Many human troubles would be
lessened if the emotional needs of infants and young children were
better understood in our society. This applies particularly to
attachment needs and the effects of separating infants from their
parents.
Can you imagine how you might feel if you were happily married,
and your partner suddenly disappeared for a week or two, and then
reappeared without explanation, expecting to carry on as if
nothing had happened? And what if he or she were holding someone
else? Many toddlers have been in a situation like this when their
mothers had a new baby. Infants, by definition, are children who
are too young to talk, and they cannot understand the future when
repeatedly told that "Mummy will come back soon".
The survival of all animals who breastfeed their young has,
throughout their long history, depended on Nature's way of keeping
the mother and her young together, both for nourishment and
protection. Some animals, such as lambs can follow their mothers
from birth, but "higher" animals such as chimpanzees,
and especially human beings, are too immature when they are born
to follow their mothers in this way, and instead they are normally
carried about by their mothers, at first in her arms, and later on
mother's back.
For this to happen, Nature has provided a process of
"bonding", so that normally a mother becomes attached to
her particular baby, making her want to stay near him or her and
respond to any crying or other signals. Successful bonding is
helped by keeping mother and baby together in the early hours and
days after delivery and breastfeeding. If they are separated at
this time bonding may not occur normally. In many animals, and
sometimes in humans, this may lead a mother to reject her baby.
Nature's pattern seems to be that mothers and infants are designed
to stay close to each other and in physical contact for much of
the time, especially in the first year of life, while mother goes
about her activities. Breastfeeding is part of Nature's pattern,
to work with attachment behavior in developing a close, warm, and
pleasurable mother-infant relationship. In humans, for better or
for worse, these are the early days in a relationship which, in
some form or other, will be lifelong. It may be that one day this
baby will care for the mother or father.
Babies' wants are much the same as their needs, and they will
signal these needs to their mothers when they are thirsty, or
wanting to be cuddled or see what is going on. Babies need their
mothers and other carers to be sensitive and responsive to their
signals. Through this responsive relationship, mother infant
"attunement" normally develops, in which the
interactions of mother and baby are like a coordinated
"dance", which forms the basis for later communication
and language development.
We know now that ideas that such care will "spoil" a
baby have been mistaken. 0n the contrary, responsive mothering is
a good basis for the infant's present and future well-being. As
the baby becomes older he or she in turn develops strong
attachment bonds to the mother, and, hopefully, also to the father
and others, thus providing a "secure base" for learning
about the world.
In natural conditions, infants separated from their mothers
could be in great danger, and, over time, only those infants with
an instinctive concern to stay somewhere near their mothers were
likely to survive to produce the next generation. So this same
instinctive concern is usually seen in infants today. This is the
basis of the "separation anxiety" which normal infants
often show, if they cannot re-unite with their mothers, or someone
who provides their secure base. Infants may develop attachments to
other members of the family or carers, who can take mother's place
for a while. But if mother does not return soon, some infants can
become quite distressed, with crying and an increase of behaviors
designed to bring the mother and infant together again. If the
separation lasts for some days, the first state of crying and
"protest" may be replaced by a mood of quiet unhappiness
or despair. In the first two or three years of life an infant has
no adult sense of time, and since explanations cannot be
understood, the infant seems to despair of the mother's return, in
a kind of grief or mourning reaction.
It is painful to go on experiencing such hurt, angry and even
depressed feelings, and eventually the infant may pass into a
state which has been termed "detachment". It may be
thought that the child has "settled", and he or she may
appear happy. He may be friendly to almost anyone, except
to his mother if she re-appears. Children in this state will often
turn away from their mothers or appear not to recognize them. It
seems that they cannot bear to have the feelings of hurt and
longing brought up again. These reactions are more likely when the
child is away from home and in a strange environment. They may be
less, or absent, if the child has good substitute mothering,
preferably from a known member of his or her own family,
throughout the period of separation.
If the separation is unavoidable it is desirable that the
mother and infant should visit each other whenever possible, even
if this appears to upset the infant at the time. It is more
healthy for this crying and upset to come to the surface, than for
it to be bottled up for later on. This particularly applies if a
toddler's mother goes to hospital to have another baby. It also
applies if an infant or young child has to go to hospital, and in
such cases it is often desirable for the mother and/or another
member of the family to spend time helping to care for the child
in the hospital, if medical and family circumstances are suitable.
If such separation in early childhood is not well handled,
sensitive children may be emotionally disturbed for a considerable
time afterwards. It is believed that children aged 6 months to 4
years are more particularly vulnerable. On reunion with mother
after a separation it is helpful if the mother can recognize what
her child has been feeling. It is important to understand and
accept the feelings of hurt, anger and sadness which may come to
the surface, perhaps with clinging and babyish behavior, as the
child seeks to clear the way to develop once again a trusting,
loving and co-operative relationship with his parents. This is one
of Nature's healing processes which should be handled with gentle
respect and acceptance, not punishment.
Note: An excellent account
for the general reader may be found in the book Becoming attached: unfolding the mystery of the
infant-mother bond and its impact on later life. Karen,
Robert. New York: Warner, 1994.