Skip to content

Posts tagged ‘Somatic Therapy’

Attachment Theory in Action: Feeling Attachment Security in the Body

Several months ago, as I sat waiting to board a flight, my attention was captivated by an active toddler sitting (for the most part) on her mother’s lap.  Beneath naturally curly locks of hair, her eyes, bright and curious, darted about the busy terminal, feasting on the smorgasbord of novel stimuli.  When a scruffy-looking man passed by in a wheelchair and offered a gnarled hand to the young child, she fearfully buried her face in her mother’s loose-fitting sweater.  The girl’s mother instinctively pulled her close and whispered softly in her ear while giving the grizzled man an apologetic smile.  As the man pushed on, his course laugh still lingering in the air, the girl gingerly emerged from her safe, sweater-cocoon to survey the scene.  Still within her mother’s secure embrace, the girl stood-up and ventured an inquisitive glance in the direction of the retreating man.  Her fear had been down-regulated and she was able to explore the environment once again.

Interactions like this between a parent and child are repeated on a regular basis throughout early development.  From the perspective of attachment theory, these dyadic experiences are the foundation for all social-emotional development.  It is noteworthy that, from the earliest moments of life, attachment experiences are interactions between two minds and two bodies. As illustrated by the example above, the mother sensitively responded to the nonverbal intentions and emotions of the child by communicating safety and security through an embodied interaction with her child.  In this way, attachment experiences, whether secure or insecure (as in the case of relational trauma and abuse), are incorporated into the body’s self-regulatory systems, and as a result, can play an important role in how the body reacts and responds in close relationships later in life.

This article is part of a series on attachment theory and relational trauma (see the first article for an overview) and is meant to illustrate how attachment theory can guide a therapeutic approach that incorporates working with emotions and the body.  To ensure patient confidentiality and anonymity, the clinical example in this article is a fictional account based on many different patient histories and various treatment experiences.  Although the following clinical information isn’t associated with one particular person, it is representative of many people who have experienced relational trauma. Read more