Some
feminists hate attachment theory. Their influence may be part of the reason so many psychotherapists ignore its important implications. Attachment theory is a set of ideas based on
the theories of psychoanalyst John Bowlby and strong experimental evidence
created by Canadian psychologist Mary Ainworth. Ainsworth was of course herself a
working woman, although she was divorced and never had children of her own.
Ainsworth sat
behind a two-way mirror for years and watched one-year-olds playing with their
mothers. She noted what happened when the mother left the room for a few
minutes and how the child responded when she returned. She then took the study
a stage further and studied what happened when, instead of the mother, a
stranger entered the room and tried to engage with the child. Ainsworth's
"Strange Situation" study, together with Bowlby's theory, showed that
how a child developed their social response patterns was the direct result of
the way the child's main carer responded to and engaged with them.
A neglectful, stressed or inconsistent parent tended to create an anxious, insecure or avoidant children. These patterns were later found to accurately predict how those children behaved between the ages of five and eight.
Feminists
argued: watching babies - what kind of proof is that? How can anyone know what
a baby is thinking and feeling? Isn't it all just woolly liberal conjecture?
Gee, actually observing what is going on and seeing the same patterns over and
over again. Why, isn’t that anecdotal? Unlike, I suppose asking research
subjects to tell you what they are thinking. Now that’s objective data!
They
accused attachment theorists of being against working women and wanting to
shackle women to the home. I guess that they thought the implications of the
theory were that women needed to be home 24/7 or they would destroy their
children. Shades of evolutionary psychologists attacking anyone who dared study
or even talk about kin selection, the tendency of human individuals to
sacrifice themselves if their kin group or tribe seemed to require it, because
it might be used to justify social Darwinism. Well, I guess it
could be used that way, but it certainly does not have to be.
Even if
the attachment science actually did prove that it is far better for children to
have stay-at-home mothers, that would not mean inconvenient realities should be
ignored. But luckily, it doesn’t that at all! Unfortunately, even the purveyors
of attachment theory often misinterpret the data from Ainsworth’s experiments,
due to a logical error and a phony assumption. Ainsworth herself was skeptical
about the viability of working motherhood, but, unlike Bowlby, admitted
the possibility that supplemental mothering could be arranged without harm to
the child.
The
logical error is equating quality with quantity. Just because a little of
something is a good thing, this hardly means that a whole lot of it is even
better. Sometimes a lot is worse! The dose makes the
difference between a nutrient a poison. It is not how often the
mothers in the experiments interact with their babies, it’s the type of
interactions. Maybe the kids also need to start having time by themselves as
well as time with other children learning how to deal with them.
The
false assumption is that the data that shows that the early patterns predicted
the later patterns must mean than any “damage” done to the child’s brain must
be permanent. That would of course mean that human beings could never adapt to
new social contingencies, something that is clearly nonsense. Our species would
not have survived if adaptation were not possible after the age of two!
This
interpretation of the experimental findings ignores the fact that the five to
eight year olds are continuing to be exposed to the
exact same problematic parenting behavior which had triggered
and reinforced the earlier behavior. Shades of the bullshit about cognitive
development I posted about in my review of the book The Myth of the
First Three Years.
What
about the “strange situation” phenomenon? Well, the limits of the data are
clearly implied in its name. This is what happens when a complete stranger
enters the picture, not a familiar adult from, say, a day care center or a
Kibbutz in Israel.
Many
(but hardly all) children from abusive homes who are adopted out to loving
families do indeed continue to show the effects of the earlier trauma, but that
does not mean that earlier physiological changes are irreversible. The fact
that some children do in fact get much better while others continue to have
problems is most likely due to the behavior of the adoptive parents.
They may
not know how to deal well with the obviously difficult behavior of these
children and so may inadvertently continue to feed into these children’s
problematic behavior. It is not at all obvious how to respond to disturbed kids, and even if you know how, doing so consistently in the face of frequent child misbehavior (which is key) is tremendously challenging. Others may have
learned what to do about it and stuck with it – maybe just from watching the TV show Supernanny
– and voila, the kids become well adjusted.
In
fact, children benefit tremendously from having a happy, fulfilled mother who
isn’t feeling guilty. I’ve written extensively about my contrary-to-the-popular-wisdom
understanding about how children learn to read their parents' behavior.
(Speaking of Supernanny, there was a recent episode in which a
father wondered why his son said he thought his Dad liked to
clean the toilets at home. The son answered, “Because you do it all the
time.” That’s what I’m talking about!).
Human
babies are born wired for survival. We are wired to learn how to survive
through interacting with other people. Throughout life.
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