Infant Attachment: Impact on Future Social Competence

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Attachment in infancy plays a huge role in a person’s future social competence. “Attachment is the positive emotional bond that develops between a child and a particular, special individual,” states Robert Feldman in Development across the Life Span (Feldman 186). Usually the first form of attachment is between a mother and her newborn. As soon as the baby is born doctors take the neonate for a quick check up and immediately place it on the mom’s chest. The mother and baby have had a very close relationship for nine months before birth. This is referred to as bonding. Development across the Life Span defines it as, “Close physical and emotional contact between parent and child during the period immediately following birth, argued by some to …show more content…

British psychiatrist John Bowlby believed that attachment is based on an infant’s need for care and protection. The greater the positive bond/relationship between a parent(s) and their infant the more positive affect it will have on the infant’s social competence. There are five types of attachment according to Mary Ainsworth’s patterns of attachment. A child who has a secure attachment pattern looks at their mother as their center, their home. According to Ainsworth,” These children seem at ease in the strange situation as long as their mothers are present,” (Feldman 187). In this type of attachment the parent is more in sync with their child and better in touch with their child’s emotions. The child grows up able to make meaningful relationships, are compassionate, and able to establish appropriate boundaries. Avoidant

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