Sensitive Mothering
From the Nursery and Beyond
Does the mother matter? The most obvious response is that, of course, every close caretaker of a child matters to that child's development into a healthy -- or less than healthy -- individual. But how much and in what particular ways do mother and mothering (their general and overall style of interacting with her child/ren) affect the development of the child? This is a point that has been debated in professional conversations for decades. In many ways, the assumptions and positions that are made by scholars mirror the questions that families have: What is the best way for a mother to interact with her child/ren? How important is the relationship between mother and child compared to that between child and other caregivers? And how much of the modeling of the good mother -- in this case the "sensitive" mother -- is based on patriarchal attitudes that run through Western culture? This paper addresses some of the most important traditions in how motherhood is conceptualized looking primarily at children of preschool age.
John Bowlby is one of the most important theoreticians in the area of mother-child bonding and hiss theories have influenced a number later scholars and clinicians. The major aspect of his model is that in order to grow up to be healthy (in terms primarily of mental acuity and health but also in terms of physical health) is that each child must be able to form a "secure base" to her or his mother. Without such a base a child is literally like any other physical object in the universe that does not have enough underneath it to support itself: Bowlby gives us an image of a child teetering back and forth until his mother reaches down to steady him.
Bowlby's model was derived in many ways (as have been so many) from his assumptions about what bad (or insecure or insensitive) mothering looked like. This makes a great deal of theoretical sense: It is easier to distinguish children who turn out "badly" (in whatever sense that that society defines "badly") then to identify those who turn out well, or at least well enough. Bowlby put aside the then-extremely prevalent theory that Freud had developed about maternal love and developed his own, creating a model on what he conceived to be the latest scientific knowledge, which included models and ideas from ethology as well as from cognitive studies.
Konrad Lorenz was one of the researchers whose work most influenced Bowlby. Lorenz created models of attachment by examining the behavior of other species, especially birds. Lorenz and his colleagues argued that attachment -- when a young individual becomes bonded with a parent or other related adult -- is an essential adaptation needed for survival (Lorenz, 1952, pp. 27-29). If young animals do not do everything that they can to connect with an adult and to make that adult connect with them then the young may not survive. Bowlby translated this idea into human terms, arguing that survival for humans (social creatures that we are) is based in attachment between parent and offspring.
Harlow's work with monkeys deprived of love and physical affection (Harlow & Zimmerman, 1959) also influenced Bowlby because his work so clearly demonstrated that attachment between a primate caregiver and child was essential for "normal" development. Harlow's work (which now seems almost horrifying) demonstrated convincingly that attachment (which is equivalent to what humans call love) is as essential as food.
Bowlby argued that the energy models espoused by Freud (in which infants some how became attached to their mothers because of extra energy in the system) ignored the fact that children, even infants, took an active role in the process of parenting, with infants responding to their mothers even as their mothers responded to them.
In a secure mother-child relationship, Bowlby argued, an infant can only develop fully (that is, normally) if that infant can be sure that s/he has someone who will respond to her obvious distress (usually expressed in the form of crying). In other words, the good/sensitive mother assures the infant that she or he will be taken care of by the caretaker no matter how frightening an event occurs (Matthew, 2006). Mary Ainsworth, a colleague of Bowlby's built upon his model to create a similar one, or rather one that she elaborated from Bowlby's. She added the feature that a well-attached child will react with less fear to strangers than does an insecurely attached child since the securely attached child knows that there is a mother/caregiver...
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