Relationships, Intimacy May Be WRONG for YOU (DMM: Dynamic-maturational model of attachment)

Uploaded 1/11/2022, approx. 38 minute read

Summary

Professor Sam Vaknin discusses how society pressures individuals to conform to the idea that everyone should be in a relationship and have intimacy skills. However, studies show that up to one-third of adults do not feel comfortable in relationships and are egodystonic. Vaknin introduces the dynamic maturational model of attachment and adaptation, which emphasizes that exposure to danger drives neural development and adaptation to promote survival, and that the greatest dangers are in relationships. People with insecure attachment styles perceive dangers in relationships even when there are none, and being in a relationship constitutes danger in their minds.

So there’s a lot of constraining of negative affectivity, of changeability, of mood-lability. There’s a lot of constricting and constraining of mental health effects, theoretically, ostensibly.

All these infantile attachment styles can still lead to mature, adult, functional relationships.

But then what happens is most infants tend to grow up. As they grow up, they begin to develop attachment strategies which are really, really problematic for relationships, intimacy, and love.

So let’s continue.

You remember all the previous attachment strategies, the infancy ones?

They prevail. They continue into preschool.

So in the infancy phase, the parents mediate the effect of the context upon the infant, including the risk to the infant.

The infant perceives risk and develops strategies mediated via his parents.

He has no direct access to reality or to the environment.

But in preschool, the child begins to learn safe forms of self-reliance for short periods of time.

He’s beginning to wander off. He’s beginning to, in other words, separate and become an individual, individually.

And so all the previous strategies continue well into preschool and well into the grave, I mean, throughout life.

But new strategies are added.

The first new strategy is A3.

Individuals using this strategy, known as compulsive caregiving, it’s actually a strategy first described by Powellby in 1973.

So individuals using this strategy rely on predictable contingencies, inhibit negative affect, and protect themselves by protecting their attachment figure.

In childhood, these people try to cheer up or care for a sad, withdrawn, depressed, unavailable, vulnerable attachment figure.

In other words, they parentify themselves. They become parent figures to their own attachment figures.

Attachment figures is another name for parents in most cases.

So these children learn that if they want the attachment figure to stick aroundand if they want the attachment figure to function even minimally, they have to parentify, to parent the attachment figure.

So they parentify themselves. And so they try to cheer up the parental figure. They try to care for the parental figure.

In adulthood, these people usually find employment where they rescue or care for others.

They have very strong saviour-rescuer complexes. And so they gravitate towards other people who appear weak and needy.

And this is also true in intimate relationships. They fix people. They’re fixers. They’re healers.

And so they would tend to have this messiah-fixer complex when they come across a potential intimate partner.

I’m going to fix her. I’m going to make her better. I’m going to heal her with my love.

The precursors of A3 and A4 can be seen even in infancy.

It’s in the strange situation experiment. It’s very clear.

But the strategy only functions fully in preschool years.

And so individuals in this period begin to show signs of this.

Now, A3 is where we first encounter promiscuity, casual sex, avoidance of intimacy.

And here is what the literature says.

Individuals with A3 and A4 use a compulsively promiscuous strategy. This is from, I’m quoting Crittenden 1995.

They use a compulsively promiscuous strategy to avoid genuine intimacy while maintaining human contact.

So in casual sex, when you’re promiscuous, you have human contact. You have a warm body. You have the smells and the taste of a partner.

But it’s not real intimacy. It’s not genuine intimacy. It’s fake. It’s like junk food. It’s fake. It’s passing. It’s ephemeral.

And so these people avoid genuine intimacy, says Crittenden, while maintaining human contact, and in some cases satisfying sexual desires.

Crittenden says these people with A3, A4 strategy show false positive effect, including sexual desire, to little known people, strangers, and they protect themselves from rejection by engaging with many people superficially and not getting deeply involved with anyone.

This strategy develops in adolescence when past intimate relationships have been treacherous and strangers appear to offer the only hope of closeness and sexual satisfaction. It may be displayed in socially promiscuous manner that does not involve sexuality or in more serious cases as sexual promiscuity.

Crittenden regards sexual promiscuity as an extreme sign of attachment dysfunction.

And so do I. And I’m not talking about agentic promiscuity, which is basically an empowered choice. I’m talking about compulsive promiscuity that involves sexual self-trashing, masochistic, self-defeating, self-destructive, reckless behaviors.

Now A4 compulsively compliant individuals were actually first described by Crittenden and Delala in 1988. They try to prevent danger. They inhibit negative effect and they protect themselves by doing what attachment figures want them to do. They are people pleasers, a co-dependence.

If the attachment figure is angry and threatening, the compliance level goes up, but the attempts to people please escalate.

These A4 characters tend to be excessively vigilant, hypervigilant, quick to anticipate and meet other people’s wishes and generally agitated and anxious. The anxiety, however, is ignored and downplayed by the individual and often is somatized.

It appears in bodily symptoms that are brushed aside as being unimportant.

This A3 and A4 emerge in preschool and remain for life.

And so during preschool period, we have the A3, A4, but we also have the C3 and C4. The C34, aggressive, feigned, helpless.

It’s a strategy that involves alternating aggression with apparent helplessness to cause other people to comply out of fear of being attacked or to cause people to assist out of fear that one cannot care for oneself.

So it’s dual messaging. It’s like a mixed signal.

I’m going to attack you so you better comply. You better do what I want you to do. You better cater to my needs. And if not, then I’m going to destroy myself. I’m going to victimize myself because I’m helpless and I can’t do otherwise. So you need to help me. You need to help me because I cannot care for myself.

So there’s an alternation between these two, this aggression and learned or feigned helplessness.

Individuals using C3, which is the aggressive variant, this strategy, they emphasize their anger in order to demand caregivers compliance.

And those using the C4, feigned helplessness, which is a form of aggression, of course.

Codependency involves emotional blackmail. It’s aggression. So C4, feigned helplessness, these people give signals of incompetence, inadequacy, submission, need, extreme neediness.

The angry presentation, C3 elicits compliance and guilt in other people, whereas the vulnerable presentation, C4 elicits rescue, saving, fixing, healing.

Now, again, you can see all these behaviors in infancy, but the strategy only functions, only blossoms, flourishes in preschool years and later.

And then, of course, after preschool, what do we have? School age.

In school age, people establish symmetrical attachments with best friends, for example, while concurrently maintaining affiliative peer relationship.

So it’s all about peers. The reference group is peers, and peers have a much bigger influence than, for example, parental figures or teachers or even role models or celebrities.

During school years, again, we have all the previous attachment strategies. I repeat again, previous attachment strategies developed earlier in life, deceased and survived into death throughout the lifespan.

So in school years, we have everything we had before, but a new strategy emerges and it’s known as C5-6. It’s an extreme form of C3-4.

It involves active deception to carry out the revenge or illicit rescue. It’s about revenge and rescue.

Individuals using this strategy substantially distort information, particularly blaming others for their own predicament and heightening their own negative effect.

The outcome is more enduring and less resolvable struggle or conflict. People using C5, which is the punitive strategy, they’re called the deceptive, the distant, the self-control. They’re much more so than people who use C3.

These people appear invulnerable. They dismiss other people’s perspectives while forcing other people to attend to them, and they mislead other people regarding their own inner feelings of helplessness and desire for comfort.

So it’s a facade, it’s a compensatory thing, and it’s very reminiscent, of course, of grandiose narcissism or overt narcissism.

Individuals using the C6, which is seductive, this strategy, they give the appearance of needing rescue from dangerous circumstances that are in fact self-induced. C6 individuals mislead other people regarding how angry they are, and this alternating pattern is often seen in bully victim pairs with gangs and in violent couples, where the hidden half of the pattern is usually forgotten or forgiven until the presentation reverses.

And this strategy develops during the school years, but actually it doesn’t function fully until adolescence, which is the next stage in the lifespan.

In adolescence, we transform best friend attachments into romantic reciprocal attachments with the sexual component. Here, with the failure starts. Here, people who are incapable of love, romantic attachments, intimacy, and relationships, they treat in adolescence.

So in adolescence, again, we have all the previous attachment strategies, A1, A3, A4, and so on and so forth. We have all the, you know, previous strategies, but we have a few new ones. So we have A5.

A5 individuals use a compulsively promiscuous strategy. And so I mentioned it before, and so A5 blossoms in adolescence. It is where it starts to manifest really powerfully and becomes the dominant attachment strategy for life.

People say, well, people can change. You shouldn’t inquire too deeply into the past history of your partner. What matters is how your partner is behaving with you now.

That’s nonsense. The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior and certain things never change. For example, attachment strategies and attachment styles.

So you need to inquire really, really deeply into the background of your partner, sexual history, relationship history, intimacy skills, relationship outcomes, infidelity, if there was any, etc. You need to do all this because it’s going to repeat itself.

We know, for example, that people who had cheated once are three to five times more likely to cheat again. We even know that people who had been cheated on are far more likely to be cheated on again. It’s all pretty predictable. We’re pretty predictable people.

The strategies that are described here are very, very important. They’re very important because they give you the tools to classify your potential intimate partner and, of course, to classify yourself. If you do that, you’re able to predict with a large degree of accuracy what’s going to happen.

So A5 individuals are similar to previous attachment style that I had mentioned, and it’s a compulsively promiscuous strategy. As I said, it’s intended to avoid genuine intimacy and so on.

But A6 is a really new layer, a really new strategy, which emerges in adolescence.

It was first described by Baulby, who else, in 1980.

Individuals who use A6, it’s a compulsively self-reliant strategy. These people don’t trust other people. They regard other people as unpredictable in their demands. They find themselves inadequate in meeting these demands. They avoid other people in their demands because they think the demands would be capricious and arbitrary, and also they don’t believe that they are adequate to answer these demands.

People with A6 inhibit negative affect. They protect themselves by relying on no one other than themselves. They’re totally self-sufficient and self-contained. They expect nothing from others. They never ask for help. They reject advice as an intrusion, as an imposition.

This protects the self from other people, but at the cost of lost help, lost advice, lost comfort, succor, and assistance. It’s a big loss. It’s not a very wise or clever trade-off, and it’s very defensive.

Usually the A6 strategy develops in adolescence after individuals have discovered that they cannot regulate the behavior of important but dangerous or non-protective caregivers.

So these people withdraw from close relationships as soon as they are old enough to care for themselves.

There is a social form of strategy in which individuals function adaptively in social and work contexts, but are distant when intimacy is expected in an isolated form.

Some people function perfectly in their careers, in their workplaces, but when intimacy is involved, their calmness, detachment, avoidance, withdrawal render it impossible for them to connect.

There’s another form in which individuals, in A6 individuals, cannot manage any interpersonal relationship and then withdraw as much as possible from other people, totally to the point of celibacy and schizoid kind of solitude.

This emerges in adolescence. A6 emerges in adolescence, and many of these adolescents are sometimes misdiagnosed as schizotypal, or they are the weirdos of the class, and they’re mocked, and they’re outcasts, they’re excommunicated, they’re ostracized, they are ridiculed, and so on so forth, and they remain like this for life.

Finally, we reach adulthood, most of us. We reach adulthood where we establish symmetrical and reciprocal spousal romantic attachments that foster both partners’ development, and there is the nurturance of children in non-reciprocal and non-symmetrical attachment relationships in which the adult is the attachment figure.

So we play a dual role. We play a role of an equal with our intimate partner and a role of an attachment figure, which is again non-symmetrical with our children, if we have any.

All the previous attachment strategies are active very much and in play, including many of them who preclude intimacy, love, and relationship, make them impossible.

But there are a few additional strategies that emerge only in adulthood.

A7, delusionally idealizing individuals. It’s a late edition, Crittenden first described it in 2000. These people have had repeated experience with severe danger that they cannot predict or control. They display brittle false positive effect and protect themselves by imagining that they’re powerless or hostile attachment figures will protect them.

This is a very desperate strategy of believing falsely in safety when no efforts are likely to reduce the danger. It’s a kind of hostage syndrome. Paradoxically, the appearances of these people, of A7 people, their appearance is generally pleasing and there’s no hint of the fear and trauma, the lie behind the nice exterior until circumstances produce a breaking functioning, they suddenly collapse mentally.

This pattern only develops in adulthood, which is a lot about the kind of adulthood that modern people have.

A8, externally assembled self, also described for the first time by Crittenden in 2000.

So people with A8 attachment strategy do as other people require. They are people pleasers, they have few genuine feelings of their own and they try to protect themselves by absolute reliance on other people.

Usually professionals who replace their absent or endangering attachment figures.

So Minkhausen syndrome and Minkhausen by proxy syndrome may be an extension of this.

Both A7 and A8 are associated with pervasive and sadistic early abuse and neglect, finally leads us to psychopathy.

Psychopathy emerges in adulthood and it’s known as the A plus C plus strategy or AC strategies. They combine the sub-patterns of both A and C like it’s best of both worlds.

In practice, most of these people have distorted patterns. For example, A34 is higher, C34 is higher, you know, this kind of thing.

Individuals using these strategies display very sudden shifts in behavior. They’re very impulsive, they’re very defined and reckless.

In the cases of blended strategies, they show very subtle mixing of distortion and deception.

And the extreme form of this is of course psychopathy.

So if you have a look, if you review, if you listen back to this recording, you will reach the very sad conclusion that a majority of attachment strategies are focused around fending off danger, protecting oneself, and therefore they are not very conducive to intimacy, love and relationships.


Finally, there’s C778, menacing paranoid. It’s the most extreme of type C strategies. It involves a willingness to attack anyone combined with the fear of everyone.

Type C strategies all involve distrust of consequences and an excessive reliance on one’s own gut feelings.

At the extreme, this pattern becomes delusional with delusions of infinite revenge over ubiquitous enemies.

The menacing strategy, C7. On the reverse side, there’s paranoia regarding these enemies, C8.

And these two strategies do not become organized before early adulthood.

Reviewing these attachment strategies tells us that when we attempt true intimacy, true love in abiding functional relationships, we have to overcome many, many layers of disturbed attachment strategies.

Attachments strategies that lead to fear, danger, avoidance, withdrawal, negative affectivity, or self-denial and self-deception. It is not therefore surprising that so many of us fail in our quest to find warmth, acceptance, and a friend, a friend for life, and even the most basic and primitive of all needs and desires.

Six.