and attachment injury (though not using the word ‘injury’ specifically) in the context of ‘bad’ parenting and is one of the only books I’ve come across that explains attachment in real concrete terms, relating it to how it manifests in both children and adults. It’s useful for explaining the attachment patterns in parents who end up creating insecure attachments in their children, and I found it made me really think about what might have been going on in my FOO that made them act the way they did.

It also made me think hard about things from my point of view as a kid and that was pretty heavy going – but I don’t think it’s triggering as such, more painful.

It’s a tad repetitive and that’s frustrating as I’d love to have a whole lot more detail about how attachment injuries show up in more individual and specific cases, but generally it’s a really good detailed breakdown of how attachment theory applies in reality.

Unfortunately when you google this book or go into Amazon to look in it, you only get the preface so I’ve copied over some quotes to give an idea of the style and content. The quotes are not consecutive, I’ve just lifted them randomly from the first part of the book.

It’s divided into 5 sections as follows and is about 300 pages long, a decent sized book:

Part 1: Emotions, Attachment and the Psychological Self
Part 2: Abuse
Part 3: Neglect
Part 4: Compound Cases of Abuse and Neglect
Part 5: Interventions, Treatment and Support

quote:
Maltreating carers tend to have more deficits, distortions, biases, and errors in their perceptions of children’s behaviours. They might be less attentive. For example, neglectful parents might fail to see, perceive or hear their children’s distress and attachment needs. Abusive parents might only see the negative things in their child’s behaviour, failing to note instances when the child complies or behaves well. Abusive parents readily perceive and identify noncompliant behaviour. It has also been observed that abusive carers, though likely to notice that their child has an emotional expression on his or her face, are much more likely to misidentify it – an error of coding. This is particularly true if the expression is conveyed at low intensity. For example, a look of surprise might be perceived as a look of dissatisfaction, which is much more likely to trigger a hostile response than one of reassurance.

High-risk parents tend to interpret negative behaviour in children as more serious, wrong and culpable than low-risk parents. They are also more inclined to see these ‘hostile’ behaviours as wilful and deliberate, warranting a heavy disciplinary response.

Maltreating parents are less likely to take mitigating or situational factors into account when interpreting a child’s behaviour. For example, if the family dog knocks into a three year old who has just made a drink, and the drink spills on the carpet, the child is accused of being careless and annoying.

High-risk parents tend to be rather rigid and inflexible in their parenting techniques, including behavioural control and discipline. Their ability to monitor, reflect on and explore the meaning and purpose of a child’s behaviour is limited. They employ the same understandings and techniques in most situations, failing to adapt or develop their responses to the particular situation or circumstance. Maltreating parents are likely to process a range of different parent-child interactions using the same assumptions, understandings and cognitive schemata. This is known as automatic processing. The effect of using the same model or cognitive schema to explain a variety of behaviours is a failure to see or think about the particularities of the situation. Reactions are unreflective and quick. An injured child, an ill child, and a tired child might all be seen as conditions demanding a response, the effect of which is to annoy the parent. The distressed child is immediately told off or disciplined. Abusive and neglectful parents see their child’s personality as fixed and their behaviour as independent of circumstance or situation.


quote:
Parents who show no interest in what they think their infant is thinking and feeling, and who fail to ‘affect mirror’, deny the child information about his or her young mind and how it works. The child cannot find his or her psychological self in the mind of a parent who is not mind-minded. All the child gets when he or she interacts with his mother is her state of mind.

In the case of connecting with the mind of an abusive carer, the child finds hostility towards his or her very existence. In the mind of a neglectful carer, the child finds only the thinnest of mental representations of the self and its needs – a virtual blank.

Thus, the only information about how to experience the self is the parent’s own thoughts and feelings towards the infant. The child therefore begins to internalize and represent this ‘alien’, non-mirrored view of self as a core part of him or herself. However, this ‘alien’ self bears no relation to the child’s own affect and cognitive states. So children of abusive carers internalize a hostile, persecutory self. Those of severely neglectful parents internalize a hollow, empty, abandoned self.


(Added by me: yeah and some of us end up with both!)

quote:
Caregivers who are unwilling (avoidant patterns) or unable (ambivalent patterns) to respond to or satisfy a child’s normally expressed attachment needs create anxiety and insecurity in the parent-child relationship. In order to increase parental responsivity, children unconsciously learn that they cannot display attachment behaviour in its full, rounded and unabridged form. Instead, they develop secondary attachment behavioural strategies. By suppressing their primary attachment strategy, children reorganize their attachment behaviour in an attempt to recover parental availability and interest. If the strategy works, the child has a way of relating to the parent, and increasing the amount of care and protection available. The child then experiences a ‘secondary felt security’. The feelings and behaviour associated with that strategy also becomes the preferred state of mind in which to be, that is to say, in which the individual feels most secure.

Children who develop avoidant attachments adapt to ‘rejecting’ caregiving by downplaying and inhibiting their feelings of need. They over-regulate their emotions. They ‘consistently omit negative affect from mental processing and behaviour’. In effect, they deactivate their attachment behaviour as a way of increasing parental proximity, acceptance, responsivity and availability. They therefore increase parental availability when they downplay attachment behaviour and conduct themselves as they believe the parent would prefer them to behave. Their anxiety is that any display of need, longing, vulnerability and emotion might drive away their caregiver.

In the case of ambivalent children, attachment behaviour appears not to predict parental availability. It is difficult for the child to build up any sense or consistent picture of how his or her behaviour affects others or brings about desired change. The responsivity of the carer is governed largely by her needs and feelings, not those of the child. The responses of the carer appear not to be contingently connected to the child’s internal mental states, anxieties or attachment behaviour. Ambivalent children, and indeed ambivalent adults, therefore have little confidence in how their own behaviour might affect the behaviour of others. Only when ambivalent individuals are in a state of heightened arousal (hyperactivated attachment) do they feel that others are likely to take notice and attend. There is an anxious need to feel recognized and loved. Relationships are therefore craved, although they provoke anxiety and anger. Inasmuch as this demanding state does increase other people’s involvement, no matter whether positive or negative, it reduces the fear of feeling alone and abandoned.

Because deactivated (avoidant) and hyperactivated (ambivalent) attachment strategies increase the availability of the attachment figure, they are described as ‘organized’ attachment patterns. These ‘organized’ attachment strategies allow individuals to stay connected to and in relationship with other people, including their attachment figure.”


Sorry about all the quotes, this book is jam packed with really interesting stuff and it’s hard to pick out representative paragraphs without wanting to include the lot. Lol do you think I really like this book?

LL
Original Post

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LL...thanks! This sounds like a fascinating book. The quotes were very attention grabbing and informative. Can you tell me if they discuss "disorganized" attachment in any thorough way?

The part in your post where you write "yeah, and some of us end up with both" made me smile because I had JUST said the very same thing to myself when I read the quote! I very much identify with that feeling.

As I am struggling with my attachment to my T right now this topic is timely. I can see so much of what I experienced as a child gets transferred onto T, yet some of what he is doing is real life stuff too. It gets all mixed up and then I react in a negative way.

Thanks for posting this.
TN
Hello TN - bet you think I'm sitting here waiting to pounce on the first person who replies lol.

Actually I was going to write something about the fact that yes the book does explain disorganized attachment too, but I couldn't extract a concise enough section to quote. One thing I really liked was that this is the first time any of the literature has explained the reasoning behind calling it 'disorganized' - which is why I posted that last paragraph. I found the book just SO enlightening, it turned abstract theory into concrete reality in a way that you can apply personally.

Lol I could go on and on about it. This has to be one of the few books on psychology I've read that I'd wholeheartedly recommend anyone interested in attachment, or just plain how they got to be who they are, to read.

LL
Hi UV nice to see you again too Smiler

I was interested to see that you’d found extracts from this book on google books (as I couldn’t unearth anything but the preface for it through Amazon when I was first looking to read it) and so I followed your advice to key in the four words – however I couldn’t come up with any of this particular book, what I got was David Howe being quoted in another book about disorganized attachment. So I’m wondering whether the stuff you mentioned that was triggering didn’t come from a different book? Would you be able to post a link to what you found maybe?

One of the things I liked about this book was that there wasn’t any direct reference to or details about actual abuse so I was surprised to read your references to violence and other topics that frightened you. Having said that, maybe I’m just not that sensitive to this stuff and what to me seemed pretty innocuous maybe is really triggering to others. So I’m really sorry you got triggered reading it and maybe anyone else who is vaguely thinking of looking into this book ought to be forewarned.

The other book by him that you put the link to, so far I can’t find ANYTHING from it on the internet nor on Amazon so if anyone has it or has read it I’d be interested to hear their views on it.

UV glad your therapy is going well, especially after being stuck in an impasse for a loooong time. Hard work and progress! Good for you AND for your T, and I’m glad you feel so warmly towards him Smiler

LL
Thanks Draggers Smiler

I was looking more though for being able to have a read of the content of the book (the one UV mentioned about Attachment over the Lifecourse), I've ploughed my way through so many rubbish psych books that I'm very wary now of forking out big bucks without having some idea of what's inside them. Sometimes Amazon let you 'look inside' but for this one, I suppose because it's only recently published, there's no look inside function and no customer reviews yet.

How you doing Draggers, hope things are picking up for you a bit Smiler Smiler

LL
Oops cross posted with you UV. This post in reply to Dragger's previous one.


Lol if only it WERE possible to read these books for free, the frustrating thing is even google books only let you see some pages, and have a bad habit of coming up with 'sorry pp 12 - 5.430 are not included in this preview' Big Grin I just want to read some of what's in these books to get an idea of the style and content (has saved me from buying many more crappy books than I already have.)

Anyway, I STILL can't find David Howe's book keying in those four words - the only google book link I come up with is for a book (which is actually in my Amazon basket waiting for me to decide whether to buy it or not) called 'Understanding Disorganized Attachment' by David and Yvonne Shemmings. Is this the one you found? I know I'm pretty computer illiterate so maybe there's something I'm doing wrong (quite likely!)

Glad you're feeling a bit better about things, not so glad they're all still crap. (((( Draggers ))))

LL

UV just had a quick look at the link and yeah it's a different book (phew maybe I haven't lost as many brain cells as I feared) - but it looks quite interesting too so I shall go have a good look at it, thanks!
Holy cow LL -- why did it take me so long to find this post?

I have to get a copy of this book, yet I am also afraid to read it. This part was HUGE:

"There is an anxious need to feel recognized and loved. Relationships are therefore craved, although they provoke anxiety and anger. Inasmuch as this demanding state does increase other people’s involvement, no matter whether positive or negative, it reduces the fear of feeling alone and abandoned."

I wonder if this is what my T is doing with me. And if he wants to me to accept and embrace the fear of feeling alone and abandoned -- why? Is it like exposure therapy where I'm learning to tolerate the feelings?

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