Attachment Based Parental Alienation

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Attachment Based Parental Alienation
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<p>&nbsp;A Scientifically Based Model of "Parental Alienation"&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Understanding the Pathology &nbsp;Role-Reversal Relationship </strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>https://s26.postimg.org/71hvgwzgp/Role_Reversal_2.jpg</p>
<p>Courtesy Google Images&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>A role-reversal relationship is one in which the child is used to meet the parent’s emotional and psychological needs. In normal and healthy parent-child relationships, the child uses the &nbsp;parent to meet the child’s emotional and psychological needs. In a normal and healthy parent-child relationship, the parent is said to act as a “regulatory object” for the child. </em><br>
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<p>In a normal and healthy parent-child relationship, when the child &nbsp;becomes upset and distressed (dysregulated), the parent acts in soothing &nbsp;and structuring ways to bring the child back into an emotionally and &nbsp;behaviorally organized and regulated state. &nbsp;The parent acts as a &nbsp;“regulatory object” – also called a “regulatory other” – for the child. This is normal and healthy. &nbsp;The child is using the parent to meet &nbsp;the child’s needs. &nbsp;The parent is an external “regulatory other” for the &nbsp;child.&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>In a role-reversal relationship, however, this normal and healthy &nbsp;parent-child relationship is turned upside down. &nbsp;In a role-reversal &nbsp;relationship, the parent uses the child to meet the parent’s emotional &nbsp;and psychological needs. In a role-reversal relationship, </em><em><strong>the parent uses the child as a “regulatory object” to stabilize the parent’s emotional and psychological state.</strong></em><em> &nbsp;&nbsp;</em></p>
<p><em>When the parent is upset and distressed, </em><em><strong>the child responds in ways &nbsp;that soothe the parent, keeping the parent in an organized and regulated &nbsp;state</strong></em><em>. &nbsp;The child becomes an external “regulatory object” for the &nbsp;parent. </em><em><strong>A role-reversal relationship is extremely pathological and damaging &nbsp;to the healthy emotional and psychological development of the child</strong></em><em>. &nbsp;It &nbsp;robs the child of self-authenticity and damages self-structure &nbsp;development. Instead, in a role-reversal relationship, the child continually &nbsp;monitors the parent’s emotional and psychological state and must become &nbsp;who the unstable parent needs the child to be in order to keep the &nbsp;parent in an emotionally and psychologically organized and regulated &nbsp;state. &nbsp;</em></p>
<p><em>In clinical and developmental psychology,</em><em><strong> a role-reversal &nbsp;relationship is considered a psychological “boundary violation” that &nbsp;violates the child’s psychological integrity</strong></em><em>. &nbsp;At its more &nbsp;extreme, a role-reversal relationship is essentially a form of &nbsp;psychological incest in which the parent psychologically violates and &nbsp;intrudes into the psychological integrity of the child so that the &nbsp;parent can meet the parent’s own emotional and psychological needs by &nbsp;using the child as a “regulatory object” for the parent’s fragile and &nbsp;damaged emotional and psychological state. <br>
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<p><strong>A role-reversal relationship is extremely pathological.</strong> &nbsp;</p>
<p>https://s26.postimg.org/q45uhkzux/Prize_9.jpg</p>
<p><strong>Inverted Family Hierarchy <br>
</strong></p>
<p>In a healthy and normal-range family, <strong>parents occupy positions of executive leadership</strong> within the family hierarchy.&nbsp; <strong>Parents have more knowledge than children</strong>. &nbsp;<strong>Parents have more experience than children.</strong> <strong>Parents have better judgement than children.</strong> &nbsp;Parents therefore healthy-hierarchy occupy positions of executive leadership within the family. &nbsp; <br>
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<p>https://s26.postimg.org/e3kegusg9/Prize_8.jpg</p>
<p><strong>&nbsp;That is a healthy family hierarchy. <br>
</strong></p>
<p>In a healthy and normal-range family, children cooperate with the &nbsp;executive leadership provided by parents. &nbsp;Children express wants and &nbsp;desires, but children also cooperatively defer to the executive &nbsp;leadership of parents. &nbsp;This represents a healthy family hierarchy.&nbsp;</p>
<p>In a healthy family hierarchy, parents judge children’s behavior as &nbsp;appropriate or inappropriate, and parents deliver consequences (rewards &nbsp;and punishments) based on parental judgements of children’s behavior. &nbsp;&nbsp;This reflects a normal and healthy family hierarchy.&nbsp;</p>
<p>An inverted family hierarchy, however, flips the normal and healthy &nbsp;family hierarchy upside down, so that <strong>children become empowered into &nbsp;positions of executive judgement OVER parents</strong>. In an inverted hierarchy, children are empowered to judge parents’ &nbsp;behavior as appropriate or inappropriate, and children are empowered to &nbsp;then deliver inverted-hierarchy“punishments” to parents based on &nbsp;child-judgments of the parent. &nbsp;The normal and healthy family hierarchy &nbsp;is flipped upside down. &nbsp;</p>
<p><em>An inverted hierarchy is caused by either of two possibilities: <br>
 1.) &nbsp;</em><em><strong>Parental Abdication of Power</strong></em><em>: &nbsp;The judged &nbsp;parent is not exercising appropriate parental authority and executive &nbsp;leadership and the parent has instead abdicated parental authority and &nbsp;position in the hierarchy to the child. <br>
 2.) </em><em><strong>&nbsp;Cross-Generational Coalition</strong></em><em>: &nbsp;The child is &nbsp;drawing power to judge a parent from a hidden cross-generational &nbsp;coalition in the family that the child has formed with an allied parent &nbsp;against the other parent. &nbsp;Through the covert and hidden alliance with &nbsp;the supposedly “favored” parent, the allied parent is empowering the &nbsp;child in the family hierarchy to an elevated position above the other &nbsp;parent, in which the child feels “entitled” to judge the adequacy of the &nbsp;parent. </em><br>
 https://s26.postimg.org/60m85j7ux/Role_Reversal_3.jpg</p>
<p>Courtesy Google Images</p>
<p><em>A cross-generational coalition represents a child being &nbsp;“triangulated” into the inter-spousal conflict by the allied (and &nbsp;supposedly “favored” parent), thereby turning a two-person &nbsp;(spouse-spouse) marital conflict into a three-person &nbsp;(spouse-child-spouse) triangulated conflict in which the child is caught &nbsp;in the middle of the spousal conflict, a pawn in the inter-spousal &nbsp;conflict.&nbsp;</em></p>
<p><em>In the general popular culture, the construct of “triangulation” is &nbsp;called “</em><em><strong>putting the child in the middle</strong></em><em>” of the spousal conflict – which &nbsp;generally involves one parent (the allied and supposedly “favored” &nbsp;parent) </em><em><strong>manipulating the child into “choosing sides” </strong></em><em>in the &nbsp;inter-spousal conflict.&nbsp;</em></p>
<p><em>The function of the cross-generational coalition is to allow the &nbsp;allied and supposedly “favored” parent to divert spousal anger at the &nbsp;other spouse through cutoff from the child. &nbsp;The child is being used by the &nbsp;allied parent to meet the allied parent’s own emotional and &nbsp;psychological needs in the inter-spousal conflict with the other spouse.&nbsp;</em></p>
<p><em>The renowned family systems therapist, Jay Haley, refers to a &nbsp;cross-generational coalition as a “perverse triangle” because the &nbsp;formation of a cross-generational coalition represents a “boundary &nbsp;violation” involving a “role-reversal relationship” in which the parent &nbsp;is using the child to meet the parent’s emotional and psychological &nbsp;needs.&nbsp;</em></p>
<p><strong>Empowering the Child</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>In the psychologically incestuous relationship of a parent’s &nbsp;“boundary violation” of the child’s psychological integrity, the parent &nbsp;first manipulates the child into a “perverse” cross-generational &nbsp;coalition, and then empowers the child in the family hierarchy, creating &nbsp;the inverted family hierarchy in which the child is empowered to judge &nbsp;the adequacy of the other parent.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The tell-tale signs of the “perverse triangle” of the &nbsp;cross-generational coalition by an emotionally needy parent using the &nbsp;child to meet the parent’s needs, are:&nbsp;</p>
<p>1.) &nbsp;A role-reversal relationship in which the child is being &nbsp;“triangulated” into the inter-spousal conflict in order to allow one &nbsp;parent to divert this parent’s spousal anger toward the other spouse &nbsp;through the child.&nbsp;</p>
<p>2.) &nbsp;An inverted family hierarchy in which the child is empowered &nbsp;into an elevated position in the family of judging the adequacy of a &nbsp;parent.&nbsp;</p>
<p>3.) &nbsp;The empowerment of the child by the allied and supposedly &nbsp;“favored parent” who is using the child in the “perverse” &nbsp;cross-generational coalition to meet the parent’s emotional and &nbsp;psychological needs. <br>
https://s26.postimg.org/71hvgwzgp/Role_Reversal_2.jpg</p>
<p>Courtesy Google Images</p>
<p><em>The psychologically incestuous relationship created by the “boundary &nbsp;violation” of the cross-generational coalition is typically offered in &nbsp;the refrain: </em><em><strong>“We need to listen to the child.”</strong></em><em>&nbsp;</em></p>
<p>In a normal and healthy family, parents occupy positions of executive &nbsp;leadership. &nbsp;Parents are responsible for their children’s behavior. &nbsp;If &nbsp;the child is disrespectful to a teacher at school, the teacher sends a &nbsp;note home to the parent who punishes the child because the parent takes &nbsp;responsibility for not teaching the child appropriate social behavior.&nbsp;</p>
<p>In a normal and healthy family, parents take responsibility. &nbsp;Parents &nbsp;are in the role of executive leadership, parents accept the role of &nbsp;executive leadership, and parents exercise the role of executive &nbsp;leadership within the family.&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>In the perverse relationship of the cross-generational coalition, the &nbsp;allied parent is psychologically manipulating and controlling the child &nbsp;to meet the parent’s own emotional and psychological needs. In the perverse relationship of a cross-generational coalition, the &nbsp;allied parent abdicates the role of parental executive leadership, &nbsp;elevating the child into this parental role, while the allied parent &nbsp;denies normal-range parental responsibility and alleges parental &nbsp;incompetence in altering the child’s behavior, typically in the refrain &nbsp;of: </em><em><strong>“What can I do? &nbsp;I can’t force the child to…”</strong></em><em>&nbsp;</em></p>
<p>Normal-range and healthy parents exercise parental executive leadership and do not abdicate parental leadership to the child.&nbsp; Normal and healthy parents are expected to show parental guidance and &nbsp;leadership to teach their children not to disrespect teachers at &nbsp;school, not to bully other children, and to develop appropriate &nbsp;responsibility for homework and chores around the house. &nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>This is is not &nbsp;called “forcing the child” to be respectful, to not bully other &nbsp;children, to do homework and chores – this is called “parenting.” &nbsp;</strong>&nbsp;Normal-range and expected parenting.&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>The abdication of “parental responsibility” by pleading selective &nbsp;parental incompetence is disingenuous – and ALL healthy and normal &nbsp;parents see this clearly – because we are normal and healthy parents. </em><em><strong>The ONLY people who do not see this are people who do not understand parenting </strong></em><em>– &nbsp;who have their own agenda in working through their own childhood family &nbsp;relationship issues. &nbsp;</em></p>
<p>https://s26.postimg.org/at0muprwp/Role_REversal_6.jpg</p>
<p>Courtesy Google Images</p>
<p>Every single normal and healthy parent &nbsp;understands the expected role of normal and healthy parental executive &nbsp;leadership in the family. It is our job as parents to teach our children to be respectful, &nbsp;kind, and cooperative with authority. &nbsp;This is not called “forcing our &nbsp;children” – this is called “parenting” our children. Every normal and healthy parent understands this. <strong>Boundary Violations</strong> A role-reversal relationship, in which the child is being used to &nbsp;meet the parent’s emotional and psychological needs, represents a &nbsp;psychological boundary violation of the child’s psychological integrity – &nbsp;and a boundary violation of the child’s psychological integrity is a &nbsp;form of psychologically incestuous parent-child relationship. &nbsp;</p>
<p>That’s &nbsp;why Jay Haley refers to the cross-generational coalition as a “perverse &nbsp;triangle.” The pathology of incest festers and is allowed to grow in the dark &nbsp;recesses of hidden secrecy within the family. &nbsp;No one sees into the &nbsp;darkness of the family secret to identify the extremely pathological and &nbsp;repulsive parental pathology that is dominating and damaging the &nbsp;child’s psychological core-self integrity.&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>The treatment of incest begins with exposing it from its secrecy; &nbsp;exposing it from its hiding. &nbsp;This is true for the reprehensible &nbsp;pathology of physical incest, and this is true for the reprehensible &nbsp;pathology of psychological incest, the “perverse” role-reversal &nbsp;relationship of the cross-generational coalition in which the parent &nbsp;violates the child’s core psychological integrity in order to use the &nbsp;child to meet the parent’s own emotional and psychological needs.</em>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Trans-Generational Transmission of Trauma</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The attachment-related pathology of AB-PA represents the &nbsp;trans-generational transmission of attachment trauma from the childhood &nbsp;of the allied narcissistic/(borderline) parent to the current family &nbsp;relationships, mediated by the personality disorder pathology of the &nbsp;parent, that is itself a product of this parent’s childhood attachment &nbsp;trauma.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The current symptoms of a child rejecting a parent are the echo – a &nbsp;reflection from earlier times – of an attachment-related trauma that &nbsp;entered the inter-generational attachment system of the family a &nbsp;generation or two prior to its current manifestation in the “perverse” &nbsp;cross-generational coalition evidenced in “parental alienation.”&nbsp;</p>
<p>The pathology of “parental alienation” is a ripple of trauma from &nbsp;generations gone by, yet carrying the same trauma-themes of the original &nbsp;trauma experience a generation or two earlier – the role-reversal use &nbsp;of the child to meet the parent’s needs – the boundary violation – the &nbsp;betrayal and abuse of the child’s love for a parent.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Themes of childhood trauma echoing across the generations, twisted &nbsp;into the current themes of “listening to the child” and “forcing the &nbsp;child” to do things against the child’s will – that were once accurate, &nbsp;but are now simply twisted echos of the childhood trauma from &nbsp;generations ago. &nbsp;An echo of inter-generational childhood trauma.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The trauma pathogen of damaged information structures that are locked &nbsp;into the inter-generational attachment networks seeks to remain hidden &nbsp;from view, so it can enact its vile malevolence – punish the parent – &nbsp;the parent deserves to be punished. Echoes from the past, traveling across generations, damaging love and &nbsp;bonding. &nbsp;Creating the pathology of the narcissistic and borderline &nbsp;personality, creating the pathology of “parental alienation” – lost &nbsp;bonds of love and affection.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The pathology of the cross-generational coalition seeks to remain a &nbsp;hidden family pathology – weaving a false story of the other parent’s &nbsp;supposed “badness” that justifies the child’s rejection. &nbsp;A hidden &nbsp;psychological abuse of the child in a “perverse triangle.”&nbsp;</p>
<p>https://s26.postimg.org/ltvrzqk5l/Role_Reversal_4.jpg</p>
<p>Courtesy Google Images</p>
<p>I see the pathogen. &nbsp;I know what it is. &nbsp;I’ve seen it before – when I &nbsp;worked in the foster care system. &nbsp;Then, I looked into the abyss of the &nbsp;childhood trauma. &nbsp;Now, I see its echo, a dark and malevolent echo of &nbsp;childhood trauma from generations past. This type of trauma pathogen seeks to remain hidden. &nbsp;It derives all &nbsp;of its malevolent power to inflict its terrible psychological damage &nbsp;onto the child by remaining a hidden family pathology – a family &nbsp;secret.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>No. &nbsp;This stops. &nbsp;It must remain hidden no more. &nbsp;We are exposing it – &nbsp;so we can protect the current children from the “perverse” &nbsp;role-reversal relationship and psychological boundary violation of their &nbsp;manipulative use by parents to meet their parent’s own damaged &nbsp;emotional and psychological needs. To the allies of the pathogen, to the flying monkeys who seek to &nbsp;prevent us from exposing this pathogen to the light – consider carefully &nbsp;what you are doing, because you’re furthering the echo transmission of a &nbsp;very malevolent and destructive child attachment pathogen.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Wake up</strong>. &nbsp;&nbsp;You are NOT protecting children, you are collaborating in the &nbsp;continuing abuse of children in a ripple of childhood trauma across &nbsp;generations. &nbsp;You are hearing the <strong>echo</strong> of trauma, and your own &nbsp;attachment trauma networks are responding in psychological resonance to &nbsp;the echo, thinking that the echo is real. &nbsp;It’s not. &nbsp;It is a ripple of &nbsp;trauma from generations past. <em><strong>The source trauma that is creating the devastating family pathology &nbsp;of “parental alienation” – in which families are torn apart and loving &nbsp;parent-child relationships are destroyed – is from a generation or two &nbsp;earlier. &nbsp;</strong></em></p>
<p>The current manifestation is not real, it is an echo of the &nbsp;earlier trauma. &nbsp;It is time to heal the children. &nbsp;It is time to heal &nbsp;the trauma that is traveling across time, embedded in the family’s &nbsp;inter-generational attachment networks, a trauma being passed across &nbsp;generations of love and bonding. It is time to bring this nightmare family tragedy – this &nbsp;inter-generational nightmare – to an end. &nbsp;The current manifestation of &nbsp;this inter-generational attachment trauma is a false story – a false &nbsp;drama. &nbsp;An echo. It is time to heal this inter-generational echo of trauma. &nbsp;It is &nbsp;time return to the beautiful and wonderful children a normal and healthy &nbsp;childhood of loving and healthy attachment bonds to both parents.&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>It &nbsp;is time to heal</strong>.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Craig Childress, Psy.D. Clinical Psychologist, PSY 18857&nbsp;</p>
<p>Citations: Haley, J. (1977). Toward a theory of pathological systems.&nbsp;</p>
<p>In P. &nbsp;Watzlawick &amp; J. Weakland (Eds.), The interactional view (pp. 31-48). &nbsp;New York: Norton. “The people responding to each other in the triangle are not peers, &nbsp;but one of them is of a different generation from the other two… In the &nbsp;process of their interaction together, the person of one generation &nbsp;forms a coalition with the person of the other generation against his &nbsp;peer. &nbsp;By ‘coalition’ is meant a process of joint action which is &nbsp;against the third person… The coalition between the two persons is &nbsp;denied. &nbsp;That is, there is certain behavior which indicates a coalition &nbsp;which, when it is queried, will be denied as a coalition… In essence, &nbsp;the perverse triangle is one in which the separation of generations is &nbsp;breached in a covert way. &nbsp;When this occurs as a repetitive pattern, the &nbsp;system will be pathological.” (p. 37) Kerig, P.K. (2005).&nbsp;</p>
<p>Revisiting the construct of boundary dissolution: &nbsp;A multidimensional perspective. Journal of Emotional Abuse, 5, 5-42. “The breakdown of appropriate generational boundaries between parents &nbsp;and children significantly increases the risk for emotional abuse.” (p. &nbsp;6) “In the throes of their own insecurity, troubled parents may rely on &nbsp;the child to meet the parent’s emotional needs, turning to the child to &nbsp;provide the parent with support, nurturance, or comforting (Zeanah &amp; &nbsp;Klitzke, 1991).&nbsp;</p>
<p>Ultimately, preoccupation with the parents’ needs &nbsp;threatens to interfere with the child’s ability to develop autonomy, &nbsp;initiative, self-reliance, and a secure internal working model of the &nbsp;self and others (Carlson &amp; Sroufe, 1995; Leon &amp; Rudy, this &nbsp;volume). (p. 6) “When parent-child boundaries are violated, the implications for &nbsp;developmental psychopathology are significant (Cicchetti &amp; Howes, &nbsp;1991).&nbsp;</p>
<p>Poor boundaries interfere with the child’s capacity to progress &nbsp;through development which, as Anna Freud (1965) suggested, is the &nbsp;defining feature of childhood psychopathology. (p. 7) “A theme that appears to be central to the conceptualization of &nbsp;boundary dissolution is the failure to acknowledge the psychological &nbsp;distinctiveness of the child.” (p. 8)</p>
<p>&nbsp;“Examination of the theoretical and empirical literatures suggests &nbsp;that there are four distinguishable dimensions to the phenomenon of &nbsp;boundary dissolution: role reversal, intrusiveness, enmeshment, and &nbsp;spousification.” (p. 8) “By binding the child in an overly close and dependent relationship, &nbsp;the enmeshed parent creates a psychological unhealthy childrearing &nbsp;environment that interferes with the child’s development of an &nbsp;autonomous self.</p>
<p>” (p. 10) “Barber (2002) defines psychological control as comprising ‘parental &nbsp;behaviors that are intrusive and manipulative of children’s thoughts, &nbsp;feelings, and attachments to parents, and are associated with &nbsp;disturbances in the boundaries between the child and the parent’ (p. 15) &nbsp;(see also Bradford &amp; Barber, this issue).” (p. 12) “As Ogden (1979) phrased it, ‘It is as if the parent says to the &nbsp;child, if you are not what I need you to be, you do not exist for me’ &nbsp;(p. 16).” (p. 12)&nbsp;</p>
<p>“Rather than telling the child directly what to do or think, as does &nbsp;the behaviorally controlling parent, the psychologically controlling &nbsp;parent uses indirect hints and responds with guilt induction or &nbsp;withdrawal of love if the child refuses to comply. &nbsp;In short, an &nbsp;intrusive parent strives to manipulate the child’s thoughts and feelings &nbsp;in such a way that the child’s psyche will conform to the parent’s &nbsp;wishes. (p. 12)</p>
<p>&nbsp;“In order to carve out an island of safety and responsivity in an &nbsp;unpredictable, harsh, and depriving parent-child relationship, children &nbsp;of highly maladaptive parents may become precocious caretakers who are &nbsp;adept at reading the cues and meeting the needs of those around them. &nbsp;&nbsp;The ensuing preoccupied attachment with the parent interferes with the &nbsp;child’s development of important ego functions, such as self &nbsp;organization, affect regulation, and emotional object constancy. (p. 14)&nbsp;</p>
<p>“There is evidence for the intergenerational transmission of boundary &nbsp;dissolution within the family. &nbsp;Adults who experienced boundary &nbsp;dissolution in their relationships with their own parents are more &nbsp;likely to violate boundaries with their children (Hazen, Jacobvitz, &nbsp;&amp; McFarland, this volume; Shaffer &amp; Sroufe, this volume).” (p. &nbsp;22) Shaffer, A., &amp; Sroufe, L. A. (2005).&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Developmental and &nbsp;adaptational implications of generational boundary dissolution: Findings &nbsp;from a prospective, longitudinal study. Journal of Emotional Abuse. &nbsp;5(2/3), 67-84. “Role reversals observed among children with disorganized attachment &nbsp;histories, which may include both controlling/punitive and caregiving &nbsp;behavior patterns, may be attempts at fear mastery and self-protection.” &nbsp;(p. 72)&nbsp;</p>
<p>“In this study the dissolution of generational boundaries was child-specific within the identified families.” (p. 75) “A maternal history of sexual exploitation has emerged as a significant predictor of boundary dissolution at 42 months.” (p. 75)&nbsp;</p>
<p>“Mothers who tend to disregard generational boundaries in interacting &nbsp;with their children are not simply more “warm” than other mothers, but &nbsp;in fact show more conflict or hostility.” (p. 78) “Parent-initiated boundary dissolution in early childhood &nbsp;instantiates a pattern of relationship disturbance in the child. Role &nbsp;reversal is apparent by early adolescence and the available data suggest &nbsp;links to psychopathology in later adolescence, particularly as a result &nbsp;of sexualized behavior observed at age 13.” (p. 80) Beck, A.T., Freeman, A., Davis, D.D., &amp; Associates (2004). &nbsp;</p>
<p>Cognitive therapy of personality disorders. (2nd edition). New York: &nbsp;Guilford. “Various studies have found that patients with BPD are characterized &nbsp;by disorganized attachment representations (Fonagy et al., 1996; Patrick &nbsp;et al, 1994). &nbsp;Such attachment representations appear to be typical for &nbsp;persons with unresolved childhood traumas, especially when parental &nbsp;figures were involved, with direct, frightening behavior by the parent. &nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;Disorganized attachment is considered to result from an unresolvable &nbsp;situation for the child when<strong> ‘the parent is at the same time the source &nbsp;of fright as well as the potential haven of safety’ </strong>(van IJzendoorn, &nbsp;Schuengel, &amp; Bakermans-Kranburg, 1999, p. 226).” (p. 191)&nbsp;</p>
<p>https://s26.postimg.org/op8v6lo5l/The_End.jpg</p>
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