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Part I. Models of Dissociation. Dissociation as an altered state of consciousnessNormalMay be clinical e.g. depersonalizationDissociation as structural pathologyCompartmentalizationStructural re-organizationPathological. Janet's Dissociation Model. Failure to take adaptive action in face of trauma Intensification of affect (
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1. Attachment & Dissociative Disorders Daniel Brown, Ph.D.
3. Janet’s Dissociation Model Failure to take adaptive action in face of trauma
Intensification of affect (“vehement emotions”
“Disaggregation” (dissociation) of consciousness with split off “nuclei” of consciousness outside of awareness/control
Narrowing of field of consciousness
Re-emergence of split off subconscious fixed ideas:
Somnambulistic states
Hypermnesia & amnesia
Conversion symptoms, e.g. paralysis
4. Dis-integrated ExperienceSpiegel & Cardena, 1991 “A structured separation of mental processes … that are ordinarily integrated.”
“Involving at least momentarily unbridgeable compartmentalization of experiences”
5. The DSM Model DSM section on dissociation only addresses cognitive forms of dissociation:
Memory symptoms (dissociative amnesia)
Disruptions in consciousness
Depersonalization & derealization
Dissociated identity
Somatoform (conversion) disorders in a separate section of DSM, as if unrelated to dissociation
No place for dissociated behavioral re-enactments
6. Domain of Dissociative Symptoms(Nijenhuis)
7. Structural Theories of Dissociation:Myer’s (1940) Theory Apparently Normal Personality:
Apparent normality but:
Emotional & bodily anesthesia
Amnesia (partial or complete)
Trauma left unintegrated
8. Primary Structural Dissociation:
9. Secondary Structural Dissociation
10. Tertiary Structural Dissociation
12. Part 2. Attachment
13. Attachment Security “The state of being secure or untroubled about the availability of the attachment figure”
(Ainsworth et al., 1978)
14. Identification of Attachment Behavior:Strange Situation Paradigm Parent-infant dyad introduced to room (1)
Parent-infant (3 min.)
Parent-infant-stranger (3 min.)
Infant-stranger (parent leaves) (3 min.)
Parent-infant (3 min.)
Infant alone (3 min.)
Infant-stranger (stranger enters) (3 min.)
Parent-infant (parent returns/stranger leaves)
(3 min.)
Assessed between 12-18 months
15. Types of Attachment Behavior(Ainsworth et al., 1978) Secure
Insecure
Avoidant
Anxious preoccupied/resistant
15% difficult to classify
Disorganized/disoriented (unresolved)
(Main & Solomon, 1986)
16. Four Main Attachment Types D
17. SSP: Secure Attachment Mother as secure base for exploration
Active exploration with interest
Signals or seeks contact when upset
Missing & protest when separated
Returns to separation once separated
Clear preference for care-giver over stranger
18. SSP: Avoidant Attachment Little display of affect or secure-base behavior
Little or no proximity seeking behavior
Stiffens or moves away from physical contact
Explores readily w/o social referencing
Interested in toys more than in care-giver
Minimal response to separation
No distress when left alone
Active avoidance upon reunion
No differential response to mother vs. stranger
19. SSP: Resistant (Preoccupied) Attachment Distress entering new environment
Fearful, passive, or angry
Fails to engage in exploration
Preoccupation with care-giver & clinging behavior
Disorganized by separation
Tantrums
Difficult to comfort after reunion
Failure to return to exploration after reunion
20. SSP: Disorganized Attachment Contradictory sequential or simultaneous attachment behaviors
Disorganized behavior with lack of goal-directedness during exploration
Incomplete, interrupted, or stereotypical behavioral sequences
Disorientation, confusion, & trance behavior
Fear or apprehension of care-giver
21. Manifestation of Attachment Behavior Over the Life-Course 1. Secure Attachment Infants
Proximity seeking
Increased behavioral & mental organization
Preschool
Social competence
Adult
Healthy pair-bonding
22. 2. Avoidant Attachment Infants
Express little affect
Avoids physical contact
Avoids mother after separation
No preference for mother over stranger
Episodes of aggression
Preschool
Emotional insulation
Antisocial or aggressive behavior
Attention-seeking
Adult
Mistrust of relationships
Social isolation & estrangement
23. 3. Resistant (Preoccupied) Attachment Infants
Clinging and tantrums
Difficulty being comforted
Preschool
Attention-seeking & needy
Passive & helpless
Impulsive
Adult
Abandonment fear
Dependent, clinging, jealous,
Compulsive care-giving
24. 4. Disorganized Attachment Infant
Activation of inconsistent & contradictory attachment behaviors
No single coherent attachment strategy
Trance states
Segregated systems
Preschool
Social inhibition & excessive care-giving
Controlling & bossy
Adult
Clinging and avoidant
Disorganized attachment associated with unresolved trauma & loss in care-giver
25. Etiology of Disorganized Attachment Frightening & frightened behavior (Main)
Frightening vocalizations & movements
Looming & invasions into infant’s space
Immobilized, trance-like states, & dissociative lapses
Deferential behavior
Defers to infant for guidance
Disrupted affective communication (Lyons-Ruth)
Extreme parental misattunement
Competing care-giving strategies
Hostile-Helpless states-of-mind (Lyons-Ruth)
Prolonged or repeated separation (Bowlby)
Seductive or sexualized behavior
Unresolved parental states-of-mind with respect to trauma or loss of parent (73%) vs. non-parent (23%)
Lapses of monitoring & reasoning
“The overall patterning of parental behaviors within the disorganized spectrum may take quite different forms” (Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 1999)
26. Disrupted Maternal Affective Communication Affective errors
Contradictory cues
Non-responsive or inappropriately responsive
Disorientation
Confused
Disorganized
Intrusive behavior (verbal or physical)
Role confusion
Role reversal
Sexualization
Withdrawal (verbal or physical)
27. Maternal Behavior & Infant Attachment Classification
28. Maltreating Parents “A maltreating caregiver is a frightened or frightening caregiver whose current mental state is characterized by a lack of resolution of loss or trauma, resulting in contradictory and unintegrated mental contents.”
(Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 1999, p. 544)
29. Child Maltreatment & Disorganized Attachment Disorganized attachment found in:
82% of maltreated infants (Carlson et al., 1989)
55% of maltreated infants (Lyons-Ruth et al., 1990)
“The disorganization of the attachment relationship, rather than simply its insecurity, may be a central mechanism in the emergence of many of the disturbances associated with maltreatment.”
(Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 1999, p. 543)
30. Base Rates of Attachment Pathology
31. The Love Quiz (Hazen & Shaver, 1987) Which best characterizes your romantic relationships:
Secure “I find it relatively easy to get close to others and am comfortable depending on them and having them depend on me. I don’t worry about being abandoned or about someone getting too close to me”
Avoidant “I am somewhat uncomfortable being close to others; I find it difficult to trust them completely, difficult to allow myself to depend on them. I am nervous when anyone gets too close, and often, others want me to be more intimate than I feel comfortable being.”
Ambivalent “I find that others are reluctant to get close as I would like. I often worry that my partner doesn’t really love me or won’t want to stay with me. I want to get very close to my partner, and this sometimes scares people away.”
32. The Relationship Questionnaire(Bartholomew & Horowitz, 1991) Secure: It is easy for me to become emotionally close to others. I am, comfortable depending on others and having others depend on me. I don’t worry about being alone or having others not accept me.
Dismissing: I am comfortable without close emotional relationships. It is very important to me to feel independent and self-sufficient, and I prefer not to depend on others or have others depend on me.
Preoccupied: I wan to be completely emotionally intimate with others, but I often find that others are reluctant to get close as I would like. I am uncomfortable being without close relationships, but I sometimes worry that others don’t value me as much as I value them.
Fearful: I am uncomfortable getting close to others. I want emotionally close relationships, but I find it difficult to trust others completely, or to depend on them. I worry that I will be hurt if I allow myself to become too close to others.
R = 0.78 with AAI
33. The Four-Category Schema of Adult Attachment (Bartholomew, 1990)
34. AAI: General Scoring Principles Coherence
Grice’s maxims
Quality—believable without contradictions
Quantity of information
Relevance—answers the questions asked
Manner—fresh, clear language
Parental behavior scales
Loving, rejecting, involving, pressuring
State-of-mind scales
Derogatory
Preoccupied
Unresolved
35. AAI: Secure Attachment Coherent discourse
Emotion neither overwhelms nor directs discourse
Single discourse strategy
Meta-cognitive monitoring
Active monitoring of thinking
Admission of biases and memory fallibility
Appearance-reality distinction
Representational diversity
Representational change
Awareness of unconscious processes
Compassion, humor, & forgiveness
36. AAI: Dismissing/Avoidant Attachment Positive, idealized view of attachment figure despite neglect
Representations unsupported or contradicted by episodes recounted e.g. “she was a very devoted mom but I couldn’t connect with her”
Lack of memory for childhood
Active derogation or dismissal of attachment experiences
Avoid focus on emotional aspects of attachments
Very brief transcripts
37. AAI: Preoccupied Anxious Attachment Preoccupied with past attachment relationships
Anger expressed toward primary attachment figure
Difficulty finding words or staying focused
Described as if reliving childhood experiences
Very long discourse
Role reversals & contradictions
38. AAI: Unresolved/ disorganized States Lapses in monitoring of reasoning
Odd thoughts & thought intrusions
Unreality
Disconnected ideas
Lapses in the monitoring of discourse
Prolonged silence
Drawn out of context of interview, then returns to normal discourse, e.g. sudden extreme attention to detail
Sudden changes in emotional theme
Lapses specific to talking about trauma or loss
39. AAI: Cannot Classify (CC) Both dismissing & preoccupied states-of-mind
Global switches between both strategies in describing same attachment figure, not just around describing loss or trauma
Representative groups:
Sexual abuse survivors
Multiple, co-morbid psychiatric diagnoses
Criminals
40. AAI Classifications Dismissing
Ds1 Dismissing of attachment
Ds2 Devaluing of attachment
Ds3 Restricted
Ds4 Fear of loss of child
Secure
F1 Conscious setting aside of attachment
F2 Somewhat dismissing/restricting of attachment but valuing
F3 Prototypical secure attachment
F4 Strong valuing plus some preoccupation
F5 Conflicted, angry preoccupied while accepting attachment
Preoccupied
E1 Passive
E2 Angry/conflicted
E3 Fearfully preoccupied by traumatic event
Ud Unresolved (disorganized/disoriented)
CC Contradictory states of mind [disorganized attachment]
41. Pervasive Developmental Effects “Difficulties in intimate relationships, unintegrated mental representations, negative self-concepts, and problems with affect regulation are expected to be core features of a disorganized attachment relationship.” (Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 1999, p. 544)
42. AAI Classification & Psychiatric Diagnoses
43. AAI Classification in Borderline and Dysthymic Disorders
44. Attachment & Psycho-pathology Insecure attachment per se does not guarantee psycho-pathology
Psychiatric diagnoses nearly always associated with insecure attachment
Unresolved/disorganized attachment over-represented among individuals with psychiatric diagnoses (50-78%)
75% & 89% of BPO showed preoccupied, anxious on the AAI (Fonagy et al., 1996; Patrick et al. 1994)
Secure attachment under-represented among individuals with psychiatric diagnoses (8%)
45. Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Dissociative Symptoms 1. 168 high-risk infants studied over 19 years
from infancy to early adulthood
Five developmentally distinct time periods
1. Infancy (0-24 months)
2. Preschool (30-54 months)
3. Elementary school (grades 1-6)
4. Adolescence (16-17 years-old)
5. Early adulthood (19 years-old)
Multiple measures at each developmental age
46. Longitudinal Study of Dissociative Symptoms:The Role of Trauma
47. Longitudinal Study of Dissociative Symptoms:The Role Attachment
48. Longitudinal Study of Dissociative Symptoms:Pathological Dissociation
49. Ogawa et al. Longitudinal Study:Conclusions “Age of onset, chronicity, & severity of trauma were highly correlated and predicted level of dissociation”
Trauma is a necessary but not sufficient predictor of pathological dissociation in adulthood
“Both avoidant & disorganized attachment are strong predictors of dissociation”
Dissociation in childhood as normal response to disruption & stress
Dissociation in adolescence & adulthood indication of psychopathology
Combination of disorganized attachment and later trauma predicts pathological dissociation
Dissociative behavior shifts in early adulthood so that trauma is less, and disorganized attachment more, predictive of adult pathological dissociation
50. Longitudinal Study:Contribution of Disorganized Attachment Carlson, 1998 Consequences of disorganized attachment in infancy:
Behavioral problems in elementary through high school
Dissociative symptoms in elementary through early adulthood
Self-harm & accident-proneness
Level of psychopathology in early adulthood
51. Longitudinal Study:Carlson’s (1998) conclusions “Attachment disorganization may have particular long-term implications for the development of dissociative symptoms in childhood and adolescence” (p. 1123)
52. Disorganized Attachment:The Contribution of Subsequent Trauma Early attachment disorganization plus
Subsequent severe & chronic trauma or abuse crystallizes disorganized/disoriented vulnerability into pathological dissociation
Combination of infant attachment disorganization and subsequent severe trauma necessary for development of pathological dissociation
Subsequent parental failure to respond to or protect child from the abuse further compounds the use of pathological dissociation
(Barach, 1991; Liotti, 1992)
53. Differential Effects of Neglect & Abuse(Alexander, 1993) 112 women with history of sexual abuse
Relationship Questionnaire:
14% secure
13% preoccupied
16% dismissing
58% fearful
Childhood sexual abuse predicted:
Depression
PTSD
Attachment style predicted:
Personality disorder
“Basic personality structure…was not associated with abuse characteristics but was instead predicted by adult attachment”
54. Dissociation as Connection or Disconnection? Detachment as final stage in dealing with separation anxiety; detachment as a kind of dissociation from attachment behavior (Barach, 1991)
Use of dissociation to preserve attachment to abusing care-giver (Blizard & Bluhm, 1994)
Selective dissociation of memories, self-states, object representations to preserve caring representation of care-giver
Dissociated amnesia to preserve attachment (Freyd, 1996)
55. Disorganized Attachment & Dissociation “Disorganized behavior of infancy is an early analogue of dissociation and may predispose the child to the use of this defense in subsequent development.”
Fonagy, 1998
“Disorganized attachment is an antecedent of the dissociative disorders”
Liotti, 1992
56. Liotti’s Model Disorgainzed/disoriented attachment as a more sophisticated construct than detachment to explain dissociative disorders
Disorganized attachment as a type of disoriented attachment, not detachment
Frightening/frightened parent is both source of comfort and danger to child
Results in creation of multiple, conflicting internal working models for attachment
57. Liotti’s Three Pathways Some (not extreme) exposure to frightening/frightened parental behavior, offset by other care-giver(s): High normal dissociative experiences (but not disorder) as adult
Extreme frightening/frightened parental behavior but no abuse: Mild DD as adult
Extreme frightening/frightened parental behavior plus subsequent serious abuse:
Construction of alter behavior & DID
58. Combination of Attachment Pathology& Abuse “One may view MPD as an attachment disorder complicated by the sequelae of active abuse (specific acts which cause physical harm or sexual harm).
Barach, 1991, p. 117
59. Perspectives on Dissociation Integration/Continuity
Developmental Models
(Putnam, Carlson, Harter, Hornstein, Liotti, Main)
Dis-integrated experience
(Janet, Spiegel & Cardena)
Multiplicity/Discontinuity
State/trait theories
Process/structural theories
60. Normal Self Development “Multiple working models” in normal infants (Liott, 1999; Putnam, 1994)
Discrete, discontinuous self-states “smooth out” over course of normal child development (Putnam, 1994)
Concrete operational thinking as “major developmental task” for relative unity of self representational system
Normal intensification of internal conflict between self-states in mid-adolescence
Identity consolidation and reduction of internal conflict in late adolescence & early adulthood
61. Contributions of Disorganized Attachment to Adult Dissociative & Personality Disorders Etiology of disorganized attachment
Care-giver problems
Unresolved loss & trauma
Depression & alcoholism
Care-giver behavior
Frightening & frightened behavior (M. Main)
Dissociative lapses (M. Main)
Hositle & helpless behavior (Lyons-Ruth)
62. Effects of Disorganized Attachment Manifestations of disorganized attachment
Behavioral
Contradictory behavioral strategies
Disorganized behavior & mental state
Reaction pattern
Intense alarm e.g. elevated heart rate
Increased dissociative states
Affect dysregulation
Increase in negative emotional behaviors & defensive aggression
63. Disorganized Attachment:Pathological Development Learned use of dissociation
“Segregated systems” (profound integration failure)
Increased frequency and duration of “trance states” as a coping strategy
Prevents “smoothing out” of self-state shifts over time
Failure to consolidate cohesive self
Regressive shifts to child-like states
Rudimentary alter behavior (Hornstein, 1996)
Pathological dissociative states persist in adolescence & early adulthood (Ogawa et al., 1997; Carlson, 1998)
Development of factitious behavior through incidental and social learning
64. Dissociation as a Learned Defensive System “If the child is driven to maintain a strong attachment to the primary care-giver, and experiences an intense abandonment depression when the attachment is lost, then the child faces a special set of problems when the primary care-giver is also an abuser…The child may have to go to great lengths to create defenses that will allow the preservation of the attachment to the object.”
Blizard & Bluhm, 1994, p.384
65. Disorganized Attachment (4)The Development of DID & DDNOS Reification of ‘parts’ in conflict in mid-adolescence
Failure to consolidate identity in late adolescence
Emergence of DD, FD, and/or PD in early adulthood (high co-morbidity)
Emergence of clinical features of dissociation (e.g. time loss and disremembered experiences), then alter behavior over time
Covert alter behavior (“phobia of dissociative identities” van der Hart & Steele)
Manifestation of alter behavior & behavioral shaping of alter behavior (Kohlenberg)
66. The Borderline-Dissociative Disorders Continuum (Ross, 1996) “The idea that the dissociative disorders lie on a continuum of increasing complexity, chronicity, and severity related to more extreme trauma was initially proposed by Ross (1985) and Braun (1986)… many individuals with DDNOS have partial, not fully crystallized forms of DID, and require a similar treatment involving memory retrieval and processing, integration of dissociative ego states, and resolution of conflicts between ego states… The relationship between borderline personality disorder and the dissociative disorders has been complicated rather than clarified in DSM-IV, because a ninth criterion for borderline personality disorder has been added: Transient, stress related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative symptoms… To my way of thinking, borderline personality disorder is a simple form of DID in which personality states are less crystalized, less personified, fewer in number, and not separated by the same degree of amnesia. Inversely, DID is a complex variant of borderline personality disorder….borderline personality disorder exists on a continuum of increasing severity, with DDNOS having a greater degree of complexity than pure borderline personality and DID the greatest degree of elaboration and crystallization. “
67. Mentalization vs. Pathological Internalization (Fonagy, 1998) Secure attachment & mirroring leads to mentalization in the child
Dissociation as the converse of mentalization resulting in a disjunction between related mental contents
Failed mirroring
“The child is likely to internalize the mother’s actual state as part of his or her own self-structure” (p. 157)
Deactivation of the reflective function as a defense in face of subsequent trauma
68. Victim & Perpetrator Alters as Metaphors of Insecure Attachment “Typically, masochistic defenses are used to preserve attachment….As these repeatedly fail, sadistic defenses may be adopted, with disavowal of need for attachment, introjection of the abuser, and projection of pain and weakness onto a victim.”
(Blizard, 2001)
69. Part 3: Treatment
70. Psychotherapy for Attachment Pathology: Transference Interpretation Interpretation of insecure attachment style as a defense
Holding core affect in the relationship
Transformation of core affects
71. The Bowlby Model Activation of attachment behavior
Formation of a secure base
Proximity-seeking behavior
Exploration
Activation of the exploratory system
New modes of action
Autonomy & independence
72. Treatment of Attachment Pathology Establishing a secure base
Therapist acts as secure base (Holmes, 1996 Sable, 2000)
Regaining access to attachment feelings (Sable, 2000)
Protocols of ‘imagined other’
Establishing contact with avoidant & encouraging independence in anxious patients
Exploration of inner world
Disavowed affects & defensive exclusions
Self development & affect regulation
Therapist as trusted companion during exploration (Sable, 2000)
Exploration of new ways to be in the world
New social situations, interests, etc.
Therapist as “background of safety” (Sandler, 1960)
73. Establishing a New Internal Working Model “The working model of the therapeutic relationship eventually exerts dominance over hurtful experiences and models of the past, countering the patient’s image of himself as unlovable and unworthy of secure affectional ties.”
(Sable, 2000, p. 333)
74. Developing Secure Attachment “The aim of therapy is to transform insecure into secure attachment, to move from clinging to intimacy, from avoidance to autonomy…. The therapist tries to behave like a responsive, attuned parent-figure who is neither intrusive nor rejecting, rebuffing nor controlling…overwhelming nor neglectful” (Holmes, 1996, p. 70)
75. Hypnotherapeutic Treatment of Attachment Pathology Object representational development
Boundary definition (Baker, 1981)
Representing the good internal object
Object integration & constancy
Security of attachment to ideal parent figures (therapist meditated attachment) (Murray-Jobsis)
Establishing the secure base for exploration (Brown, 2002)
76. Attachment in the Treatment of DID “The therapist can note evidence for an attachment disorder in nearly every aspect of the psychotherapy of MPD. From this perspective the resolution of the attachment disorder, rather than the resolution of the effects of sexual and physical trauma, causes the extended and turbulent nature of the psychotherapy of more complex cases of MPD.” (Barach, 1991, p. 117)
77. Multi-Leveled Attachment Protocol View each alter’s communication/behavior as a specific attachment re-enactments
Application of specific attachment protocol for each alter personality state to re-activate attachment behavior
Use of relationship to active reflective function
Establishment of security of attachment & reflective function across alter personality system
Move from dismissing, disorganized, or anxious attachment, to secure attachment
Use of secure attachment base for affect regulation and self development
78. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 1. Establishing a secure base
With any ‘part’
Using secure base to reduce dissociation & other trauma-related symptoms
Secure attachment across the alter system
Developing secure attachment with more & more alters
Addressing attachment needs of more & more alters across time in the session
Addressing attachment needs of a number of alters simultaneously
Addressing negative beliefs through attachment
Dealing with active resistance & outliers through attachment
79. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 2. Reaching the goal of inclusion of all alters into the attachment system
Dealing with active blocking
Insecure vs. healthy attachment
Residual dismissing attachment
Longing activation
Anxious, preoccupied attachment
Compassionate attachment & perpetrator acts
All alters sharing in the attachment system
Generalization beyond the hour
80. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 3. Affect regulation through attachment
Soothing attachment
Specific affect states
Shame
Fear
Hopelessness & despair
Guilt
Rage
Conflict resolution through attachment
81. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 4a. Self Development Secure attachment as the basis for integrated self development
Ideal attachment figures to foster self development & enhancement of ‘real’ Self
Unburdening habitual reactions that obscure the ‘Self’
Unburdening vs. attachment security
82. Stages in Treatment 4bSigns of Self Development Reduction of internal conflict & system noise
Reduced activity of ‘parts’ protective reactions
Development of decision-making & choice
Sensing the wholeness of self as distinct from ‘parts’
83. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 5. The ‘real’ therapeutic relationship
Fostering the working alliance across parts
Mistrust & other transference issues
Therapist as abuser or sadistic abuser
Development of anxious attachment to the therapist
Manifestations of anxious attachment in treatment
Working through anxious attachment
Therapist as the ‘backing’ of safety & security for internal & external exploration
84. Stages in Treatment of Attachment Pathology in DID 6. Attachment as the basis of normalization & exploration, & discovery of a healthy life
Reducing trauma-related symptoms
Relapse prevention
Reaching the self’s potential
Secure intimacy & healthy peer relationships
Resiliency