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What is your earliest memory?

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Diana Sinclair
Diana Sinclair
Posts: 10119
Joined: 3rd Apr 2008
Location: USA
quotePosted at 15:26 on 24th April 2009
On 24th April 2009 14:36, Jason T wrote:

I remember lying in my cot, remember the rupert bear wallpaper and the plastic balls that spun on the side of the cot!

I also remember crying and crying!! and my mom sitting outside the door!!  she tells me now i was just a tiny baby when that happened!


Makes me think of a book I am reading called "The Chemistry of Connection" about how oxytocin (the chemical released by our brains which is responsible for making us feel loved and secure, and allows us to bond to others) is developed in the brain of a child. While we are all "hard-wired" to love and bond, it is not automatic, rather it is a learned response. Our primary care giver when we are infants (usually mother but not always) plays a huge part in teaching us (by the way she/he interacts with us) our "oxytocin response". Literally, a pattern of how to love is learned by the child's brain which will write the script for how we form relationships in the future, be they with friends, family, or lovers. Fascinating book.

BTW - They have discovered that a child who does not form a healthy "oxytocin response" can learn to love even into old age. So, don't despair if you had a less than perfect model for learning to love!

Jason, I don't mean to imply that you are defective in this area. Please don't be offended! LOL!!! Laughing It's just that your comment about how your mother would leave you to cry and cry is a perfect example of how a child's brain, when it's exposed to that type of treatment repeatedly, will over time create a "oxytocin script" that learns to associate love (i.e. nurturing, contentment, satiety etc.) with being ignored. As an adult this person might choose partners that ignore him/her not realizing that his brain has learned this pattern.

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Krissy
Krissy
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Joined: 8th Jul 2008
Location: USA
quotePosted at 15:30 on 24th April 2009
That is very interesting!!!!! Make a lot of sense for me!!! My mother did not take care of me when I was an infant, my aunt did!!  Which I think started the whole pattern!! Hmmm.....very interesting!!
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Jason T
Jason T
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Joined: 14th Apr 2004
Location: UK
quotePosted at 15:32 on 24th April 2009
Wow!!   thats interesting Diana.  I maybe made it sound harsher than it was though, she did used to come into me, as did my dad, but I went through a stage of just crying at bedtime apparently, I think most babies do this trying to get attention, obviously no attention is a terrible thing, but to much attention can be just as damaging!  so i think she just didn't know what to do, so would stay for a while but then leave, but she couldn't go away so would sit by the door!!  now she told me this, but i knew she was still there!! i could sense it!! odd!
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Krissy
Krissy
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Location: USA
quotePosted at 15:35 on 24th April 2009
She would sit by the door??? Awww....that's sweet!
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Jason T
Jason T
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Joined: 14th Apr 2004
Location: UK
quotePosted at 15:38 on 24th April 2009

Yeah it is really!

 

I have really good memories from my childhood, was a very good time!Smile

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Krissy
Krissy
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quotePosted at 15:38 on 24th April 2009
You are a lucky man!
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Diana Sinclair
Diana Sinclair
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Joined: 3rd Apr 2008
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quotePosted at 15:42 on 24th April 2009
On 24th April 2009 15:32, Jason T wrote:
 obviously no attention is a terrible thing, but to much attention can be just as damaging! 


Absolutely! They talk about that too, and give an example of a woman who was spoiled rotten as a child and as she grew up she found it difficult to form lasting connections with men she would date, because when they didn't give her the amount of attention that she was used to, her oxytocin levels would drop dramatically and she was literally unable to form a connection with them. It wasn't until she found a man whose oxytocin response matched her own that she was able to commit!

No parent is perfect and most (With the exception of a few right Krissy? Wink) do their best to give their children the care that they require and deserve, but we all learn our "oxytocin script" automatically by the way we are treated as children, especially during the first three years of life. It's not a conscious choice, it just happens. So even a well intentioned parent who for example follows the school of thought that it's better to let a child cry herself to sleep is teaching that child's brain to release oxytocin only after she has been ignored first and then cuddled.

It's really fascinating stuff!

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Krissy
Krissy
Posts: 15430
Joined: 8th Jul 2008
Location: USA
quotePosted at 15:49 on 24th April 2009
Oh wow!!  Can I have a do over!!!! 
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