Evaluating attachment style with love relationship affected by childhood experience Attachment is a pattern of behavior that is traditionally caused by thought, emotion, and caregiver's ability to meet the baby's immediate needs (Myrick, Green, & Crenshaw), 2014) Indeed, the style of attachment keeps constant intimate relationships with the children until they become adults and builds new relationships with friends and romantic partners to gain emotional and intimate support That's why. (Black & Schutte, 2006)
Children often experience unhealthy affection and relationships with their parents. It seems to lead to childhood aggression and hostility. This study was characterized by love of adolescence, family dysfunction, parental alcohol dependence, and interpersonal relationships: structure model, undergraduate studies, and family environment, attachment, and interpersonal relationships. The results show that parental alcohol dependence is not an important predictor of parent attachment or interpersonal relationship; however, when investigating family dysfunction, the mediating role of parental affection is evident. Participants reported decreasing parent attachment and more difficult relationship as family malfunction increased (Mothersead; Kivlighan; Wynkoop, 1998)
Attachment style is characterized by various ways of interacting and acting in relation. In early childhood, these attachment styles focused on how children and parents interact. In adulthood, the attachment style is used to describe the attachment pattern in a loving relationship. The concept of attachment style was born from attachment theory and research born in the 1960s and 1970s. Today, psychologists often recognize four major attachment styles. In the 1970s, psychologist Mary Answorth further expanded Balbie's pioneering research in a currently known "Unfamiliar Situation" study. In this study, I observed a child between 12 months and 18 months after receiving a short loneliness and a reunion with my mother afterwards.