Attachment Theory: A Case Study

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Modern Attachment Theory is in integration of Bowlby’s attachment Theory and neurobiology. This theory not only focuses on the attachment the child has with the parents but how that attachment can impact the development of brain. According to this theory, attachment is crucial to the development of the right brain, which is described as the neurobiological core of human unconsciousness. The right brain also controls neurobiological symptoms such as the processing of emption and self-regulation (Schore & Schore, 2007). Attachment in early childhood determines how an individual will attach to others later in life (Berzoff, Flanagan, & Hertz, 2011). The client did not develop an insecure attachment as infant. When the client was born she was …show more content…

She was not hugged or comforted and states her mother was always angry and yelling at everyone in the home. She recalls her grandmother being the same way and was “always yelling. This behavior would be consistent with intergenerational transfer of behavior from mother to daughter. Therefore, the client is at risk for passing this pattern on to her own child through the transference of stored patters in her memory (Morse & Wiley, 1997). “Caregivers who experience difficulties with their own affect regulation often have a difficult time in assisting their children to deal adaptively with their emotional development, often resulting in anxious and insecure attachment patterns which affect their abilities to form satisfying relationships”(Miehls & Applegate, 2014, p. 152). The grandmother was unable to have appropriate affect regulation and was not able to attach to her children or her husband. Both mother and grandmother are unable to control their emotions. As a result the client states she is not close to anyone and has no one to talk to. She is upset she must go to the doctor alone but states, “ That’s just the way it is”. When expressing herself she wither yells or cries and is has a difficult time managing her …show more content…

Stress has affected the client in many ways. Physiologically, she has chest pains, suffers from migraines at least four times a week, and has lost 15 pounds in two weeks. Cognitively, her grades are dropping despite previously having good grades. She is exhibiting poor judgment regarding consequence regarding her sexual health and behavior at school. She exhibits impulsive behavior at school such as not going to class which results in detention. The client is has little affect regulation and frequently cries or argues with her father. In the past she has coped with stress by drinking, smoking marijuana, taking ecstasy, or having sex. During the early development neurobiological systems were not formed appropriately in the client’s right hemispheres. As a result, when she is emotionally dysregualted she has a difficulty managing her

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