
Aug 31, 2014, 06:24 PM
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Member Since: Jun 2014
Location: United States
Posts: 1,478
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Quote:
Originally Posted by archipelago
Don't want to hijack the thread, but maybe it is helpful to talk about the role of attachment in all of this. First the basics. We all have attachment styles. All. It is universal (meaning cross-cultural). There are secure and insecure styles that are formed with early caregivers. Insecure types (there are 4 of them) are quite common; you don't have to have severe abuse or neglect to have an insecure attachment style.
With avoid ant remember though it sounds as though there is no "need" avoid ant attachment is still an attachment. Get it? When they do a little experiment with avoid ant kids, the kids appear on the outside to not be distressed and not seek out comfort or need anyone, but sensors show that they are in fact quite distressed. So one important step is to recognize and accept that no matter what your outside behavior is like (rejecting needs) or your internal story (I don't have needs), there is still distress that you are denying. It is human to be interdependent, not weakness. We can't be entirely self-sufficient; that is a myth. We are social primates who need to balance cooperative joining with independent action. Infants are born hard-wired for relatedness, which is now considered a primary if not the primary drive.
Allowing that ability to develop a relationship with my therapist, who unlike others, is bound by his profession to not abandon, demand, or harm me, made it safe for me to explore and even test this. At first I felt reluctant and bad about reaching out. Then I swung the other way and was too demanding. In many ways, I was like a very young child still trying to figure out how to express distress and get the right level of response. Once I made progress on that, everything calmed down. I found that I could internalize some of the relationship so that I could soothe myself and take care of my needs with newly developed skills about truly being able to be there for myself. The next step was to try this outside of the safety of the therapeutic relationship and see what happened. My attachment style by then was more or less secure so I was handling relationships differently anyway. There were difficulties since people are more reactive and do not restrain themselves in the way that therapists do, but I was more able to tolerate this and willing to work with it to connect. And I was more able to step away if my needs were not being met. The shift in attachment has shifted my whole life. It isn't only attachment but it is largely attachment.
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I'm curious.....did your T explain this to you? I think my T is maybe waiting for me to attach but hasn't explained. I just now got to the point where she hinted it's ok to feel close to her. For some reason I wanted her permission.
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