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We will feature a new article here each month written
by one of our group members. These articles are offered free for your information
and are not meant to provide individual advice or psychotherapy.
http://therapyinla.com/book-review/
September 2007
Attachment And The Repetition Compulsion
by Jeffrey Lance, Ph.D.
“Freud observed that, despite our conscious
protests and longings,
we often seem to prefer relationships that repeat our
early experience, no matter how unsatisfying.”
Robert Karen from “Becoming Attached”
What is it that we actually repeat from the legacy of our
early attachments? How is it that we unconsciously repeat these early
connections, and symbolically reproduce, in adult relationships, the environment
of early childhood caretaker relationships? Years of attachment and infant
research support the idea that adult patterns of connection with significant
others, is founded in the blueprint of the original ways we felt and related
to our caretakers. John Bowlby, a major pioneer in this field, believed
that attachment behaviors are built in, innate psychobiological needs.
In other words, we have to attach no matter how bad the early connections
are, and we will carry the particular form and struggles of these early
attachments into our adult lives, and live them out with others. This
will include the unmet longings, fears, and protective strategies we developed
from these connections.
In this article I would like to present four ways the legacy of these
attachments get lived out in our later relationships with significant
others. The four repetitions I will be addressing are as follows:
(1.)The longing for missed early attachment/emotional dependency needs;
(2.) The dread of a repetition of the failure and rupture of the original
longings; (3.) The tendency to do to others in relationships in adult
life, what has been done to us in our early attachments; and lastly (4.)
The tendency to elicit from others, in adult life, the very responses
we most dread. I call these four aspects of repetition: longing for, dreading
from, doing to, and eliciting from.
Let’s take a look at how these four repetitions might be expressed.
Imagine developing a new romantic relationship. At first the hope is high
that this person will be someone that will meet the unmet needs for attachment,
love and caring. We often hear young lovers say they just feel good and
special in the other persons presence. Almost as if they are more in love
with the way they feel around the other person, than with who the person
is. Here we often see that longing and need distort the perception of
the other person, into the longed for and needed other, and selectively
exclude, or down play, aspects of the other that don’t fit these
longings. We feel this person will be what we need them to be, rather
than who they really are. I have asked adults coming to therapy for couples/marital
difficulty, if they noticed these “undesirable” traits they
now complain of, early in courting, and they often reflect back and recognize
them in retrospect, but say that they just didn’t focus on them
during courting, or tended to not let in this information. In other words,
they wanted their loved one to be the person they needed them to be. The
person who would meet the unmet longing, left over from early attachment
which still influenced perception. This would represent the longed for
aspect of the repetition compulsion.
Sometimes it doesn’t take long before this illusion crumbles. We
begin to dread a repetition of the failures and ruptures from childhood
attachment figures being reenacted with this significant other in the
present. Now we often feel both longing and dread mixed together. This
is because we are now struggling to make them into what we need, even
though we fear they will now disappoint and hurt us just as we were originally
hurt. We feel a kind of apprehension and dread, as well as longing. This
often evolves into ambivalent feelings toward the needed and dreaded other.
We vacillate between yearning for them to meet our emotional needs, and
distancing from them in fear of a repetition of emotional pain. This period
of the relationship can become an intense and painful struggle between
longing and protective strategies.
The third repetition experience is the one in which we begin to behave
toward our mate the way we ourselves were related to when we were needy
and longing for contact and connection, responsiveness, and receptivity.
We may shut them out, act distant, be controlling, be emotionally unavailable
etc. , just like our own attachment figures where to us . We do to others
what had once been done to us. This was our role model and we may unconsciously
repeat this by doing the same to others to whom we are close. In this
way we may get others to feel the very same frustrated, hurt and painful
way we did as children. This can be cause for tremendous distress in our
relationships.
Lastly, and maybe the most difficult repetition to recognize is that of
eliciting from others the very responses that we dread and fear to get.
This is often very difficult to recognize we are doing, since it seems
so contrary to what we consciously want. For example, we fear someone
will reject and abandon us, so we withdraw and protect ourselves by distancing.
Our spouse then experiences this as painful and rejecting of them, and
they finally begin to withdraw and move away from us. The very thing we
feared. Maybe we constantly are suspicious, and this then becomes too
much for the partner and they start to withdraw and lean emotionally on
others. Or we fear our spouse is too needy and we create rigid boundaries
and personal space which triggers more intense longing and distress in
our spouse which leads to more neediness. I could go on, but I think you
get the picture.
I don’t mean to imply that we do these repetitions consciously,
or even intend to repeat them. They are so ingrained that sometimes we
don’t even know we are doing them. There are probably many I have
left out, and there may be different patterns from different caretakers,
but I hope this suffices to express the kind of intense longings and fears
repeated in adult life, from failures and ruptures of attachment with
our caretakers carried with us from earlier in life. Perhaps in a future
paper I will discuss what we can do to repair these ruptures, so that
we have lessrepetition and distress in our relationships.
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