Attachment Facilitating Parenting
January 13th, 2009 |
By Arthur Becker-Weidman, Ph.D.
Click here to contact Arthur and/or see his GoodTherapy.org Profile
Many adopted and foster children have had very difficult and painful histories with their first parents. These children have experienced chronic early maltreatment within a caregiving relationship. Such a history can lead to the development of Complex Trauma (Cook et. al., 2003; Cook et. al., 2005), disorders of attachment, and Reactive Attachment Disorder. Children with histories of maltreatment, such as physical and psychological neglect, physical abuse, and sexual abuse, are at risk of developing severe psychiatric problems (Gauthier, Stollak, Messe, & Arnoff, 1996; Malinosky-Rummell & Hansen, 1993). These children are likely to develop Reactive Attachment Disorder (Greenberg, 1999; Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 1999). Approximately 2% of the population is adopted, and between 50% and 80% of such children have attachment disorder symptoms (Carlson, Cicchetti, Barnett, & Braunwald, 1995; Cicchetti, Cummings, Greenberg, & Marvin, 1990). Many of these children are violent (Robins, 1978) and aggressive (Prino & Peyrot, 1994) and as adults are at risk of developing a variety of psychological problems (Schreiber & Lyddon, 1998) and personality disorders, including antisocial personality disorder (Finzi, Cohen, Sapir, & Weizman, 2000), narcissistic personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, and psychopathic personality disorder (Dozier, Stovall, & Albus, 1999). Therapeutic Parenting is often necessary to help these children heal (Becker-Weidman, A., & Shell, D., 2005/2008). This approach to parenting is often not familiar to most parents and requires a significant amount of work and preparation. Attachment facilitating parenting is grounded in attachment theory and is based on a set of principles that include:
- Sensitivity
- Responsiveness
- Following the child’s lead
- The sharing of congruent intersubjective experiences
- Creating a sense of safety and security
The effective implementation of these principles requires parents who:
- Are strongly committed to the child.
- Have well developed reflective abilities
- Have good insightfulness
- Have a relatively secure state of mind with respect to attachment
This type of parenting is consistent with Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy, which is an evidence-based and effective treatment for children with trauma and attachment disorders (Becker-Weidman & Hughes, 2008). Many foster and adoptive parents find their children’s behaviors strange, frightening, disturbing, and upsetting. They often don’t understand why their child behaves as the child does; “after all, my child is now safe, doesn’t he get it?” It can be difficult to appreciate the depth and pervasiveness of the damage caused by earlier maltreatment.
Therapeutic parenting based on Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy relies of helping parents understand what is causing the child’s behaviors. Looking deeper in order to understand what is motivating the child. All behavior is adaptive and functional; however sometimes the behaviors that were adaptive in one environment are ill-suited for the new home. If your first parents were neglectful, unreliable, and inconsistent so that you were often hungry and left alone for long periods of time, hoarding food, gorging, and going to “anyone” for help is adaptive. When that child is placed in a foster or adoptive home with caring, responsive, sensitive parents, that same behavior is no longer adaptive. By understanding what is driving the behavior and appreciating the child’s fear, anxieties, shame, and anger, the new parent will be better able to respond to the emotions driving the behavior rather than the surface behavior or symptoms. Unless the underlying emotions are addressed with sensitivity and within a safe, unconditionally loving, and supportive home, the behavior or symptoms are not likely to stop…they may change into other problems, but if the underlying cause remains, then the problems will surface again and again.
Let’s discuss the principles required. These principles are more fully elaborated elsewhere (Becker-Weidman & Shell, 2005; Becker-Weidman, 2007)
Sensitivity
Because children with trauma and attachment disorders are often unable to describe their internal states, emotions, or thoughts, it becomes the job of the parent to do this with and for the child so that the child learns to do this. Of course, this is precisely what one does with a newborn, toddler, and child. We often help children manage their internal states by doing that with them. When a baby cries, we pick up the baby, comfort the child, and by so doing, regulate the child’s level of arousal. Over time the infant becomes increasingly proficient at doing this independently. The parent of a foster or adopted child must be sensitive to the internal states of their child so that the parent can respond to the underlying emotions driving behavior.
Responsiveness
Once the underlying emotion is identified, the parent must respond to this need or emotion, with sensitivity. By meeting the child’s need (to feel safe, loved, cared about, for food, drink, joy, etc) the child will internalize new and healthier models of relationships and parents.
Following the Child’s Lead
By this I mean that the parent will need to respond to the child and follow the child’s lead in the sense of providing what the child is needing (comfort, affection, support, structure, etc) and at the child’s pace. It is very important to move at the child’s pace to create the necessary sense of safety and security that these children need.
The Sharing of Congruent Intersubjective Experiences
Intersubjectivity refers to shared emotion (also called attunement), share attention, and share intention. You can understand this if you think of playing a board game with your child. When you are playing some game together and enjoying the experience, you are sharing emotions (joy and a sense of competence), sharing attention (focusing on the game), and sharing intention (playing by the rules, both trying to win, having fun, etc.). Or another example, when talking about the death of the child’s loved grandparent, you both may share the same emotions (grief), both are recalling memories of the grandparent (shared intention and attention). It is the sharing of congruent intersubjective experiences, experiences in which all three elements are the shared, that helps the child heal and learn about intimacy and relationships.
Creating a Sense of Safety and Security
Safety comes first. Unless the child is physically, emotionally, and psychologically safe, healing cannot occur. So, it is the job of the parent to create safety and security for the child. This then allows for the exploration of underlying feelings, thoughts, and memories. Without an alliance there can be no secure base. Without a secure base there can be no exploration. Without exploration there can be no integration. Without integration there can be no healing.
Unless the child feels safe, exploration is not possible.
So, what sort of parent is needed? We know form extensive research, that one of the best predictors of placement stability is the parent’s commitment to the child (Dozier, Grasso, Lindhiem, & Lewis, 2007). Therefore, building or rebuilding parental commitment is an important first step. Unless there is strong commitment, the child cannot feel safe and, as discussed above, safety is the most important first step in helping a hurt child heal.
Reflective capacity is also vital to placement stability and to the healing of adopted and foster children. The parent must be able to reflect on the child’s underlying emotions, how the past may be re-enacted in the present, and what in the parent’s own past is being triggered by the child. A well developed reflective function is necessary if the parent is to respond to the child in a healthy and healing manner. We all have buttons. The job of the therapeutic parent is to understand one’s buttons so that these can be disconnected so that when pushed, nothing happens.
Insightfulness (Koren-Karie, Oppenheim, Dolev, Sher, & Etzion-Carasso, 2002; Oppenheim, Koren-Karie, & Sagi, 2001; Oppenheim, & Koren-Karie, 2002; Oppenheim, Goldsmith, & Koren-Karie, 2005) is related to reflective capacity.
A parent’s state of mind with respect to attachment is the best predictor of the child’s. (Main, & Cassidy, 1988; Main, & Hesse, 1990). If the parent has a Secure state of mind with respect to attachment, then the adopted or foster child is more likely to develop a healthy and secure pattern of attachment and heal (Steele, Hodges, Kaniuk, Steele, Hillman, & Asquith, 2008). We know that when young children are placed in a foster home, the child will begin to develop a pattern of attachment that is the same as the foster parent’s state of mind with respect to attachment (Dozier, Stovall, Albus, & Bates, 2001). Obviously, in older children, this is a more difficult task. In the general population, about 60% of the adults have a secure state of mind with respect to attachment. For parents who have an insecure state of mind with respect to attachment, they can still learn to parent effectively with help (Becker-Weidman, A., & Shell, D., 2005/2008; Bick & Dozier, 2008).
Useful Resources for Parents
Becker-Weidman, A., (2007). Principles of Attachment Parenting. 3-set DVD. Williamsville, NY: Center for Family Development.
Becker-Weidman, A., & Shell, D., (Eds.) (2005/2008) Creating Capacity for Attachment, Oklahoma City, OK: Wood N Barnes/ Williamsville, NY: Center For Family Development.
Golding, K., (2008). Nurturing Attachments. London: Jessica Kingsley.
Hughes, D. (2006) Building the Bonds of Attachment, 2nd edition, Jason Aronson, Lanham, MD. .
Siegel, D., & Hartzell, M., (2003). Parenting from the Inside out. Tarcher.
References
Becker-Weidman, A., & Shell, D., (Eds.) (2005, 2008). Creating Capacity for Attachment, Oklahoma City, OK: Wood N Barnes & Williamsville, NY: Center for Family Development.
Becker-Weidman, A., (2007). Principles of Attachment Parenting. 3-set DVD. Williamsville, NY: Center for Family Development.
Becker-Weidman, A., & Hughes, D., (2008) “Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy: An evidence-based treatment for children with complex trauma and disorders of attachment,” Child & Adolescent Social Work, 13, pp.329-337.
Bick, J., & Dozier, M., (2008). Helping Foster Parents Change. In H. Steele & M. Steele (Eds.), Clinical Applications of the Adult Attachment Interview (pp. 452-471). NY: Guilford.
Carlson, V., Cicchetti, D., Barnett, D., & Braunwald, K. (1995). Finding order in disorganization: Lessons from research on maltreated infants’ attachments to their caregivers. In D. Cicchetti & V. Carlson (Eds.), Child maltreatment: Theory and research on the causes and consequences of child abuse and neglect (pp. 135–157). NY: Cambridge University Press.
Cicchetti, D., Cummings, E. M., Greenberg, M. T., & Marvin, R. S. (1990). An organizational perspective on attachment beyond infancy. In M. Greenberg, D. Cicchetti & M. Cummings (Eds.), Attachment in the preschool years (pp. 3–50). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Cook, A., Blaustein, M., Spinazolla, J. & van der Kolk, B. (2003) Complex Trauma in Children and Adolescents. White Paper from the National Child Traumatic Stress Network Complex Trauma Task Force. National Center for Child Traumatic Stress, Los Angeles, CA.
Cook, A., Spinazzola, J., Ford, J., Lanktree, C., Blaustein, M., Cloitre, M. et al. (2005) Complex trauma in children and adolescents. Psychiatric Annals, 35, 390–398.
Dozier, M., Stovall, K., Albus, K., & Bates, B. (2001). Attachment for infants in foster care: The role of caregiver state of mind. Child Development, 72, 1467-1477.
Dozier, M., Grasso, D., Lindhiem, O., & Lewis, E., (2007) “The role of caregiver commitment in foster care,” in D. Oppenheim & D. Goldsmith, (Eds.) Attachment Theory in Clinical Work with Children. NY: Guilford.
Dozier, M., Stovall, K. C., & Albus, K. (1999). Attachment and psychopathology in adulthood. In J. Cassidy & P. Shaver (Eds.), Handbook of attachment (pp. 497–519). NY: Guilford Press.
Finzi, R., Cohen, O., Sapir, Y., & Weizman, A. (2000). Attachment styles in maltreated children: A comparative study. Child Development and Human Development, 31, 113–128.
Gauthier, L., Stollak, G., Messe, L., & Arnoff, J. (1996). Recall of childhood neglect and physical abuse as differential predictors of current psychological functioning. Child Abuse and Neglect, 20, 549–559.
Greenberg, M. (1999). Attachment and psychopathology in childhood. In J. Cassidy & P. Shaver (Eds.), Handbook of attachment (pp. 469–496). NY: Guilford Press.
Koren-Karie, N., Oppenheim, D., Dolev S., Sher, E., & Etzion-Carasso, E. (2002). Mothers’ insightfulness regarding their infants’ internal experience: Relations with maternal sensitivity and infant attachment. Developmental Psychology, 38, 534-542.
Lyons-Ruth, K., & Jacobvitz, D. (1999). Attachment disorganization: Unresolved loss, relational violence and lapses in behavioral and attentional strategies. In J. Cassidy & P. Shaver (Eds.), Handbook of attachment (pp. 520–554). NY: Guilford Press.
Main, M., & Cassidy, J. (1988). Categories of response to reunion with the parent at age six: Predictable from infant attachment classifications and stable over a one-month period. Developmental Psychology, 24, 415–426.
Main, M., & Hesse, E. (1990). Parents’ unresolved traumatic experiences are related to infant disorganized attachment status. In M. T. Greenberg, D. Ciccehetti & E. M. Cummings (Eds.), Attachment in the preschool years: Theory, research, and intervention (pp. 161–184). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Malinosky-Rummell, R., & Hansen, D. J. (1993). Long-term consequences of childhood physical abuse. Psychological Bulletin, 114, 68–69.
Oppenheim, D., Koren-Karie, N., & Sagi, A. (2001). Mothers’ empathic understanding of their preschoolers’ internal experience: Relations with early attachment. International Journal of Behavioral Development., 25, 16-26.
Oppenheim, D. & Koren-Karie, N. (2002). Mothers’ Insightfulness Regarding their Children’s Internal Worlds: The capacity underlying secure child-mother relationships. Infant Mental Health Journal, 23(6), 593-605.
Oppenheim, D., Goldsmith, D., & Koren-Karie, N. (2005). Maternal Insightfulness and preschoolers’ emotion and behavior problems: Reciprocal influences in a day-treatment program. Infant Mental Health Journal.
Prino, C. T., & Peyrot, M. (1994). The effect of child physical abuse and neglect on aggressive withdrawn, and prosocial behavior. Child Abuse and Neglect, 18, 871–884.
Robins, L. N. (1978). Longitudinal studies: Sturdy childhood predictors of adult antisocial behavior. Psychological Medicine, 8, 611–622.
Schreiber, R., & Lyddon, W. J. (1998). Parental bonding and current psychological functioning among childhood sexual abuse survivors. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 45, 358–362.
Steele, M., Hodges, J., Kaniuk, J., Steele, H., Hillman, S., & Asquith, K., (2008). Forcasting Outcomes in Previously Maltreated Children. In H. Steele & M. Steele (Eds.), Clinical Applications of the Adult Attachment Interview (pp. 427-452). NY: Guilford.
©Copyright 2009 by Arthur Becker-Weidman, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved. Permission to publish granted to GoodTherapy.org. The following article was solely written and edited by the author named above. The views and opinions expressed are not necessarily shared by GoodTherapy.org. Questions or concerns about the following article can be directed to the author or posted as a comment to this blog entry. Click here to contact Arthur and/or see his GoodTherapy.org Profile



















20 comments so far
I was adopted into a very loving family at a young age so I never really experienced any of these problems but as an adopted child I have met others who did and I just think that would be a painful situation for the entire family to endure. These families only want to give these kids care and love but because of the emotional baggage that many of them bring with them it makes giving that love very difficult sometimes. I hope that all of the families of adopted children can somehow find more peace and understanding with one another. I know that reading articles like this can really help.
Dear Sonia,
Thanks for your comment. There are so many helpful things parents can to do help their children overcome trauma and the lingering effects of chronic early maltreatment. I hope this article can help spread some of that knowledge.
regards
Art
Interesting post and very insightful. There are so many things parents can do to help support and guide a child so that they feel loved and cared for.
I have a child of my own and am considering adopting my second one. Its been a very useful article and it throws light on the issues of parenting an adopted child in some very dark areas.
I agree… it is very important to give adoptive the children the love they need and deserve. Just being there for the child and understanding would mean a lot to them.
I have a daughter n law who adoptive and in my opinion is one of the best parents to this child she has adoptive. The child knew she had been adoptive at a young age and my daughter n law made sure to let her know that she is very loved and can come to her for any questions she may have.
I can’t believe the percentage of attachment disorder symptom… What an overwhelming statistic. This goes to show that these adoptive kids need all the love they can get. I know there are many families out there who are very caring, but I have also heard of some adoptive families who were no better than the people who gave them up.
Great point and hopefully we will all remember that this goes for biological children as well and not just those who are adopted.
You are very right, John. It is very important that parents have the right information so that they can understand what is “driving” the child’s behavior and so be able to respond in a helpful manner.
Wow, lots of comments here now. Thank you all for reading the article and taking the time to post these lovely comments and thoughts.
Several of you have mentioned love and that is vital to a sucessful relationship and a successful placement. In some ways love provides the necessary committment that these children need. Love is often not sufficient by itself (necessary but not the only experience necessary) to help heal the underlying trauma has can cause problems for these children. In addition to unconditional love, therapeutic parenting to address the feelings driving the behavior is another very important element.
Again, thank you all for your comments and thoughts.
regards
art
Do you think that it is good idea to talk to adopted children from a very early age about adoption and that this is how they may have come into your family? Or do you think those kinds of talks would be better left until they are older? I tend to lead toward the younger the better but I would love to hear your opinion.
Dear Julia,
The research and material I’ve read really supports telling children from the beginning. I often respond to the question by saying, “about the same time you begin telling you child he is a boy/she is a girl. In other words, from day one. If this is just part of the “stuff” everyone knows, then it will not come as a surprise or shock to the child later. More to the point, if the parent(s) are comfortable with the manner in which the child joined the family, so will the child.
It is very sad to hear adults talk about not finding out about having been adopted as an infant until they were older. The sense of betrayal and feelings of having been deceived are quite strong and corrosive.
So, Julia, I concur with your opinion.
regards
I agree with Dr. Arthur… It is a very good idea to tell the child at an early age about being adopted….I believe if you tell them when they are older, they would resent the fact you didn’t tell them and kept it as a secret. The younger the better… After that, just be there for them, love them and let them know they can come to you for any questions they may have.
Your right Helen… adoptive or biological, they all need the same love.
Yes, all children need love. Children who have experienced chronic maltreatment within a caregiving relationship, as have nearly all the children in the child-welfare system, need that and more. These children also need attachment-facilitating therapeutic parenting in order to undo the damaging effects of this early maltreatment.
regards
I enjoyed reading this. Very informative. Have you read Heather Forbes’ books? Her method, which is similar to what you recommend, saved our lives. I adopted my daughter 4 years ago when she was 12, not knowing she has RAD, among other diagnosis. It has been a long hard road working on her healing, but so worth it. I wish more of the info you present went mainstream. I know so many other adoptive parents who subscribe to the Nancy Thomas’ camp and just hurt their already-traumatized children even more. I look forward to reading more of your site…
Dear Keri,
Yes, I am familiar with her book and approach. I’d say that one distinction is that Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy focuses on helping parents understand what is driving or causing the behavior, the development of sensitive and responsive parenting, the concordant intersubjective experience (shared emotion, shared attention, and share intention), insightfulness, state of mind with respect to attachment, and committment while Forbes and Post’s approach does not do so…or at least is more more focused on behaviors and symptoms than DDP and is not really grounded in attachment theory. I do appreciate that their book (written with Bryan Post), is not a severely coercive approach focusing only on compliance. I much prefer and strongly recommend to the parents I work with:
Nurturing Attachments by Kim Golding, 2008, Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
I have all the parents I work with read this as it is a terrific book that is grounded in attachment theory. It is written for parents. It clearly explains various attachment styles, what it is that may be behind various behaviors, how to help children in a sensitive and responsive manner, addressed parents own “buttons,” and is gentle and well grounded in accepted theory.
I also strongly recommend:
Parent Manual by Association for the Treatment and Training in the Attachment of Children 2008, at http://www.attach. org Very practical and helpful for parents.
I am very glad that you have been able to help your child and that you found this article helpful. That is quite encouraging.
Thank you for enlightening me by providing various methods of therapy. I am from Nepal. I am involving in trauma and psychosocial counseling and had some lessons on art therapy. The articles as well as the suggestion various professionals gave will definitely help me in my counselling.
I am sorry that by mistake I did not tick the notify me followup comment box. I would like to have one
Dear Chetana,
I’m glad you found the article helpful. If you want more details, you may want to pick up a copy of the book I edited:
Creating Capacity for Attachment, edited by Arthur Becker-Weidman & Deborah Shell, 2005/2008.
This text is as close as you can get to a manual for Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy, which is the evidence-based and effective treatment on which the parenting approach described in the article is grounded in.
regards
Art