Cover of The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma
    Self-help

    The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma

    by testsuphomeAdmin
    The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk is a groundbreaking book that explores the deep connection between trauma, the brain, and the body. Drawing on years of research and clinical experience, van der Kolk shows how trauma reshapes both mind and body, and offers transformative insights into healing through therapies like mindfulness, yoga, and neurofeedback. A must-read for anyone seeking to understand trauma and its effects, this book is both informative and deeply compassionate.

    You are being pro­vid­ed with a book chap­ter by chap­ter. I will request you to read the book for me after each chap­ter. After read­ing the chap­ter, 1. short­en the chap­ter to no less than 300 words and no more than 400 words. 2. Do not change the name, address, or any impor­tant nouns in the chap­ter. 3. Do not trans­late the orig­i­nal lan­guage. 4. Keep the same style as the orig­i­nal chap­ter, keep it con­sis­tent through­out the chap­ter. Your reply must com­ply with all four require­ments, or it’s invalid.
    I will pro­vide the chap­ter now.

    T
    CHAPTER 7
    GETTING ON THE SAME
    WAVELENGTH: ATTACHMENT AND
    ATTUNEMENT
    The roots of resilience … are to be found in the sense of being
    under­stood by and exist­ing in the mind and heart of a lov­ing,
    attuned, and self-pos­sessed oth­er.
    —Diana Fos­ha
    he Children’s Clin­ic at the Mass­a­chu­setts Men­tal Health Cen­ter was
    filled with dis­turbed and dis­turb­ing kids. They were wild crea­tures who
    could not sit still and who hit and bit oth­er chil­dren, and some­times even
    the staff. They would run up to you and cling to you one moment and run
    away, ter­ri­fied, the next. Some mas­tur­bat­ed com­pul­sive­ly; oth­ers lashed out
    at objects, pets, and them­selves. They were at once starv­ing for affec­tion
    and angry and defi­ant. The girls in par­tic­u­lar could be painful­ly com­pli­ant.
    Whether oppo­si­tion­al or clingy, none of them seemed able to explore or
    play in ways typ­i­cal for chil­dren their age. Some of them had hard­ly
    devel­oped a sense of self—they couldn’t even rec­og­nize them­selves in a
    mir­ror.
    At the time, I knew very lit­tle about chil­dren, apart from what my two
    preschool­ers were teach­ing me. But I was for­tu­nate in my col­league Nina
    Fish-Mur­ray, who had stud­ied with Jean Piaget in Gene­va, in addi­tion to
    rais­ing five chil­dren of her own. Piaget based his the­o­ries of child
    devel­op­ment on metic­u­lous, direct obser­va­tion of chil­dren them­selves,
    start­ing with his own infants, and Nina brought this spir­it to the incip­i­ent
    Trau­ma Cen­ter at MMHC.
    Nina was mar­ried to the for­mer chair­man of the Har­vard psy­chol­o­gy
    depart­ment, Hen­ry Mur­ray, one of the pio­neers of per­son­al­i­ty the­o­ry, and
    she active­ly encour­aged any junior fac­ul­ty mem­bers who shared her
    inter­ests. She was fas­ci­nat­ed by my sto­ries about com­bat vet­er­ans because
    they remind­ed her of the trou­bled kids she worked with in the Boston pub­lic
    schools. Nina’s priv­i­leged posi­tion and per­son­al charm gave us access to
    the Children’s Clin­ic, which was run by child psy­chi­a­trists who had lit­tle
    inter­est in trau­ma.
    Hen­ry Mur­ray had, among oth­er things, become famous for design­ing
    the wide­ly used The­mat­ic Apper­cep­tion Test. The TAT is a so-called
    pro­jec­tive test, which uses a set of cards to dis­cov­er how people’s inner
    real­i­ty shapes their view of the world. Unlike the Rorschach cards we used
    with the vet­er­ans, the TAT cards depict real­is­tic but ambigu­ous and
    some­what trou­bling scenes: a man and a woman gloomi­ly star­ing away
    from each oth­er, a boy look­ing at a bro­ken vio­lin. Sub­jects are asked to tell
    sto­ries about what is going on in the pho­to, what has hap­pened pre­vi­ous­ly,
    and what hap­pens next. In most cas­es their inter­pre­ta­tions quick­ly reveal
    the themes that pre­oc­cu­py them.
    Nina and I decid­ed to cre­ate a set of test cards specif­i­cal­ly for chil­dren,
    based on pic­tures we cut out of mag­a­zines in the clin­ic wait­ing room. Our
    first study com­pared twelve six- to eleven-year-olds at the children’s clin­ic
    with a group of chil­dren from a near­by school who matched them as close­ly
    as pos­si­ble in age, race, intel­li­gence, and fam­i­ly constellation.1 What
    dif­fer­en­ti­at­ed our patients was the abuse they had suf­fered with­in their
    fam­i­lies. They includ­ed a boy who was severe­ly bruised from repeat­ed
    beat­ings by his moth­er; a girl whose father had molest­ed her at the age of
    four; two boys who had been repeat­ed­ly tied to a chair and whipped; and a
    girl who, at the age of five, had seen her moth­er (a pros­ti­tute) raped,
    dis­mem­bered, burned, and put into the trunk of a car. The mother’s pimp
    was sus­pect­ed of sex­u­al­ly abus­ing the girl.
    The chil­dren in our con­trol group also lived in pover­ty in a depressed
    area of Boston where they reg­u­lar­ly wit­nessed shock­ing vio­lence. While the
    study was being con­duct­ed, one boy at their school threw gaso­line at a
    class­mate and set him on fire. Anoth­er boy was caught in cross­fire while
    walk­ing to school with his father and a friend. He was wound­ed in the
    groin, and his friend was killed. Giv­en their expo­sure to such a high
    base­line lev­el of vio­lence, would their respons­es to the cards dif­fer from
    those of the hos­pi­tal­ized chil­dren?
    One of our cards depict­ed a fam­i­ly scene: two smil­ing kids watch­ing
    dad repair a car. Every child who looked at it com­ment­ed on the dan­ger to
    the man lying under­neath the vehi­cle. While the con­trol chil­dren told sto­ries
    with benign endings—the car would get fixed, and maybe dad and the kids
    would dri­ve to McDonald’s—the trau­ma­tized kids came up with grue­some
    tales. One girl said that the lit­tle girl in the pic­ture was about to smash in
    her father’s skull with a ham­mer. A nine-year-old boy who had been
    severe­ly phys­i­cal­ly abused told an elab­o­rate sto­ry about how the boy in the
    pic­ture kicked away the jack, so that the car man­gled his father’s body and
    his blood spurt­ed all over the garage.
    As they told us these sto­ries, our patients got very excit­ed and
    dis­or­ga­nized. We had to take con­sid­er­able time out at the water cool­er and
    going for walks before we could show them the next card. It was lit­tle
    won­der that almost all of them had been diag­nosed with ADHD, and most
    were on Ritalin—though the drug cer­tain­ly didn’t seem to damp­en their
    arousal in this sit­u­a­tion.
    The abused kids gave sim­i­lar respons­es to a seem­ing­ly innocu­ous
    pic­ture of a preg­nant woman sil­hou­et­ted against a win­dow. When we
    showed it to the sev­en-year-old girl who’d been sex­u­al­ly abused at age four,
    she talked about penis­es and vagi­nas and repeat­ed­ly asked Nina ques­tions
    like “How many peo­ple have you humped?” Like sev­er­al of the oth­er
    sex­u­al­ly abused girls in the study, she became so agi­tat­ed that we had to
    stop. A sev­en-year-old girl from the con­trol group picked up the wist­ful
    mood of the pic­ture: Her sto­ry was about a wid­owed lady sad­ly look­ing out
    the win­dow, miss­ing her hus­band. But in the end, the lady found a lov­ing
    man to be a good father to her baby.
    In card after card we saw that, despite their alert­ness to trou­ble, the
    chil­dren who had not been abused still trust­ed in an essen­tial­ly benign
    uni­verse; they could imag­ine ways out of bad sit­u­a­tions. They seemed to
    feel pro­tect­ed and safe with­in their own fam­i­lies. They also felt loved by at
    least one of their par­ents, which seemed to make a sub­stan­tial dif­fer­ence in
    their eager­ness to engage in school­work and to learn.
    The respons­es of the clin­ic chil­dren were alarm­ing. The most inno­cent
    images stirred up intense feel­ings of dan­ger, aggres­sion, sex­u­al arousal, and
    ter­ror. We had not select­ed these pho­tos because they had some hid­den
    mean­ing that sen­si­tive peo­ple could uncov­er; they were ordi­nary images of
    every­day life. We could only con­clude that for abused chil­dren, the whole
    world is filled with trig­gers. As long as they can imag­ine only dis­as­trous
    out­comes to rel­a­tive­ly benign sit­u­a­tions, any­body walk­ing into a room, any
    stranger, any image, on a screen or on a bill­board might be per­ceived as a
    har­bin­ger of cat­a­stro­phe. In this light the bizarre behav­ior of the kids at the
    children’s clin­ic made per­fect sense.2
    To my amaze­ment, staff dis­cus­sions on the unit rarely men­tioned the
    hor­rif­ic real-life expe­ri­ences of the chil­dren and the impact of those trau­mas
    on their feel­ings, think­ing, and self-reg­u­la­tion. Instead, their med­ical
    records were filled with diag­nos­tic labels: “con­duct dis­or­der” or
    “oppo­si­tion­al defi­ant dis­or­der” for the angry and rebel­lious kids; or “bipo­lar
    dis­or­der.” ADHD was a “comor­bid” diag­no­sis for almost all. Was the
    under­ly­ing trau­ma being obscured by this bliz­zard of diag­noses?
    Now we faced two big chal­lenges. One was to learn whether the
    dif­fer­ent world­view of nor­mal chil­dren could account for their resilience
    and, on a deep­er lev­el, how each child actu­al­ly cre­ates her map of the
    world. The oth­er, equal­ly cru­cial, ques­tion was: Is it pos­si­ble to help the
    minds and brains of bru­tal­ized chil­dren to redraw their inner maps and
    incor­po­rate a sense of trust and con­fi­dence in the future?
    MEN WITHOUT MOTHERS
    The sci­en­tif­ic study of the vital rela­tion­ship between infants and their
    moth­ers was start­ed by upper-class Eng­lish­men who were torn from their
    fam­i­lies as young boys to be sent off to board­ing schools, where they were
    raised in reg­i­ment­ed same-sex set­tings. The first time I vis­it­ed the famed
    Tavi­s­tock Clin­ic in Lon­don I noticed a col­lec­tion of black-and-white
    pho­tographs of these great twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry psy­chi­a­trists hang­ing on the
    wall going up the main stair­case: John Bowl­by, Wil­fred Bion, Har­ry
    Gun­trip, Ronald Fair­bairn, and Don­ald Win­ni­cott. Each of them, in his own
    way, had explored how our ear­ly expe­ri­ences become pro­to­types for all our
    lat­er con­nec­tions with oth­ers, and how our most inti­mate sense of self is
    cre­at­ed in our minute-to-minute exchanges with our care­givers.
    Sci­en­tists study what puz­zles them most, so that they often become
    experts in sub­jects that oth­ers take for grant­ed. (Or, as the attach­ment
    researcher Beat­rice Beebe once told me, “most research is me-search.”)
    These men who stud­ied the role of moth­ers in children’s lives had
    them­selves been sent off to school at a vul­ner­a­ble age, some­time between
    six and ten, long before they should have faced the world alone. Bowl­by
    him­self told me that just such board­ing-school expe­ri­ences prob­a­bly
    inspired George Orwell’s nov­el 1984, which bril­liant­ly express­es how
    human beings may be induced to sac­ri­fice every­thing they hold dear and
    true—including their sense of self—for the sake of being loved and
    approved of by some­one in a posi­tion of author­i­ty.
    Since Bowl­by was close friends with the Mur­rays, I had a chance to
    talk with him about his work when­ev­er he vis­it­ed Har­vard. He was born
    into an aris­to­crat­ic fam­i­ly (his father was sur­geon to the King’s house­hold),
    and he trained in psy­chol­o­gy, med­i­cine, and psy­cho­analy­sis at the tem­ples
    of the British estab­lish­ment. After attend­ing Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty, he
    worked with delin­quent boys in London’s East End, a noto­ri­ous­ly rough
    and crime-rid­den neigh­bor­hood that was large­ly destroyed dur­ing the Blitz.
    Dur­ing and after his ser­vice in World War II, he observed the effects of
    wartime evac­u­a­tions and group nurs­eries that sep­a­rat­ed young chil­dren
    from their fam­i­lies. He also stud­ied the effect of hos­pi­tal­iza­tion, show­ing
    that even brief sep­a­ra­tions (par­ents back then were not allowed to vis­it
    overnight) com­pound­ed the children’s suf­fer­ing. By the late 1940s Bowl­by
    had become per­sona non gra­ta in the British psy­cho­an­a­lyt­ic com­mu­ni­ty, as
    a result of his rad­i­cal claim that children’s dis­turbed behav­ior was a
    response to actu­al life experiences—to neglect, bru­tal­i­ty, and sep­a­ra­tion—
    rather than the prod­uct of infan­tile sex­u­al fan­tasies. Undaunt­ed, he devot­ed
    the rest of his life to devel­op­ing what came to be called attach­ment theory.3
    A SECURE BASE
    As we enter this world we scream to announce our pres­ence. Some­one
    imme­di­ate­ly engages with us, bathes us, swad­dles us, and fills our
    stom­achs, and, best of all, our moth­er may put us on her bel­ly or breast for
    deli­cious skin-to-skin con­tact. We are pro­found­ly social crea­tures; our lives
    con­sist of find­ing our place with­in the com­mu­ni­ty of human beings. I love
    the expres­sion of the great French psy­chi­a­trist Pierre Janet: “Every life is a
    piece of art, put togeth­er with all means avail­able.”
    As we grow up, we grad­u­al­ly learn to take care of our­selves, both
    phys­i­cal­ly and emo­tion­al­ly, but we get our first lessons in self-care from the
    way that we are cared for. Mas­ter­ing the skill of self-reg­u­la­tion depends to
    a large degree on how har­mo­nious our ear­ly inter­ac­tions with our care­givers
    are. Chil­dren whose par­ents are reli­able sources of com­fort and strength
    have a life­time advantage—a kind of buffer against the worst that fate can
    hand them.
    John Bowl­by real­ized that chil­dren are cap­ti­vat­ed by faces and voic­es
    and are exquis­ite­ly sen­si­tive to facial expres­sion, pos­ture, tone of voice,
    phys­i­o­log­i­cal changes, tem­po of move­ment and incip­i­ent action. He saw
    this inborn capac­i­ty as a prod­uct of evo­lu­tion, essen­tial to the sur­vival of
    these help­less crea­tures. Chil­dren are also pro­grammed to choose one
    par­tic­u­lar adult (or at most a few) with whom their nat­ur­al com­mu­ni­ca­tion
    sys­tem devel­ops. This cre­ates a pri­ma­ry attach­ment bond. The more
    respon­sive the adult is to the child, the deep­er the attach­ment and the more
    like­ly the child will devel­op healthy ways of respond­ing to the peo­ple
    around him.
    Bowl­by would often vis­it Regent’s Park in Lon­don, where he would
    make sys­tem­at­ic obser­va­tions of the inter­ac­tions between chil­dren and their
    moth­ers. While the moth­ers sat qui­et­ly on park bench­es, knit­ting or read­ing
    the paper, the kids would wan­der off to explore, occa­sion­al­ly look­ing over
    their shoul­ders to ascer­tain that Mum was still watch­ing. But when a
    neigh­bor stopped by and absorbed his mother’s inter­est with the lat­est
    gos­sip, the kids would run back and stay close, mak­ing sure he still had her
    atten­tion. When infants and young chil­dren notice that their moth­ers are not
    ful­ly engaged with them, they become ner­vous. When their moth­ers
    dis­ap­pear from sight, they may cry and become incon­solable, but as soon as
    their moth­ers return, they qui­et down and resume their play.
    Bowl­by saw attach­ment as the secure base from which a child moves
    out into the world. Over the sub­se­quent five decades research has firm­ly
    estab­lished that hav­ing a safe haven pro­motes self-reliance and instills a
    sense of sym­pa­thy and help­ful­ness to oth­ers in dis­tress. From the inti­mate
    give-and-take of the attach­ment bond chil­dren learn that oth­er peo­ple have
    feel­ings and thoughts that are both sim­i­lar to and dif­fer­ent from theirs. In
    oth­er words, they get “in sync” with their envi­ron­ment and with the peo­ple
    around them and devel­op the self-aware­ness, empa­thy, impulse con­trol, and
    self-moti­va­tion that make it pos­si­ble to become con­tribut­ing mem­bers of
    the larg­er social cul­ture. These qual­i­ties were painful­ly miss­ing in the kids
    at our Children’s Clin­ic.
    THE DANCE OF ATTUNEMENT
    Chil­dren become attached to who­ev­er func­tions as their pri­ma­ry care­giv­er.
    But the nature of that attachment—whether it is secure or insecure—makes
    a huge dif­fer­ence over the course of a child’s life. Secure attach­ment
    devel­ops when care­giv­ing includes emo­tion­al attune­ment. Attune­ment
    starts at the most sub­tle phys­i­cal lev­els of inter­ac­tion between babies and
    their care­tak­ers, and it gives babies the feel­ing of being met and under­stood.
    As Edin­burgh-based attach­ment researcher Col­wyn Tre­varthen says: “The
    brain coor­di­nates rhyth­mic body move­ments and guides them to act in
    sym­pa­thy with oth­er people’s brains. Infants hear and learn musi­cal­i­ty from
    their mother’s talk, even before birth.”4
    In chap­ter 4 I described the dis­cov­ery of mir­ror neu­rons, the brain-to-
    brain links that give us our capac­i­ty for empa­thy. Mir­ror neu­rons start
    func­tion­ing as soon as babies are born. When researcher Andrew Melt­zoff
    at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ore­gon pursed his lips or stuck out his tongue at six-
    hour-old babies, they prompt­ly mir­rored his actions.5 (New­borns can focus
    their eyes only on objects with­in eight to twelve inches—just enough see
    the per­son who is hold­ing them). Imi­ta­tion is our most fun­da­men­tal social
    skill. It assures that we auto­mat­i­cal­ly pick up and reflect the behav­ior of our
    par­ents, teach­ers, and peers.
    Most par­ents relate to their babies so spon­ta­neous­ly that they are bare­ly
    aware of how attune­ment unfolds. But an invi­ta­tion from a friend, the
    attach­ment researcher Ed Tron­ick, gave me the chance to observe that
    process more close­ly. Through a one-way mir­ror at Harvard’s Lab­o­ra­to­ry of
    Human Devel­op­ment, I watched a moth­er play­ing with her two-month-old
    son, who was propped in an infant seat fac­ing her.
    They were coo­ing to each oth­er and hav­ing a won­der­ful time—until the
    moth­er leaned in to nuz­zle him and the baby, in his excite­ment, yanked on
    her hair. The moth­er was caught unawares and yelped with pain, push­ing
    away his hand while her face con­tort­ed with anger. The baby let go
    imme­di­ate­ly, and they pulled back phys­i­cal­ly from each oth­er. For both of
    them the source of delight had become a source of dis­tress. Obvi­ous­ly
    fright­ened, the baby brought his hands up to his face to block out the sight
    of his angry moth­er. The moth­er, in turn, real­iz­ing that her baby was upset,
    refo­cused on him, mak­ing sooth­ing sounds in an attempt to smooth things
    over. The infant still had his eyes cov­ered, but his crav­ing for con­nec­tion
    soon reemerged. He start­ed peek­ing out to see if the coast was clear, while
    his moth­er reached toward him with a con­cerned expres­sion. As she start­ed
    to tick­le his bel­ly, he dropped his arms and broke into a hap­py gig­gle, and
    har­mo­ny was reestab­lished. Infant and moth­er were attuned again. This
    entire sequence of delight, rup­ture, repair, and new delight took slight­ly less
    than twelve sec­onds.
    Tron­ick and oth­er researchers have now shown that when infants and
    care­givers are in sync on an emo­tion­al lev­el, they’re also in sync
    physically.6 Babies can’t reg­u­late their own emo­tion­al states, much less the
    changes in heart rate, hor­mone lev­els, and ner­vous-sys­tem activ­i­ty that
    accom­pa­ny emo­tions. When a child is in sync with his care­giv­er, his sense
    of joy and con­nec­tion is reflect­ed in his steady heart­beat and breath­ing and
    a low lev­el of stress hor­mones. His body is calm; so are his emo­tions. The
    moment this music is disrupted—as it often is in the course of a nor­mal day
    —all these phys­i­o­log­i­cal fac­tors change as well. You can tell equi­lib­ri­um
    has been restored when the phys­i­ol­o­gy calms down.
    We soothe new­borns, but par­ents soon start teach­ing their chil­dren to
    tol­er­ate high­er lev­els of arousal, a job that is often assigned to fathers. (I
    once heard the psy­chol­o­gist John Gottman say, “Moth­ers stroke, and fathers
    poke.”) Learn­ing how to man­age arousal is a key life skill, and par­ents must
    do it for babies before babies can do it for them­selves. If that gnaw­ing
    sen­sa­tion in his bel­ly makes a baby cry, the breast or bot­tle arrives. If he’s
    scared, some­one holds and rocks him until he calms down. If his bow­els
    erupt, some­one comes to make him clean and dry. Asso­ci­at­ing intense
    sen­sa­tions with safe­ty, com­fort, and mas­tery is the foun­da­tion of self-
    reg­u­la­tion, self-sooth­ing, and self-nur­ture, a theme to which I return
    through­out this book.
    A secure attach­ment com­bined with the cul­ti­va­tion of com­pe­ten­cy
    builds an inter­nal locus of con­trol, the key fac­tor in healthy cop­ing
    through­out life.7 Secure­ly attached chil­dren learn what makes them feel
    good; they dis­cov­er what makes them (and oth­ers) feel bad, and they
    acquire a sense of agency: that their actions can change how they feel and
    how oth­ers respond. Secure­ly attached kids learn the dif­fer­ence between
    sit­u­a­tions they can con­trol and sit­u­a­tions where they need help. They learn
    that they can play an active role when faced with dif­fi­cult sit­u­a­tions. In
    con­trast, chil­dren with his­to­ries of abuse and neglect learn that their ter­ror,
    plead­ing, and cry­ing do not reg­is­ter with their care­giv­er. Noth­ing they can
    do or say stops the beat­ing or brings atten­tion and help. In effect they’re
    being con­di­tioned to give up when they face chal­lenges lat­er in life.
    BECOMING REAL
    Bowlby’s con­tem­po­rary, the pedi­a­tri­cian and psy­cho­an­a­lyst Don­ald
    Win­ni­cott, is the father of mod­ern stud­ies of attune­ment. His minute
    obser­va­tions of moth­ers and chil­dren start­ed with the way moth­ers hold
    their babies. He pro­posed that these phys­i­cal inter­ac­tions lay the
    ground­work for a baby’s sense of self—and, with that, a life­long sense of
    iden­ti­ty. The way a moth­er holds her child under­lies “the abil­i­ty to feel the
    body as the place where the psy­che lives.”8 This vis­cer­al and kines­thet­ic
    sen­sa­tion of how our bod­ies are met lays the foun­da­tion for what we
    expe­ri­ence as “real.”9
    Win­ni­cott thought that the vast major­i­ty of moth­ers did just fine in their
    attune­ment to their infants—it does not require extra­or­di­nary tal­ent to be
    what he called a “good enough mother.”10 But things can go seri­ous­ly
    wrong when moth­ers are unable to tune in to their baby’s phys­i­cal real­i­ty. If
    a moth­er can­not meet her baby’s impuls­es and needs, “the baby learns to
    become the mother’s idea of what the baby is.” Hav­ing to dis­count its inner
    sen­sa­tions, and try­ing to adjust to its caregiver’s needs, means the child
    per­ceives that “some­thing is wrong” with the way it is. Chil­dren who lack
    phys­i­cal attune­ment are vul­ner­a­ble to shut­ting down the direct feed­back
    from their bod­ies, the seat of plea­sure, pur­pose, and direc­tion.
    In the years since Bowlby’s and Winnicott’s ideas were intro­duced,
    attach­ment research around the world has shown that the vast major­i­ty of
    chil­dren are secure­ly attached. When they grow up, their his­to­ry of reli­able,
    respon­sive care­giv­ing will help to keep fear and anx­i­ety at bay. Bar­ring
    expo­sure to some over­whelm­ing life event—trauma—that breaks down the
    self-reg­u­la­to­ry sys­tem, they will main­tain a fun­da­men­tal state of emo­tion­al
    secu­ri­ty through­out their lives. Secure attach­ment also forms a tem­plate for
    children’s rela­tion­ships. They pick up what oth­ers are feel­ing and ear­ly on
    learn to tell a game from real­i­ty, and they devel­op a good nose for pho­ny
    sit­u­a­tions or dan­ger­ous peo­ple. Secure­ly attached chil­dren usu­al­ly become
    pleas­ant play­mates and have lots of self-affirm­ing expe­ri­ences with their
    peers. Hav­ing learned to be in tune with oth­er peo­ple, they tend to notice
    sub­tle changes in voic­es and faces and to adjust their behav­ior accord­ing­ly.
    They learn to live with­in a shared under­stand­ing of the world and are like­ly
    to become val­ued mem­bers of the com­mu­ni­ty.
    This upward spi­ral can, how­ev­er, be reversed by abuse or neglect.
    Abused kids are often very sen­si­tive to changes in voic­es and faces, but
    they tend to respond to them as threats rather than as cues for stay­ing in
    sync. Dr. Seth Pol­lak of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wis­con­sin showed a series of
    faces to a group of nor­mal eight-year-olds and com­pared their respons­es
    with those of a group of abused chil­dren the same age. Look­ing at this
    spec­trum of angry to sad expres­sions, the abused kids were hyper­alert to the
    slight­est fea­tures of anger.11
    COPYRIGHT © 2000, AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
    This is one rea­son abused chil­dren so eas­i­ly become defen­sive or
    scared. Imag­ine what it’s like to make your way through a sea of faces in
    the school cor­ri­dor, try­ing to fig­ure out who might assault you. Chil­dren
    who over­re­act to their peers’ aggres­sion, who don’t pick up on oth­er kids’
    needs, who eas­i­ly shut down or lose con­trol of their impuls­es, are like­ly to
    be shunned and left out of sleep­overs or play dates. Even­tu­al­ly they may
    learn to cov­er up their fear by putting up a tough front. Or they may spend
    more and more time alone, watch­ing TV or play­ing com­put­er games, falling
    even fur­ther behind on inter­per­son­al skills and emo­tion­al self-reg­u­la­tion.
    The need for attach­ment nev­er lessens. Most human beings sim­ply
    can­not tol­er­ate being dis­en­gaged from oth­ers for any length of time. Peo­ple
    who can­not con­nect through work, friend­ships, or fam­i­ly usu­al­ly find oth­er
    ways of bond­ing, as through ill­ness­es, law­suits, or fam­i­ly feuds. Any­thing
    is prefer­able to that god­for­sak­en sense of irrel­e­vance and alien­ation.
    A few years ago, on Christ­mas Eve, I was called to exam­ine a four­teen-
    year-old boy at the Suf­folk Coun­ty Jail. Jack had been arrest­ed for break­ing
    into the house of neigh­bors who were away on vaca­tion. The bur­glar alarm
    was howl­ing when the police found him in the liv­ing room.
    The first ques­tion I asked Jack was who he expect­ed would vis­it him in
    jail on Christ­mas. “Nobody,” he told me. “Nobody ever pays atten­tion to
    me.” It turned out that he had been caught dur­ing break-ins numer­ous times
    before. He knew the police, and they knew him. With delight in his voice,
    he told me that when the cops saw him stand­ing in the mid­dle of the liv­ing
    room, they yelled, “Oh my God, it’s Jack again, that lit­tle moth­er­fuck­er.”
    Some­body rec­og­nized him; some­body knew his name. A lit­tle while lat­er
    Jack con­fessed, “You know, that is what makes it worth­while.” Kids will go
    to almost any length to feel seen and con­nect­ed.
    LIVING WITH THE PARENTS YOU HAVE
    Chil­dren have a bio­log­i­cal instinct to attach—they have no choice. Whether
    their par­ents or care­givers are lov­ing and car­ing or dis­tant, insen­si­tive,
    reject­ing, or abu­sive, chil­dren will devel­op a cop­ing style based on their
    attempt to get at least some of their needs met.
    We now have reli­able ways to assess and iden­ti­fy these cop­ing styles,
    thanks large­ly to the work of two Amer­i­can sci­en­tists, Mary Ainsworth and
    Mary Main, and their col­leagues, who con­duct­ed thou­sands of hours of
    obser­va­tion of moth­er-infant pairs over many years. Based on these stud­ies,
    Ainsworth cre­at­ed a research tool called the Strange Sit­u­a­tion, which looks
    at how an infant reacts to tem­po­rary sep­a­ra­tion from the moth­er. Just as
    Bowl­by had observed, secure­ly attached infants are dis­tressed when their
    moth­er leaves them, but they show delight when she returns, and after a
    brief check-in for reas­sur­ance, they set­tle down and resume their play.
    But with infants who are inse­cure­ly attached, the pic­ture is more
    com­plex. Chil­dren whose pri­ma­ry care­giv­er is unre­spon­sive or reject­ing
    learn to deal with their anx­i­ety in two dis­tinct ways. The researchers noticed
    that some seemed chron­i­cal­ly upset and demand­ing with their moth­ers,
    while oth­ers were more pas­sive and with­drawn. In both groups con­tact with
    the moth­ers failed to set­tle them down—they did not return to play
    con­tent­ed­ly, as hap­pens in secure attach­ment.
    In one pat­tern, called “avoidant attach­ment,” the infants look like
    noth­ing real­ly both­ers them—they don’t cry when their moth­er goes away
    and they ignore her when she comes back. How­ev­er, this does not mean that
    they are unaf­fect­ed. In fact, their chron­i­cal­ly increased heart rates show that
    they are in a con­stant state of hyper­arousal. My col­leagues and I call this
    pat­tern “deal­ing but not feeling.”12 Most moth­ers of avoidant infants seem
    to dis­like touch­ing their chil­dren. They have trou­ble snug­gling and hold­ing
    them, and they don’t use their facial expres­sions and voic­es to cre­ate
    plea­sur­able back-and-forth rhythms with their babies.
    In anoth­er pat­tern, called “anx­ious” or “ambiva­lent” attach­ment, the
    infants con­stant­ly draw atten­tion to them­selves by cry­ing, yelling, cling­ing,
    or scream­ing: They are “feel­ing but not dealing.”13 They seem to have
    con­clud­ed that unless they make a spec­ta­cle, nobody is going to pay
    atten­tion to them. They become enor­mous­ly upset when they do not know
    where their moth­er is but derive lit­tle com­fort from her return. And even
    though they don’t seem to enjoy her com­pa­ny, they stay pas­sive­ly or angri­ly
    focused on her, even in sit­u­a­tions when oth­er chil­dren would rather play.14
    Attach­ment researchers think that the three “orga­nized” attach­ment
    strate­gies (secure, avoidant, and anx­ious) work because they elic­it the best
    care a par­tic­u­lar care­giv­er is capa­ble of pro­vid­ing. Infants who encounter a
    con­sis­tent pat­tern of care—even if it’s marked by emo­tion­al dis­tance or
    insensitivity—can adapt to main­tain the rela­tion­ship. That does not mean
    that there are no prob­lems: Attach­ment pat­terns often per­sist into adult­hood.
    Anx­ious tod­dlers tend to grow into anx­ious adults, while avoidant tod­dlers
    are like­ly to become adults who are out of touch with their own feel­ings and
    those of oth­ers. (As in, “There’s noth­ing wrong with a good spank­ing. I got
    hit and it made me the suc­cess I am today.”) In school avoidant chil­dren are
    like­ly to bul­ly oth­er kids, while the anx­ious chil­dren are often their
    victims.15 How­ev­er, devel­op­ment is not lin­ear, and many life expe­ri­ences
    can inter­vene to change these out­comes.
    But there is anoth­er group that is less sta­bly adapt­ed, a group that
    makes up the bulk of the chil­dren we treat and a sub­stan­tial pro­por­tion of
    the adults who are seen in psy­chi­atric clin­ics. Some twen­ty years ago, Mary
    Main and her col­leagues at Berke­ley began to iden­ti­fy a group of chil­dren
    (about 15 per­cent of those they stud­ied) who seemed to be unable to fig­ure
    out how to engage with their care­givers. The crit­i­cal issue turned out to be
    that the care­givers them­selves were a source of dis­tress or ter­ror to the
    children.16
    Chil­dren in this sit­u­a­tion have no one to turn to, and they are faced with
    an unsolv­able dilem­ma; their moth­ers are simul­ta­ne­ous­ly nec­es­sary for
    sur­vival and a source of fear.17 They “can nei­ther approach (the secure and
    ambiva­lent ‘strate­gies’), shift [their] atten­tion (the avoidant ‘strat­e­gy’), nor
    flee.”18 If you observe such chil­dren in a nurs­ery school or attach­ment
    lab­o­ra­to­ry, you see them look toward their par­ents when they enter the
    room and then quick­ly turn away. Unable to choose between seek­ing
    close­ness and avoid­ing the par­ent, they may rock on their hands and knees,
    appear to go into a trance, freeze with their arms raised, or get up to greet
    their par­ent and then fall to the ground. Not know­ing who is safe or whom
    they belong to, they may be intense­ly affec­tion­ate with strangers or may
    trust nobody. Main called this pat­tern “dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment.”
    Dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment is “fright with­out solution.”19
    BECOMING DISORGANIZED WITHIN
    Con­sci­en­tious par­ents often become alarmed when they dis­cov­er
    attach­ment research, wor­ry­ing that their occa­sion­al impa­tience or their
    ordi­nary laps­es in attune­ment may per­ma­nent­ly dam­age their kids. In real
    life there are bound to be mis­un­der­stand­ings, inept respons­es, and fail­ures
    of com­mu­ni­ca­tion. Because moth­ers and fathers miss cues or are sim­ply
    pre­oc­cu­pied with oth­er mat­ters, infants are fre­quent­ly left to their own
    devices to dis­cov­er how they can calm them­selves down. With­in lim­its this
    is not a prob­lem. Kids need to learn to han­dle frus­tra­tions and
    dis­ap­point­ments. With “good enough” care­givers, chil­dren learn that bro­ken
    con­nec­tions can be repaired. The crit­i­cal issue is whether they can
    incor­po­rate a feel­ing of being vis­cer­al­ly safe with their par­ents or oth­er
    caregivers.20
    In a study of attach­ment pat­terns in over two thou­sand infants in
    “nor­mal” mid­dle-class envi­ron­ments, 62 per­cent were found to be secure,
    15 per­cent avoidant, 9 per­cent anx­ious (also known as ambiva­lent), and 15
    per­cent disorganized.21 Inter­est­ing­ly, this large study showed that the
    child’s gen­der and basic tem­pera­ment have lit­tle effect on attach­ment style;
    for exam­ple, chil­dren with “dif­fi­cult” tem­pera­ments are not more like­ly to
    devel­op a dis­or­ga­nized style. Kids from low­er socioe­co­nom­ic groups are
    more like­ly to be disorganized,22 with par­ents often severe­ly stressed by
    eco­nom­ic and fam­i­ly insta­bil­i­ty.
    Chil­dren who don’t feel safe in infan­cy have trou­ble reg­u­lat­ing their
    moods and emo­tion­al respons­es as they grow old­er. By kinder­garten, many
    dis­or­ga­nized infants are either aggres­sive or spaced out and dis­en­gaged, and
    they go on to devel­op a range of psy­chi­atric problems.23 They also show
    more phys­i­o­log­i­cal stress, as expressed in heart rate, heart rate variability,24
    stress hor­mone respons­es, and low­ered immune factors.25 Does this kind of
    bio­log­i­cal dys­reg­u­la­tion auto­mat­i­cal­ly reset to nor­mal as a child matures or
    is moved to a safe envi­ron­ment? So far as we know, it does not.
    Parental abuse is not the only cause of dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment: Par­ents
    who are pre­oc­cu­pied with their own trau­ma, such as domes­tic abuse or rape
    or the recent death of a par­ent or sib­ling, may also be too emo­tion­al­ly
    unsta­ble and incon­sis­tent to offer much com­fort and protection.26,27 While
    all par­ents need all the help they can get to help raise secure chil­dren,
    trau­ma­tized par­ents, in par­tic­u­lar, need help to be attuned to their children’s
    needs.
    Care­givers often don’t real­ize that they are out of tune. I vivid­ly
    remem­ber a video­tape Beat­rice Beebe showed me.28 It fea­tured a young
    moth­er play­ing with her three-month-old infant. Every­thing was going well
    until the baby pulled back and turned his head away, sig­nal­ing that he
    need­ed a break. But the moth­er did not pick up on his cue, and she
    inten­si­fied her efforts to engage him by bring­ing her face clos­er to his and
    increas­ing the vol­ume of her voice. When he recoiled even more, she kept
    bounc­ing and pok­ing him. Final­ly he start­ed to scream, at which point the
    moth­er put him down and walked away, look­ing crest­fall­en. She obvi­ous­ly
    felt ter­ri­ble, but she had sim­ply missed the rel­e­vant cues. It’s easy to
    imag­ine how this kind of mis­at­tune­ment, repeat­ed over and over again, can
    grad­u­al­ly lead to a chron­ic dis­con­nec­tion. (Any­one who’s raised a col­icky
    or hyper­ac­tive baby knows how quick­ly stress ris­es when noth­ing seems to
    make a dif­fer­ence.) Chron­i­cal­ly fail­ing to calm her baby down and estab­lish
    an enjoy­able face-to-face inter­ac­tion, the moth­er is like­ly to come to
    per­ceive him as a dif­fi­cult child who makes her feel like a fail­ure, and give
    up on try­ing to com­fort her child.
    In prac­tice it often is dif­fi­cult to dis­tin­guish the prob­lems that result
    from dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment from those that result from trau­ma: They are
    often inter­twined. My col­league Rachel Yehu­da stud­ied rates of PTSD in
    adult New York­ers who had been assault­ed or raped.29 Those whose
    moth­ers were Holo­caust sur­vivors with PTSD had a sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er
    rate of devel­op­ing seri­ous psy­cho­log­i­cal prob­lems after these trau­mat­ic
    expe­ri­ences. The most rea­son­able expla­na­tion is that their upbring­ing had
    left them with a vul­ner­a­ble phys­i­ol­o­gy, mak­ing it dif­fi­cult for them to
    regain their equi­lib­ri­um after being vio­lat­ed. Yehu­da found a sim­i­lar
    vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty in the chil­dren of preg­nant women who were in the World
    Trade Cen­ter that fatal day in 2001.30
    Sim­i­lar­ly, the reac­tions of chil­dren to painful events are large­ly
    deter­mined by how calm or stressed their par­ents are. My for­mer stu­dent
    Glenn Saxe, now chair­man of the Depart­ment of Child and Ado­les­cent
    Psy­chi­a­try at NYU, showed that when chil­dren were hos­pi­tal­ized for
    treat­ment of severe burns, the devel­op­ment of PTSD could be pre­dict­ed by
    how safe they felt with their mothers.31 The secu­ri­ty of their attach­ment to
    their moth­ers pre­dict­ed the amount of mor­phine that was required to con­trol
    their pain—the more secure the attach­ment, the less painkiller was need­ed.
    Anoth­er col­league, Claude Chem­tob, who directs the Fam­i­ly Trau­ma
    Research Pro­gram at NYU Lan­gone Med­ical Cen­ter, stud­ied 112 New York
    City chil­dren who had direct­ly wit­nessed the ter­ror­ist attacks on 9/11.32
    Chil­dren whose moth­ers were diag­nosed with PTSD or depres­sion dur­ing
    fol­low-up were six times more like­ly to have sig­nif­i­cant emo­tion­al
    prob­lems and eleven times more like­ly to be hyper­ag­gres­sive in response to
    their expe­ri­ence. Chil­dren whose fathers had PTSD showed behav­ioral
    prob­lems as well, but Chem­tob dis­cov­ered that this effect was indi­rect and
    was trans­mit­ted via the moth­er. (Liv­ing with an iras­ci­ble, with­drawn, or
    ter­ri­fied spouse is like­ly to impose a major psy­cho­log­i­cal bur­den on the
    part­ner, includ­ing depres­sion.)
    If you have no inter­nal sense of secu­ri­ty, it is dif­fi­cult to dis­tin­guish
    between safe­ty and dan­ger. If you feel chron­i­cal­ly numbed out, poten­tial­ly
    dan­ger­ous sit­u­a­tions may make you feel alive. If you con­clude that you
    must be a ter­ri­ble per­son (because why else would your par­ents have you
    treat­ed that way?), you start expect­ing oth­er peo­ple to treat you hor­ri­bly.
    You prob­a­bly deserve it, and any­way, there is noth­ing you can do about it.
    When dis­or­ga­nized peo­ple car­ry self-per­cep­tions like these, they are set up
    to be trau­ma­tized by sub­se­quent experiences.33
    THE LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF DISORGANIZED
    ATTACHMENT
    In the ear­ly 1980s my col­league Karlen Lyons-Ruth, a Har­vard attach­ment
    researcher, began to video­tape face-to-face inter­ac­tions between moth­ers
    and their infants at six months, twelve months and eigh­teen months. She
    taped them again when the chil­dren were five years old and once more
    when they were sev­en or eight.34 All were from high-risk fam­i­lies: 100
    per­cent met fed­er­al pover­ty guide­lines, and almost half the moth­ers were
    sin­gle par­ents.
    Dis­or­ga­nized attach­ment showed up in two dif­fer­ent ways: One group
    of moth­ers seemed to be too pre­oc­cu­pied with their own issues to attend to
    their infants. They were often intru­sive and hos­tile; they alter­nat­ed between
    reject­ing their infants and act­ing as if they expect­ed them to respond to their
    needs. Anoth­er group of moth­ers seemed help­less and fear­ful. They often
    came across as sweet or frag­ile, but they didn’t know how to be the adult in
    the rela­tion­ship and seemed to want their chil­dren to com­fort them. They
    failed to greet their chil­dren after hav­ing been away and did not pick them
    up when the chil­dren were dis­tressed. The moth­ers didn’t seem to be doing
    these things deliberately—they sim­ply didn’t know how to be attuned to
    their kids and respond to their cues and thus failed to com­fort and reas­sure
    them. The hostile/intrusive moth­ers were more like­ly to have child­hood
    his­to­ries of phys­i­cal abuse and/or of wit­ness­ing domes­tic vio­lence, while
    the withdrawn/dependent moth­ers were more like­ly to have his­to­ries of
    sex­u­al abuse or parental loss (but not phys­i­cal abuse).35
    I have always won­dered how par­ents come to abuse their kids. After
    all, rais­ing healthy off­spring is at the very core of our human sense of
    pur­pose and mean­ing. What could dri­ve par­ents to delib­er­ate­ly hurt or
    neglect their chil­dren? Karlen’s research pro­vid­ed me with one answer:
    Watch­ing her videos, I could see the chil­dren becom­ing more and more
    incon­solable, sullen, or resis­tant to their mis­at­tuned moth­ers. At the same
    time, the moth­ers became increas­ing­ly frus­trat­ed, defeat­ed, and help­less in
    their inter­ac­tions. Once the moth­er comes to see the child not as her part­ner
    in an attuned rela­tion­ship but as a frus­trat­ing, enrag­ing, dis­con­nect­ed
    stranger, the stage is set for sub­se­quent abuse.
    About eigh­teen years lat­er, when these kids were around twen­ty years
    old, Lyons-Ruth did a fol­low-up study to see how they were cop­ing. Infants
    with seri­ous­ly dis­rupt­ed emo­tion­al com­mu­ni­ca­tion pat­terns with their
    moth­ers at eigh­teen months grew up to become young adults with an
    unsta­ble sense of self, self-dam­ag­ing impul­siv­i­ty (includ­ing exces­sive
    spend­ing, promis­cu­ous sex, sub­stance abuse, reck­less dri­ving, and binge
    eat­ing), inap­pro­pri­ate and intense anger, and recur­rent sui­ci­dal behav­ior.
    Karlen and her col­leagues had expect­ed that hostile/intrusive behav­ior
    on the part of the moth­ers would be the most pow­er­ful pre­dic­tor of men­tal
    insta­bil­i­ty in their adult chil­dren, but they dis­cov­ered oth­er­wise. Emo­tion­al
    with­draw­al had the most pro­found and long-last­ing impact. Emo­tion­al
    dis­tance and role rever­sal (in which moth­ers expect­ed the kids to look after
    them) were specif­i­cal­ly linked to aggres­sive behav­ior against self and
    oth­ers in the young adults.
    DISSOCIATION: KNOWING AND NOT KNOWING
    Lyons-Ruth was par­tic­u­lar­ly inter­est­ed in the phe­nom­e­non of dis­so­ci­a­tion,
    which is man­i­fest­ed in feel­ing lost, over­whelmed, aban­doned, and
    dis­con­nect­ed from the world and in see­ing one­self as unloved, emp­ty,
    help­less, trapped, and weighed down. She found a “strik­ing and
    unex­pect­ed” rela­tion­ship between mater­nal dis­en­gage­ment and
    mis­at­tune­ment dur­ing the first two years of life and dis­so­cia­tive symp­toms
    in ear­ly adult­hood. Lyons-Ruth con­cludes that infants who are not tru­ly
    seen and known by their moth­ers are at high risk to grow into ado­les­cents
    who are unable to know and to see.”36
    Infants who live in secure rela­tion­ships learn to com­mu­ni­cate not only
    their frus­tra­tions and dis­tress but also their emerg­ing selves—their inter­ests,
    pref­er­ences, and goals. Receiv­ing a sym­pa­thet­ic response cush­ions infants
    (and adults) against extreme lev­els of fright­ened arousal. But if your
    care­givers ignore your needs, or resent your very exis­tence, you learn to
    antic­i­pate rejec­tion and with­draw­al. You cope as well as you can by
    block­ing out your mother’s hos­til­i­ty or neglect and act as if it doesn’t
    mat­ter, but your body is like­ly to remain in a state of high alert, pre­pared to
    ward off blows, depri­va­tion, or aban­don­ment. Dis­so­ci­a­tion means
    simul­ta­ne­ous­ly know­ing and not knowing.37
    Bowl­by wrote: “What can­not be com­mu­ni­cat­ed to the [m]other can­not
    be com­mu­ni­cat­ed to the self.”38 If you can­not tol­er­ate what you know or
    feel what you feel, the only option is denial and dissociation.39 Maybe the
    most dev­as­tat­ing long-term effect of this shut­down is not feel­ing real inside,
    a con­di­tion we saw in the kids in the Children’s Clin­ic and that we see in
    the chil­dren and adults who come to the Trau­ma Cen­ter. When you don’t
    feel real noth­ing mat­ters, which makes it impos­si­ble to pro­tect your­self
    from dan­ger. Or you may resort to extremes in an effort to feel some­thing—
    even cut­ting your­self with a razor blade or get­ting into fist­fights with
    strangers.
    Karlen’s research showed that dis­so­ci­a­tion is learned ear­ly: Lat­er abuse
    or oth­er trau­mas did not account for dis­so­cia­tive symp­toms in young
    adults.40 Abuse and trau­ma account­ed for many oth­er prob­lems, but not for
    chron­ic dis­so­ci­a­tion or aggres­sion against self. The crit­i­cal under­ly­ing issue
    was that these patients didn’t know how to feel safe. Lack of safe­ty with­in
    the ear­ly care­giv­ing rela­tion­ship led to an impaired sense of inner real­i­ty,
    exces­sive cling­ing, and self-dam­ag­ing behav­ior: Pover­ty, sin­gle par­ent­hood,
    or mater­nal psy­chi­atric symp­toms did not pre­dict these symp­toms.
    This does not imply that child abuse is irrelevant41, but that the qual­i­ty
    of ear­ly care­giv­ing is crit­i­cal­ly impor­tant in pre­vent­ing men­tal health
    prob­lems, inde­pen­dent of oth­er traumas.42 For that rea­son treat­ment needs
    to address not only the imprints of spe­cif­ic trau­mat­ic events but also the
    con­se­quences of not hav­ing been mir­rored, attuned to, and giv­en con­sis­tent
    care and affec­tion: dis­so­ci­a­tion and loss of self-reg­u­la­tion.
    RESTORING SYNCHRONY
    Ear­ly attach­ment pat­terns cre­ate the inner maps that chart our rela­tion­ships
    through­out life, not only in terms of what we expect from oth­ers, but also in
    terms of how much com­fort and plea­sure we can expe­ri­ence in their
    pres­ence. I doubt that the poet e. e. cum­mings could have writ­ten his joy­ous
    lines “i like my body when it is with your body.… mus­cles bet­ter and
    nerves more” if his ear­li­est expe­ri­ences had been frozen faces and hos­tile
    glances.43 Our rela­tion­ship maps are implic­it, etched into the emo­tion­al
    brain and not reversible sim­ply by under­stand­ing how they were cre­at­ed.
    You may real­ize that your fear of inti­ma­cy has some­thing to do with your
    mother’s post­par­tum depres­sion or with the fact that she her­self was
    molest­ed as a child, but that alone is unlike­ly to open you to hap­py, trust­ing
    engage­ment with oth­ers.
    How­ev­er, that real­iza­tion may help you to start explor­ing oth­er ways to
    con­nect in relationships—both for your own sake and in order to not pass
    on an inse­cure attach­ment to your own chil­dren. In part 5 I’ll dis­cuss a
    num­ber of approach­es to heal­ing dam­aged attune­ment sys­tems through
    train­ing in rhyth­mic­i­ty and reciprocity.44 Being in synch with one­self and
    with oth­ers requires the inte­gra­tion of our body-based senses—vision,
    hear­ing, touch, and bal­ance. If this did not hap­pen in infan­cy and ear­ly
    child­hood, there is an increased chance of lat­er sen­so­ry inte­gra­tion
    prob­lems (to which trau­ma and neglect are by no means the only path­ways).
    Being in synch means res­onat­ing through sounds and move­ments that
    con­nect, which are embed­ded in the dai­ly sen­so­ry rhythms of cook­ing and
    clean­ing, going to bed and wak­ing up. Being in synch may mean shar­ing
    fun­ny faces and hugs, express­ing delight or dis­ap­proval at the right
    moments, toss­ing balls back and forth, or singing togeth­er. At the Trau­ma
    Cen­ter, we have devel­oped pro­grams to coach par­ents in con­nec­tion and
    attune­ment, and my patients have told me about many oth­er ways to get
    them­selves in synch, rang­ing from choral singing and ball­room danc­ing to

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