BeExcellent
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2015
- Messages
- 4,729
- Reaction score
- 6,719
- Age
- 55
Been reading up on attachment theory lately. Why? Because attachment theory underlines how individuals relate to one another in close relationships. Here are some interesting findings:
Secure Attachment style: people who are secure in themselves, have healthy foundational relationships (parents, siblings, family etc.) and who welcome intimacy & bonding in close relationships. Product of stable, secure caregiving during childhood, intact family, positive & nuturing childhood environment. This represents about 50% of the population.
I wonder does this correlate to the 50% of 1st marriages that stay together for the duration (figure for first marriages is actually a higher success rate...50% divorce stat includes subsequent marriages with higher percent failure rate - but it all gets averaged together).
Anxious Attachment style: Basically your insecure clingers. They tend to seek relationships but getting close to someone brings out insecurity and clingyness. About 25% of the population suffers from an anxious style, result of volatile family background where there was some nuturing & love but also some dysfunctional dynamics that trigger insecurities. These people are pleasers & doormats for the reward of close relationships.
Avoidant attachment style: There are various subtypes including dismissive avoidant, fearful avoidant and some others. These are people who crave intimacy and close relationships but were grossly neglected, unloved, or abandoned as vulnerable children or by primary close relationships early in life resulting in fear of intimacy, fear of close relationships, lack of emotional development (lack of empathy, narcissism, inability to give or recieve love). These people are emotionally fvcked up by early developmental dysfunction. This affects about 25% of the population....
But that number skews higher in adult singles because avoidant attachment style people are least equipped to bond or build intimacy or maintain close relationships with others. In other words avoidant types are the least likely to pair bond and end up in stable marriages or LTRs.
The good news is people can repair their attachment style if it is dysfunctional with self awareness, maturity and perseverance. But dating an avoidant is no picnic. These are people who avoid intimacy because it isn't safe.
But I wonder how much of what the forum members experience in the dating realm can tie back to dysfunctional attachment styles.
I am dating a fearful avoidant. I am a secure/anxious (about 3-5% of the population). It's very interesting how this stuff applies and how true the behavioral patterns seem to be.
Just thought it might offer some morsels for provocation of thought about ourselves as individuals as well as the people we get into relationships with.
Secure Attachment style: people who are secure in themselves, have healthy foundational relationships (parents, siblings, family etc.) and who welcome intimacy & bonding in close relationships. Product of stable, secure caregiving during childhood, intact family, positive & nuturing childhood environment. This represents about 50% of the population.
I wonder does this correlate to the 50% of 1st marriages that stay together for the duration (figure for first marriages is actually a higher success rate...50% divorce stat includes subsequent marriages with higher percent failure rate - but it all gets averaged together).
Anxious Attachment style: Basically your insecure clingers. They tend to seek relationships but getting close to someone brings out insecurity and clingyness. About 25% of the population suffers from an anxious style, result of volatile family background where there was some nuturing & love but also some dysfunctional dynamics that trigger insecurities. These people are pleasers & doormats for the reward of close relationships.
Avoidant attachment style: There are various subtypes including dismissive avoidant, fearful avoidant and some others. These are people who crave intimacy and close relationships but were grossly neglected, unloved, or abandoned as vulnerable children or by primary close relationships early in life resulting in fear of intimacy, fear of close relationships, lack of emotional development (lack of empathy, narcissism, inability to give or recieve love). These people are emotionally fvcked up by early developmental dysfunction. This affects about 25% of the population....
But that number skews higher in adult singles because avoidant attachment style people are least equipped to bond or build intimacy or maintain close relationships with others. In other words avoidant types are the least likely to pair bond and end up in stable marriages or LTRs.
The good news is people can repair their attachment style if it is dysfunctional with self awareness, maturity and perseverance. But dating an avoidant is no picnic. These are people who avoid intimacy because it isn't safe.
But I wonder how much of what the forum members experience in the dating realm can tie back to dysfunctional attachment styles.
I am dating a fearful avoidant. I am a secure/anxious (about 3-5% of the population). It's very interesting how this stuff applies and how true the behavioral patterns seem to be.
Just thought it might offer some morsels for provocation of thought about ourselves as individuals as well as the people we get into relationships with.