love
TRANSCRIPT
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Styles of Love Styles of Love
and Attachmentand Attachment
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Liking is based on affection, respect, and enjoyable interaction.
Loving is based on attachment, motivation, and a deeper level of caring.
What is the difference? Liking
and Loving
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Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Pragma Love: Shopping List
Love
Agape Love: Selfless Love
Mania Love: Possessive &
Dominant Love
Lee’s Styles of Loving
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Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Pragma Love: Shopping List
Love
Agape Love: Selfless Love
Mania Love: Possessive &
Dominant Love
Which is more stable?
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Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Eros: Romantic, Passionate
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Storge: Friendship
Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Ludus: Game
Playing Love
Pragma Love: Shopping List
Love
Agape Love: Selfless Love
Mania Love: Possessive &
Dominant Love
Which is more likely to end badly?
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Sternberg’s Triangular Theory of Love
Intimacy
Passion Commitment
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Foundation of the triangle Based on emotional
attachment Moderately stable Somewhat controllable
Intimacy: The “Warm” Component
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Based on motivation
UnstableUncontrollable
Can be difficult to sustain
Passion: The “Hot” Component
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Based on cognitive choice
Relatively stable Relatively controllable
Commitment is related to trust, loyalty, and faithfulness, which have been found to be central to love
Commitment: The “Cool” Component
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Infatuation
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Empty Love
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Romantic Love
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Friendship Love
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Consummate Love
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Is our love style stable or does it change over time?
Why?
What role does culture play in how we view love?
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Beginning in infancy and continuing throughout
the lifespan, humans have an innate need to form attachments with others.
The interaction children have with caregivers leads to the development of internal working models of self and others that influence communication.
Attachment Theory: Key Ideas
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Working models fall along a positive-negative continuum.
model of self: the degree to which a child develops an internalized sense of self-worth that is not dependent on external validation
model of others: the degree to which a child expects others to be supportive and accepting (rather than rejecting)
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Working models are related to a person’s
attachment style.
Attachment styles are coherent patterns of emotion and social behavior that occur in close relationships.
These styles first develop in childhood but can be modified throughout the lifespan.
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Secure: around 70% of children (positive models of self and others)
Avoidant: around 20% of children (negative models of others)
Anxious-Ambivalent: around 10% of children (negative models of self)
Children’s Attachment Styles
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Secure Avoidant AnxiousAmbivalent
Free to explore the environment?
Anxious around strangers?
Reaction to separation?
Reaction to reunion?
Distinguishing Features of Children’s Attachment Styles
yes no yes and no
a little no a lotupset, then calm
little reaction
very anxious
happy little reaction
ambivalent(relief/anger)
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Secure: “goodness of fit” in terms of stimulation, responsive to basic needs, consistently caring
Avoidant: over- or under-stimulated, sometimes neglected
Anxious-Ambivalent: inconsistent response patterns, parent is preoccupied or stressed
Caregiver Communication Patterns
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Adult Attachment Styles
Positive Model of Others
Negative Model of Others
Positive
Model
Of Self
Negative
Model
of Self
Secure(I’m okay,
you’re okay)
Preoccupied(I’m not okay,
you’re okay)
Dismissive(I’m okay,
you’re not okay)
Fearful(I’m not okay,
you’re not okay)
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self-sufficient and comfortable with intimacy compromise and problem-solving during conflict highest level of maintenance behavior tend to be pleasant, self-disclosive, and skilled
communicators
Reinforcement Effect: Because secures are confident and expressive, people react to them positively, reinforcing positive models of self and others
SECURE: The Prosocial Style
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overly involved and dependent want excessive intimacy and worry that
partners do not care enough for them demanding, nagging conflict behavior express negative emotion with aggression or
passive aggression overly disclosive and overly sensitive
Reinforcement Effect: By clinging to their partners and escalating intimacy quickly, they push partners away, thereby reinforcing that they are unworthy of love
PREOCCUPIED: The Emotional Style
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fearful of intimacy (they have often been hurt in
the past and/or fear rejection) communication is often passive, guarded, and
anxious trouble expressing emotions and self-disclosing relatively low levels of maintenance and
nonverbal pleasantness
Reinforcement Effect: By avoiding taking risks, they keep themselves from developing the kind of close, positive relationship that will help them feel better about themselves and others
FEARFUL: The Hesitant Style
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counterdependent (self-sufficient to the point of pushing others away)
relationships seen as nonessential; personal goals are a higher priority
relatively low levels of relational maintenance, disclosure, and emotional expression
withdrawing conflict style with more interruptions
Reinforcement Effect: By learning to get along on their own, they reinforce the idea that they do not need other people to be happy
DISMISSIVE: The Detached Style
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Explanations for Stability
Interactions with caregivers have an especially strong effect on a person’s social development.
The reinforcement effect
Explanations for Change Significant life/relationship events The partner’s attachment style Variability across relationship types
Stability and Change in Attachment Styles