Saturday, March 23, 2013

Attachment Style and Relationships



As part of my relationship study and struggles I'd like to reflect on a paper that I wrote regarding Attachment Style and Relationships (2011, May 08).
Part I: The three dimensions of love.
It is my belief that every relationship requires a balance of security, trust, and commitment.  According to Sternberg’s model of love (1988), love requires a combination of ‘passion, intimacy, and commitment’ (Bolt, 2004, p. 30).  Love has seven stages that most people shift to throughout a relationship, these stages consist of the three basic dimensions of love and four subtypes.  The basic dimensions are passion, which is the infatuation stage of a relationship, intimacy the liking, and commitment is the promise that each partner makes to the other to remain together.   As the three basic dimensions of love are combined there is achieved various subtypes of a love relationship: romantic love, fatuous love, companionate love, and the one everyone strives for consummate love.  Each partner contributes to these variations in whole or in part during a relationship; how much of each dimension he or she contributes moves the relationship to the various stages of love.
To identify any specific type of love relationship will depend on the mixture of the basic dimensions of love present.  As most relationships start, intimacy will be identified as the liking stage.  According to Bolt (2004), “Intimacy is an essential element of a loving relationship” it begins slowly and builds through the disclosure reciprocity effect (p. 36).  Plainly stated; the sharing of intimate details of one’s life, hopes, and dreams.  This is not to suggest that relationships cannot also begin with only passion or commitment.  For passion only relationships, it is known as the infatuation stage, for commitment only, empty love.  When proximity and contact are maintained passion is added to intimacy to form romantic love, or combining passion and commitment will provide a fatuous love.  Romantic love is that powerful yearning to be with someone; causing feelings of profound happiness when returned or intense grief when not returned.  Fatuous love is considered to be more of an impetuous love, happening fast and without thought.  When intimacy is combined with commitment a companionate love will form.  Not all relationships have passion; but in its absence, a mutual affection toward each other and commitment keep a relationship together.  Regardless of the type of commitment that one has (personal, moral, or constraint) relational satisfaction will vary depending on how the equity invested into the relationship is perceived.
Finally, the goal that each person strives for is to achieve a consummate love.  A love that has the three basic dimensions combined: intimacy, passion, and commitment.  What makes the consummate love relationship work is that all the key elements are reciprocated equally.  With intimacy and the desires to learn, grow, and share with each other, continuing to make the fires of passion flame through touching and play, and the knowledge that each partner is committed to the longevity of their relationship all combine to form that consummate love relationship. 

Part II: How attachment style affects types of love relationships.
Attachment styles are a learned trait infants acquire from the earliest contacts with their parents or caregivers: secure, avoidant, or anxious.  Humans in general are by nature social creatures; dependent on one another for the fulfillment of their basic needs of survival, procreation, and social connections (Bolt, 2004).  Because infants depend solely on caregivers to fulfill their basic needs, one of the three attachment styles develops depending on how the interactions transpire: warm and responsive, cold and rejecting, or ambivalent and inconsistent.  These interactions greatly affect how children perceive their social world and form emotional relationships throughout their lifetime.  Attachment itself has three key components: closeness, care, and commitment.  Both infants and adults desire a close physical connection; this allows the bonds of attachment to be made.  According to Bolt (2004), from closeness and proximity care is developed, “including both comfort and emotional support” (p. 25).  With extended time in a close, caring, and committed environment a sense of safety and security develops.  Long-term commitments are critical for developing mature loving relationships as adults.
Determining the type of love relationship an adult will have directly relates to the type of relationship that was nurtured as a child.  From birth, babies instinctually seek out relationships that are close, caring, and committed whereas an adult seeks out passion, intimacy, and commitment.  Looking at both child and adult relationship components, they are virtually the same, except passion not only indicates closeness, but a sexual element that encourages procreation.  Relationship styles are shaped by one’s parent and partner and directly reflect how well these components were learned.  A child who received warm and responsive care from his or her parent or caregiver is likely to develop a secure attachment style and therefore will be open to developing a secure or consummate love relationship.  Feeling comfortable with close relationships, physical touch, talking intimately with others, and able to make and receive the commitments necessary for a long-term relationship.  Passion’s created by physical closeness often will consume the relationship initially.  As this closeness increases, intimacy is developed through the reciprocity of sharing and caring about the partner’s well-being. 

Through time, both short-term and long-term commitments are formed, which leads to a strong healthy relationship.  For infants that received a cold, rejecting relationship with their caregivers, an avoidant attachment is gained as an adult.  Avoidant attachment can develop into passion, romantic love, and fatuous love, or even companionate love.  Avoidant adults are less likely to make the commitments necessary for a long-term relationship; wanting to maintain their own independence.  Behaviors of an avoidant adult are very emotional and sex without love is not unusual (Bolt, 2004).  Trust issues are also experienced with avoidant adults because of the inconsistency of their upbringing.  Anxious attachment also occurs when babies experience inconsistency with care.  As adults they are obsessive, untrusting, demanding, and jealous.  Love relationships for anxious adults are quick to passion, but become upset easily if feelings are not returned.  Other love relationship styles for anxious adults are fatuous love; falling head over heels in love without clearly knowing the individual or jumping at commitment with no other foundations, only to have a turbulent relationship.  Also, making more of intimacy than is genuinely there; becoming possessive and jealous over time spent with others.  
This is not to say because someone was raised by a cold and distant or ambivalent and inconsistent parent or caregiver, there can never be a long-lasting consummate love relationship.  Furthermore, just because an infant is raised in a warm and loving home does not mean he or she will never have relational difficulties.  Challenges in a relationship occur even in the healthiest of love relationships.  Knowing how relationship styles are acquired can help someone that may be looking for a love relationship, finds him or herself in an interpersonal relationship that struggles, or just wants a way to foster change in a relationship.  Assessing what elements may be needed to obtain a more secure attachment style is beneficial for any relationship.  Because each relationship is different, each couple will need to find their own correct mixture of the key components to fulfill their happily ever after.  Remember, overcoming difficulties in a loving relationship reinforces the bonds of attachment and nurtures passion, intimacy, and commitment.      




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