Rosenblum
(eds) The Effect of the Infant on its Caregiver, 49-76, New York; Wiley-Interscience.
A-Secure-Base-Bowlby-Johnf
Even so the impasse may continue: the story is told and retold in a flat cyn- ical way with no show of feeling whatever.
This situation has been discussed by Selma Fraiberg who, with colleagues, set out to help vul- nerable mothers at risk of either neglecting or ab- using their infants (Fraiberg, Adelson, and Sha- piro, 1975). They describe making visits to the homes of two such mothers and listening to the distressing tales these women had to tell. Each told a story of gross cruelty during child- hood--being subjected to violent beatings, being locked out in the cold, often deserted by mother, being shunted from one place to another, and of having no one to go to for help or comfort. Neither gave a hint of how they might have felt nor what they may have felt like doing. One, a girl of 16 who avoided touching or holding her baby (who screamed hopelessly), insisted: 'But what's the use of talking? I always kept things to myself.
310/362
? ? ? I want to forget. I don't want to think. ' This was the point at which the therapist intervened--by herself expressing all the feelings that any and every child would be expected to have in the situ- ations described: how frightened, how angry, how hopeless one would feel, and also how one would long to go to someone who would understand and provide comfort and protection. In doing so the therapist not only showed an understanding of how the patient must have felt, but communic- ated in her manner that the expression of such feeling and desire would be met with a sympath- etic and comforting response. Only then was it possible for the young mother to express all the grief, the tears, 'and the unspeakable anguish for herself as a cast-off child' that she had always felt but had never dared express.
In this account of Fraiberg's methods of help- ing a patient express the emotions she dares not show I have deliberately emphasized the link between emotion and action. Failure to express emotion is due very largely to unconscious fear lest the action of which the emotion is a part will lead to a dreaded outcome. In many families an- ger with an adult leads to punishment which can sometimes be severe. Moreover a tearful appeal
311/362
? ? ? for comfort and help can lead to rejection and hu- miliation. It is perhaps too often forgotten by clinicians that many children, when they become distressed and weepy and are looking for com- fort, are shooed off as intolerable little cry-babies. Instead of the comforting provided by an under- standing and affectionate parent, these children meet with an unsympathetic and critical rebuff. No wonder therefore if, should this pattern pre- vail during childhood, the child learns never to show distress or seek comfort and, should he un- dertake therapy, assumes that his therapist will be as intolerant of anger and tears as his parents always were.
Every therapist who adopts a psychoanalytic per- spective has long recognized that, to be effective, therapy requires that a patient not only talks about his memories, his ideas and dreams, his hopes and desires, but also expresses his feelings. The discussion of Fraiberg's technique for help- ing a cynical and frozen young woman to discover the depth of her feelings and to express them freely to her therapist is therefore a fitting note on which to end. In writing this lecture I have throughout been aware that, by using terms such as 'information', 'communication', and 'working
312/362
? ? ? models', it would be easy for an unwary reader to suppose that these terms belong within a psycho- logy concerned only with cognition and one bereft of feeling and action. Although for many years it was all too common for cognitive psycho- logists to omit reference to emotion, it is now re- cognized that to do so is artificial and unfruitful (Hinde, Perret-Clermont, and Stevenson-Hinde, 1985). There are, in fact, no more important com- munications between one human being and an- other than those expressed emotionally, and no information more vital for constructing and re- constructing working models of self and other than information about how each feels towards the other. During the earliest years of our lives, indeed, emotional expression and its reception are the only means of communication we have, so that the foundations of our working models of self and attachment figure are perforce laid using information from that source alone. Small won- der therefore, if, in reviewing his attachment re- lationships during the course of psychotherapy and restructuring his working models, it is the emotional communications between a patient and his therapist that play the crucial part.
313/362
? ? ? 1 Within traditional theory this shift of role by a pa- tient is likely to be termed a case of identification with the aggressor.
2 Since in previous publications I have given much at- tention to the ill effects on personality development of bereavements and prolonged separations, these themes are omitted from what follows.
3 For research purposes, however, criteria for accept- ing retrospective information as valid must be much stricter.
REFERENCES
Adams-Tucker, C. (1982) 'Proximate effects of sexual abuse in childhood: a report on 28 children', American Journal of Psychiatry, 139: 1252-6.
Ainsworth, M. D. (1962) 'The effects of maternal deprivation: a review of findings and controversy in the context of research strategy' in: Deprivation of maternal care: a reassessment of its effects, Public Health Papers no. 14, Geneva: World Health Organisation.
Ainsworth, M. D. (1963) 'The development of infant- mother interaction among the Ganda' in B. M. Foss (ed. ) Determinants of infant behaviour, vol. 2, London: Methuen; New York: Wiley.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1967) Infancy in Uganda: infant care and the growth of attachment, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1969) 'Object relations, depend- ency and attachment: a theoretical review of the infant-mother relationship', Child Development, 40: 969-1025.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1977) 'Social development in the first year of life: maternal influences on infant- mother attachment' in J. M. Tanner (ed. ) Develop- ments in psychiatric research, London: Tavistock.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1982) 'Attachment: retrospect and prospect' in C. M. Parkes and J. Stevenson-Hinde
315/362
? ? ? (eds) The place of attachment in human behavior,
3-30, New York: Basic Books; London: Tavistock. Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1985) 'I Patterns of infant-mother attachment: antecedents and effects on develop- ment' and 'II Attachments across the life-span', Bulletin of New York Academy of Medicine, 61:
771-91 and 791-812.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. and Wittig, B. A. (1969) 'Attachment
and exploratory behaviour of one-year-olds in a strange situation' in B. M. Foss (ed. ) Determinants of infant behaviour, vol. 4, London: Methuen; New York: Barnes & Noble.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. , Bell, S. M. , and Stayton, D. J. (1971) 'Individual differences in strange situation behavi- or of one-year-olds' in H. R. Schaffer (ed. ) The ori- gins of human social relations, 17-57, London: Academic Press.
Ainsworth, M. D. , Blehar, M. C. , Waters, E. , and Wall, S. (1978) Patterns of attachment: assessed in the strange situation and at home, Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Anderson, J. W. (1972) 'Attachment behaviour out of doors' in N. Blurton Jones (ed). Ethological stud- ies of child behaviour, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Arend, R. , Gove, F. L. , and Sroufe, L. A. (1979) 'Continu- ity of individual adaptation from infancy to kindergarten: a predictive study of ego-resiliency
316/362
? ? ? and curiosity in preschoolers', Child Development,
50: 950-9.
Baldwin, J. (1977) 'Child abuse: epidemiology and pre-
vention' in Epidemiological approaches in child
psychiatry, 55-106, London: Academic Press. Ballou, J. (1978) 'The significance of reconciliative themes in the psychology of pregnancy', Bulletin
of the Menninger Clinic, 42: 383-413.
Bender, L. (1947) 'Psychopathic behaviour disorders in children' in R. M. Lindner and R. V. Seliger (eds) Handbook of correctional psychology, New York:
Philosophical Library.
Bender, L. and Yarnell, H. (1941) 'An observation nurs-
ery', American Journal of Psychiatry, 97:
1158-74.
Blehar, M. C. , Lieberman, A. F. , and Ainsworth, M. D. S.
(1977) 'Early face-to-face interaction and its rela- tions to later infant-mother attachment', Child Development, 48: 182-94.
Blight, J. G. (1981) 'Must psychoanalysis retreat to her- meneutics? ', Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Thought, 4: 147-205.
Bliss, E. L. (1980) 'Multiple personalities: report of 14 cases with implications for schizophrenia and hys- teria', Archives of General Psychiatry, 37: 1388-97.
Bliss, E. L. (1986) Multiple personality, allied dis- orders and hypnosis, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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? ? ? Bloch, D. (1978) 'So the witch won't eat me', Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Bowlby, J. (1940) 'The influence of early environment in the development of neurosis and neurotic char- acter', International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 21: 154-78.
Bowlby, J. (1944) 'Forty-four juvenile thieves: their characters and home life', International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 25: 19-52 and 107-27.
Bowlby, J. (1951) Maternal care and mental health, Geneva: World Health Organisation; London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office; New York: Columbia University Press; abridged version: Child Care and the Growth of Love (second edn, 1965) Har- mondsworth: Penguin.
Bowlby, J. (1958) The nature of the child's tie to his mother, International Journal of Psycho-Analys- is, 39: 350-73.
Bowlby, J. (1960) 'Grief and mourning in infancy and early childhood', The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 15: 9-52.
Bowlby, J. (1961) 'Processes of mourning', Internation- al Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 42: 317-40.
Bowlby, J. (1969) Attachment, vol. 1 of Attachment and loss (2nd edition 1982), London: Hogarth Press; New York: Basic Books; Harmondsworth: Penguin (1971).
Bowlby, J. (1973) Separation: anxiety and anger, vol. 2 of Attachment and loss, London: Hogarth Press;
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Bowlby, J. (1977) 'The making and breaking of affec-
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Bowlby, J. (1980) Loss: sadness and depression, vol. 3 of Attachment and loss, London: Hogarth Press; New York: Basic Books; Harmondsworth: Penguin (1981).
Bowlby, J. (1981) 'Psychoanalysis as a natural science', International Review of Psycho-Analysis, 8: 243-56.
Bowlby, J. (1982) Attachment, 2nd edition of vol. 1 of Attachment and loss London: Hogarth Press. Brazelton, T. B. , Koslowski, B. , and Main, M. (1974)
'The origins of reciprocity in mother-infant inter- action' in M. Lewis and L. A.
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Bretherton, I. (1987) 'New perspectives on attachment relations in infancy: security, communication and internal working models' in J. D. Osofsky, (ed. ) Handbook of infant development (2nd edition), 1061-100, New York: Wiley.
Brown, G. W. and Harris, T. (1978) The social origins of depression, London:Tavistock.
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Aggression and anti-social behaviour in children and adolescents, 73-93, Oxford and New York: Pergamon Press.
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Guidano, V. F. and Liotti, G. (1983) Cognitive processes and emotional disorders, New York: Guilford Press.
This situation has been discussed by Selma Fraiberg who, with colleagues, set out to help vul- nerable mothers at risk of either neglecting or ab- using their infants (Fraiberg, Adelson, and Sha- piro, 1975). They describe making visits to the homes of two such mothers and listening to the distressing tales these women had to tell. Each told a story of gross cruelty during child- hood--being subjected to violent beatings, being locked out in the cold, often deserted by mother, being shunted from one place to another, and of having no one to go to for help or comfort. Neither gave a hint of how they might have felt nor what they may have felt like doing. One, a girl of 16 who avoided touching or holding her baby (who screamed hopelessly), insisted: 'But what's the use of talking? I always kept things to myself.
310/362
? ? ? I want to forget. I don't want to think. ' This was the point at which the therapist intervened--by herself expressing all the feelings that any and every child would be expected to have in the situ- ations described: how frightened, how angry, how hopeless one would feel, and also how one would long to go to someone who would understand and provide comfort and protection. In doing so the therapist not only showed an understanding of how the patient must have felt, but communic- ated in her manner that the expression of such feeling and desire would be met with a sympath- etic and comforting response. Only then was it possible for the young mother to express all the grief, the tears, 'and the unspeakable anguish for herself as a cast-off child' that she had always felt but had never dared express.
In this account of Fraiberg's methods of help- ing a patient express the emotions she dares not show I have deliberately emphasized the link between emotion and action. Failure to express emotion is due very largely to unconscious fear lest the action of which the emotion is a part will lead to a dreaded outcome. In many families an- ger with an adult leads to punishment which can sometimes be severe. Moreover a tearful appeal
311/362
? ? ? for comfort and help can lead to rejection and hu- miliation. It is perhaps too often forgotten by clinicians that many children, when they become distressed and weepy and are looking for com- fort, are shooed off as intolerable little cry-babies. Instead of the comforting provided by an under- standing and affectionate parent, these children meet with an unsympathetic and critical rebuff. No wonder therefore if, should this pattern pre- vail during childhood, the child learns never to show distress or seek comfort and, should he un- dertake therapy, assumes that his therapist will be as intolerant of anger and tears as his parents always were.
Every therapist who adopts a psychoanalytic per- spective has long recognized that, to be effective, therapy requires that a patient not only talks about his memories, his ideas and dreams, his hopes and desires, but also expresses his feelings. The discussion of Fraiberg's technique for help- ing a cynical and frozen young woman to discover the depth of her feelings and to express them freely to her therapist is therefore a fitting note on which to end. In writing this lecture I have throughout been aware that, by using terms such as 'information', 'communication', and 'working
312/362
? ? ? models', it would be easy for an unwary reader to suppose that these terms belong within a psycho- logy concerned only with cognition and one bereft of feeling and action. Although for many years it was all too common for cognitive psycho- logists to omit reference to emotion, it is now re- cognized that to do so is artificial and unfruitful (Hinde, Perret-Clermont, and Stevenson-Hinde, 1985). There are, in fact, no more important com- munications between one human being and an- other than those expressed emotionally, and no information more vital for constructing and re- constructing working models of self and other than information about how each feels towards the other. During the earliest years of our lives, indeed, emotional expression and its reception are the only means of communication we have, so that the foundations of our working models of self and attachment figure are perforce laid using information from that source alone. Small won- der therefore, if, in reviewing his attachment re- lationships during the course of psychotherapy and restructuring his working models, it is the emotional communications between a patient and his therapist that play the crucial part.
313/362
? ? ? 1 Within traditional theory this shift of role by a pa- tient is likely to be termed a case of identification with the aggressor.
2 Since in previous publications I have given much at- tention to the ill effects on personality development of bereavements and prolonged separations, these themes are omitted from what follows.
3 For research purposes, however, criteria for accept- ing retrospective information as valid must be much stricter.
REFERENCES
Adams-Tucker, C. (1982) 'Proximate effects of sexual abuse in childhood: a report on 28 children', American Journal of Psychiatry, 139: 1252-6.
Ainsworth, M. D. (1962) 'The effects of maternal deprivation: a review of findings and controversy in the context of research strategy' in: Deprivation of maternal care: a reassessment of its effects, Public Health Papers no. 14, Geneva: World Health Organisation.
Ainsworth, M. D. (1963) 'The development of infant- mother interaction among the Ganda' in B. M. Foss (ed. ) Determinants of infant behaviour, vol. 2, London: Methuen; New York: Wiley.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1967) Infancy in Uganda: infant care and the growth of attachment, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1969) 'Object relations, depend- ency and attachment: a theoretical review of the infant-mother relationship', Child Development, 40: 969-1025.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1977) 'Social development in the first year of life: maternal influences on infant- mother attachment' in J. M. Tanner (ed. ) Develop- ments in psychiatric research, London: Tavistock.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1982) 'Attachment: retrospect and prospect' in C. M. Parkes and J. Stevenson-Hinde
315/362
? ? ? (eds) The place of attachment in human behavior,
3-30, New York: Basic Books; London: Tavistock. Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1985) 'I Patterns of infant-mother attachment: antecedents and effects on develop- ment' and 'II Attachments across the life-span', Bulletin of New York Academy of Medicine, 61:
771-91 and 791-812.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. and Wittig, B. A. (1969) 'Attachment
and exploratory behaviour of one-year-olds in a strange situation' in B. M. Foss (ed. ) Determinants of infant behaviour, vol. 4, London: Methuen; New York: Barnes & Noble.
Ainsworth, M. D. S. , Bell, S. M. , and Stayton, D. J. (1971) 'Individual differences in strange situation behavi- or of one-year-olds' in H. R. Schaffer (ed. ) The ori- gins of human social relations, 17-57, London: Academic Press.
Ainsworth, M. D. , Blehar, M. C. , Waters, E. , and Wall, S. (1978) Patterns of attachment: assessed in the strange situation and at home, Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Anderson, J. W. (1972) 'Attachment behaviour out of doors' in N. Blurton Jones (ed). Ethological stud- ies of child behaviour, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Arend, R. , Gove, F. L. , and Sroufe, L. A. (1979) 'Continu- ity of individual adaptation from infancy to kindergarten: a predictive study of ego-resiliency
316/362
? ? ? and curiosity in preschoolers', Child Development,
50: 950-9.
Baldwin, J. (1977) 'Child abuse: epidemiology and pre-
vention' in Epidemiological approaches in child
psychiatry, 55-106, London: Academic Press. Ballou, J. (1978) 'The significance of reconciliative themes in the psychology of pregnancy', Bulletin
of the Menninger Clinic, 42: 383-413.
Bender, L. (1947) 'Psychopathic behaviour disorders in children' in R. M. Lindner and R. V. Seliger (eds) Handbook of correctional psychology, New York:
Philosophical Library.
Bender, L. and Yarnell, H. (1941) 'An observation nurs-
ery', American Journal of Psychiatry, 97:
1158-74.
Blehar, M. C. , Lieberman, A. F. , and Ainsworth, M. D. S.
(1977) 'Early face-to-face interaction and its rela- tions to later infant-mother attachment', Child Development, 48: 182-94.
Blight, J. G. (1981) 'Must psychoanalysis retreat to her- meneutics? ', Psychoanalysis and Contemporary Thought, 4: 147-205.
Bliss, E. L. (1980) 'Multiple personalities: report of 14 cases with implications for schizophrenia and hys- teria', Archives of General Psychiatry, 37: 1388-97.
Bliss, E. L. (1986) Multiple personality, allied dis- orders and hypnosis, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
317/362
? ? ? Bloch, D. (1978) 'So the witch won't eat me', Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Bowlby, J. (1940) 'The influence of early environment in the development of neurosis and neurotic char- acter', International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 21: 154-78.
Bowlby, J. (1944) 'Forty-four juvenile thieves: their characters and home life', International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 25: 19-52 and 107-27.
Bowlby, J. (1951) Maternal care and mental health, Geneva: World Health Organisation; London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office; New York: Columbia University Press; abridged version: Child Care and the Growth of Love (second edn, 1965) Har- mondsworth: Penguin.
Bowlby, J. (1958) The nature of the child's tie to his mother, International Journal of Psycho-Analys- is, 39: 350-73.
Bowlby, J. (1960) 'Grief and mourning in infancy and early childhood', The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, 15: 9-52.
Bowlby, J. (1961) 'Processes of mourning', Internation- al Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 42: 317-40.
Bowlby, J. (1969) Attachment, vol. 1 of Attachment and loss (2nd edition 1982), London: Hogarth Press; New York: Basic Books; Harmondsworth: Penguin (1971).
Bowlby, J. (1973) Separation: anxiety and anger, vol. 2 of Attachment and loss, London: Hogarth Press;
318/362
? ? ? New York: Basic Books; Harmondsworth: Penguin
(1975).
Bowlby, J. (1977) 'The making and breaking of affec-
tional bonds', British Journal of Psychiatry, 130: 201-10 and 421-31; reprinted 1979, New York: Methuen Inc. ; London: Tavistock.
Bowlby, J. (1980) Loss: sadness and depression, vol. 3 of Attachment and loss, London: Hogarth Press; New York: Basic Books; Harmondsworth: Penguin (1981).
Bowlby, J. (1981) 'Psychoanalysis as a natural science', International Review of Psycho-Analysis, 8: 243-56.
Bowlby, J. (1982) Attachment, 2nd edition of vol. 1 of Attachment and loss London: Hogarth Press. Brazelton, T. B. , Koslowski, B. , and Main, M. (1974)
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