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This microbook is a summary/original review based on the book: Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find – and Keep – Love
Available for: Read online, read in our mobile apps for iPhone/Android and send in PDF/EPUB/MOBI to Amazon Kindle.
ISBN: 1585429139
Publisher: TarcherPerigee
Forget about what fairytales and Hollywood tell you – no matter how much love two people feel for each other, it may sometimes be impossible for them to find a way to be together and work out their differences. In “Attached,” psychiatrist and neuroscientist Amir Levine and organizational psychologist Rachel Heller explain why. Get ready to discover yourself!
First proposed by British psychologist John Bowlby in the 1970s, attachment theory is a psychological and evolutionary model of human behavior based on the idea that the need to be in a close relationship is engraved in our genes. This might seem a bit conservative in our age of radical individualism, but it makes a lot of evolutionary sense. To begin with, ask yourself the following question: “If my first neighbors were lions and tigers, would I choose to rely on myself for protection or form a close bond with someone else?”
The prehistoric world was no place for loners: people who refused (for whatever reason) to become dependent on other people were far more likely to end up being prey. For hundreds of thousands of years of our evolution, being attached to someone was a survival advantage. In other words, quite counterintuitively, genetic selection favored the more vulnerable among our ancestors – that is to say, the ones who allowed others to take care of them.
Now, obviously, we are not hunted by predators anymore. Even so, we tend to act as if we still are. This should surprise nobody since, in evolutionary terms, we reached the top of the food chain no more than a second ago. “Our emotional brain was handed down to us by Homo sapiens who lived in a completely different era, and it is their lifestyle and the dangers they encountered that our emotions were designed to address,” Levine and Heller write. “Our feelings and behaviors in relationships today are not very different from those of our early ancestors.”
Case in point, our brain still has a biological mechanism “specifically responsible for creating and regulating our connection with our attachment figures (parents, children, and romantic partners).” It is called the attachment system, and it consists of “emotions and behaviors that ensure that we remain safe and protected by staying close to our loved ones.”
When separated from their mothers, children immediately start protesting. They become panicky and rowdy, refusing to calm down until reestablishing contact. “In prehistoric times, being close to a partner was a matter of life and death,” Levine and Heller remark. “And our attachment system developed to treat such proximity as an absolute necessity.”
It gets even more interesting. Namely, since the attachment system remains to be a part of the adult brain as well, grown-ups exhibit the same so-called protest behavior as children. It’s just a bit more subtle. Just think of the last time someone of your loved ones didn’t arrive home on time. Remember the sinking feeling in your stomach and the accompanying hysteria? Well, that’s the attachment system taking the reins over your body. And all those numerous calls on your loved one’s phone in the middle of the night? Nothing more but a grown-up version of a child’s uncontrollable crying, a more focused and directed attempt at reestablishing contact with someone you care about.
If you’ve ever been in a situation such as this, you probably already know that you won’t feel calm nor at ease before your loved one picks up the phone – or, even better, returns home. It’s nothing less than fascinating that the normal functioning of your body and your brain could depend on someone else’s presence and well-being. And yet – it constantly does. That’s one of the mesmerizing side effects of being evolutionary programmed to single out specific individuals and make them precious to you. In time, they become part of you. Quite literally.
“Numerous studies show that once we become attached to someone, the two of us form one physiological unit,” the authors explain. “Our partner regulates our blood pressure, our heart rate, our breathing, and the levels of hormones in our blood. We are no longer separate entities. The emphasis on differentiation that is held by most of today’s popular psychology approaches to adult relationships does not hold water from a biological perspective. Dependency is a fact; it is not a choice or a preference.”
The most famous of these studies is Mary Ainsworth’s strange situation test, in which a mother brings a 1-year-old child into a room full of toys and then leaves, after which a stranger comes in and attempts to engage the child. The stressful situation is repeated several times over, with the mother constantly going away and returning to reunite with her child. What the experiment discovered is that a child’s exploratory drive depends almost entirely on the presence of their mother; in her absence, even when they are not crying, most children seem disinterested in finding out more about their environment or playing with the available toys. Without “a secure base” to return to in case things go awry, they lose the courage to delve into the unknown. Adults are no different.
Only when our emotional needs are met, we can safely turn our attention outward. So, quite paradoxically, the more effectively we depend on someone else, the more independent and daring we become.
However, even though we all have this basic need to form close bonds with other people, the way we form them varies from one person to another. Some create too strong bonds with other people, others too loose. Yet a third group of people are dependent on others in just the right kind of way. Consequently, attachment theory designates three main “attachment styles” for adults – or “manners in which people perceive and respond to intimacy in romantic relationships” – that parallel those found in children: anxious, avoidant, and secure.
To form a healthy bond, anxious people need secure individuals, the only ones who can provide them the three things they need – safety, reassurance, and understanding. On the other hand, if one of the partners in a bond is anxious and the other avoidant, then “their relationship is likely to become more of a storm-tossed voyage than a safe haven.” Consequently, it’s not enough to know your own attachment style – it’s even more important to determine the attachment style of your partner. To this end, Levine and Heller provide the five golden rules for deciphering attachment styles:
Described as “a groundbreaking book that redefines what it means to be in a relationship,” by John Gray – the bestselling author of “Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus” – “Attached” is, indeed, quite an enlightening read.
Although it tends to simplify things here and there – and although sometimes it feels as if it’s too long to endure the burden of its one big idea without being redundant – it’s still simultaneously science-based and applicable. And – especially in the “Sex & Relationships” genre – very few bestselling books can be described in this way.
Anxious people are preoccupied with their partner’s feelings; avoidant, in contrast, are too disinterested in them. If you are not a secure person – that is, warm, loving, and comfortable with intimacy – then try to find one: relationships between anxious and avoidant people are emotionally taxing roller coasters for both sides.
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Amir Levine is an Israeli Canadian psychiatrist and neuroscientist with a private practice in New York. He is board-certified in adult psychiatry and is a member of the American Psychiatric Association, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry... (Read more)
Rachel S.F. Heller is an Israeli organizational psychologist with a Bachelor in Arts in behavioral sciences and a Master of Arts in social-organizational psychology from Columbia University. She works with children, paren... (Read more)
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