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Abandonment (emotional)

Emotional abandonment is a subjective emotional state in which people feel undesired, left behind, insecure, or discarded. People experiencing emotional abandonment may feel at a loss. They may feel like they have been cut off from a crucial source of sustenance or feel withdrawn, either suddenly or through a process of erosion. Emotional abandonment can manifest through loss or separation from a loved one.[1]

Feeling rejected, which is a significant component of emotional abandonment, has a biological impact in that it activates the physical pain centers of the brain and can leave an emotional imprint in the brain's warning system.[2] Emotional abandonment has been a staple of poetry and literature since ancient times.[3]

Impairment and treatment considerations edit

Feelings of emotional abandonment can stem from numerous situations. According to Makino et al:

Whether one considers a romantic rejection, the dissolution of a friendship, ostracism by a group, estrangement from family members, or merely being ignored or excluded in casual encounters, rejections have myriad emotional, psychological, and interpersonal consequences. People not only react strongly when they perceive that others have rejected them, but a great deal of human behavior is influenced by the desire to avoid rejection."[4]

Our perception of rejection or of being rejected can have a lasting effect on how an individual acts.[5][6][7] One's perception may impair one's ability to establish and maintain close and meaningful relationships with others.[5][8]

Individuals who experience feelings of emotional abandonment are likely to also experience maladaptive thoughts ("irrational beliefs") and behaviors such as depressive symptoms and relationship avoidance and/or dependence. This may cause abundant difficulty in daily life with interpersonal relationships and social settings. While such maladaptive thoughts and behaviors are sometimes present in the context of certain psychological disorders (e.g., borderline personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, depression, anxiety disorders), not all individuals who experience feelings of emotional abandonment will meet criteria for such a psychological disorder. These individuals may function within normal limits in spite of the presence of these emotional difficulties.[9][8] Such feelings should only be considered by a mental health professional in conjunction with all available information and diagnostic criterion prior to drawing conclusions about the state of someone's mental health.[9]

When treatment is deemed appropriate by a mental health professional, there are several treatment plans that are helpful in improving maladaptive thoughts and behaviors commonly manifested in those who feel emotionally abandoned. For example, cognitive processing therapy (CPT) is effective in treating depression, anxiety disorders, and PTSD.[10] Emotion focused therapy (EFT) is effective in treating depression.[10]Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is effective in treating negative emotionality and impulsive behaviors commonly seen in those diagnosed with borderline personality disorder.[11][12]

Another form of therapy that is suited to this population is acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT). ACT focuses on an individual's avoidance of painful emotions and memories. ACT techniques are designed to cultivate thought processes that are focused on being present in the moment and accepting uncomfortable or painful thoughts and feelings. Reframing maladaptive perceptions of one's thoughts to adaptive perceptions of thoughts and committing to aligning one's behaviors with one's goals and values is fundamental to ACT treatment.[11] Just like the process of arriving at diagnostic conclusions, all modes of therapy and treatment plans should be based on individual presentation and should be evaluated by a mental health professional before beginning treatment.

Separation anxiety edit

Separation anxiety, a substrate of emotional abandonment, is recognized as a primary source of human distress and dysfunction.[13] When we experience a threat or disconnect within a primary attachment, it triggers a fear response referred to as separation stress or separation anxiety.[14] Separation stress has been the subject of extensive research in psychological[15] and neurobiological[16] fields, and has been shown to be a universal response to separation in the animal world.[17] When conducting experiments on rat pups, researchers separate the pups from their mothers for a period of time. They then measure their distress vocalizations and stress hormones to determine varying conditions of the separation response.[14] As the rats mature, their subsequent reactive behaviors and stress hormones are reexamined and are shown to bear a striking resemblance to the depression, anxiety, avoidance behaviors, and self defeated posturing displayed by human beings known to have suffered earlier separation traumas.[18]

Owing to the neocortical component of human functioning, when human beings lose a primary relationship, they are slow to grasp its potential repercussions (i.e. they may feel uncertain about the future or fear being unable to climb out of an abyss). There are additional factors that add to these fears such as "Unusual distress about being separated from a person or a pet, excessive worry that another person will be harmed if they leave them alone, heightened fear of being alone, physical symptoms when they know they will be separated from another person soon, excessive worry surrounding being alone, and needing to know where a spouse or loved one is at all times."[19] All the aforementioned factors add an additional layer of separation stress.[20] To abandon is "to withdraw one's support or help from, especially in spite of duty, allegiance, or responsibility; desert: abandon a friend in trouble."[21] When the loss is due to the object's voluntary withdrawal, a common response is to feel unworthy of love. This indicates the tendency for people to blame the rejection on themselves. "Am I unworthy of love, destined to grow old and die all alone, bereft of human connection or caring?" Questioning one's desirability as a mate[22] and fearing eternal isolation are among the additional anxieties incurred in abandonment scenarios.[23] The concurrence of self devaluation and primal fear distinguish abandonment grief from most other types of bereavement. [24]

Psychological trauma edit

The depression that might accompany abandonment can create a sustained type of stress that constitutes an emotional trauma which can be severe enough to leave an emotional imprint on an individual's psychobiological functioning. This can affect future choices and responses to rejection, loss, or even disconnection.[25] One after-effect of abandonment is that of experiencing triggers. These triggers are linked to our primal fear of being separated. This type of fear is referred to as primal abandonment fear. We fear being left alone and having no one to take care of our needs. People usually first experience anxiety as a fear of being separated from their mother[26] This sensation is stored in the amygdala – a structure set deep into the brain's emotional memory system responsible for conditioning the fight/freeze/flight response to fear.[27] Primal fear may have been initiated by birth trauma and even have some prenatal antecedents.[28] The emotional memory system is fairly intact at or before birth and lays down traces of the sensations and feelings of the infant's separation experiences.[29] These primitive feelings are reawakened by later events, especially those reminiscent of unwanted or abrupt separations from a source of sustenance.[30]

In adulthood, being left arouses primal fear along with other primitive sensations which contribute to feelings of terror and outright panic. Infantile needs and urgencies re-emerge and can precipitate a symbiotic regression in which individuals feel, at least momentarily, unable to survive without the lost object.[22] People may also experience the intense stress of helplessness.[31] When they make repeated attempts to compel their loved one to return and are unsuccessful, they feel helpless and inadequate to the task. This helplessness causes people to feel possessed of what Michael Balint calls “a limited capacity to perform the work of conquest – the work necessary to transform an indifferent object into a participating partner.” According to Balint, feeling one's ‘limited capacity’ is traumatic in that it produces a fault line in the psyche which renders the person vulnerable to heightened emotional responses within primary relationships.[32]

Another factor contributing to the traumatic conditions is the stress of losing one's background object. A background object is someone on whom individuals have come to rely in ways they did not realize until the object is no longer present.[33] For instance, the relationship served as a mutual regulatory system. Multiple psychobiological systems helped to maintain individuals’ equilibrium.[34] As members of a couple, they became external regulators for one another. They were attuned on many levels: their pupils dilated in synchrony, they echoed one another's speech patterns, movements, and even cardiac and EEG rhythms.[35] As a couple, they functioned like a mutual bio-feedback system, stimulating and modulating each other's bio rhythms, responding to one another's pheromones,[36] and addicting to the steady trickle of endogenous opiates induced by the relationship.[37] When the relationship ends, the many processes it helped to regulate go into disarray.[34] As the emotional and bio-physiological effects mount, the stressful process is heightened by the knowledge that it was not the person, but their loved one who chose to withdraw from the bond.[22] This knowledge may cause people to interpret their intense emotional responses to the disconnection as evidence of their putative weakness and ‘limited capacity to perform the work of conquest’.[32]

Post-traumatic stress disorder edit

Some people who experience the traumatic stress of abandonment go on to develop post traumatic symptoms.[38] Post-traumatic symptoms associated with abandonment include a sequela of heightened emotional reactions (ranging from mild to severe) and habituated defense mechanisms (many of which have become maladaptive) to perceived threats or disruptions to one's sense of self or to one's connections.[39] Such symptoms are all very common, regardless of how traumatic the event. They include "recurrent intrusive memories, traumatic nightmares, and flashbacks. Avoiding trauma-related thoughts and feelings and/or objects, people, or places associated with the trauma. Distorted beliefs about oneself or the world, persistent shame or guilt, emotional numbing, feelings of alienation, inability to recall key details of the trauma, etc." These symptoms all stem from devastating events that can have lasting effects on the brain through adulthood.[40]

There are various predisposing psycho-biological and environmental factors that go into determining whether one's earlier emotional trauma might lead to the development of a true clinical picture of post-traumatic stress disorder.[25] One factor has to do with variation in certain brain structures. According to Jerome Kagan, some people are born with a locus coeruleus that tends to produce higher concentrations of norepinephrine, a brain chemical involved in arousal of the body's self-defense response.[41] This would lower their threshold for becoming aroused and make them more likely to become anxious when they encounter stresses in life that are reminiscent of childhood separations and fears, hence making them more prone to becoming post-traumatic.

Borderline personality disorder edit

The most distinguishing symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD) are marked sensitivity to rejection or criticism, and intense fear of possible abandonment.[42] Overall, the features of BPD include unusually intense sensitivity in relationships with others, difficulty regulating emotions, issues with self-image and impulsivity.[42] Fear of abandonment may lead to overlapping dating relationships as a new relationship is developed to protect against abandonment in the existing relationship. Other symptoms may include feeling unsure of one's personal identity, morals, and values; having paranoid thoughts when feeling stressed; depersonalization; and, in moderate to severe cases, stress-induced breaks with reality or psychotic episodes.

Autophobia edit

Autophobia is the specific phobia of isolation; a morbid fear of being egotistical, or a dread of being alone or isolated.[43] Sufferers need not be physically alone, but just to believe that they are being ignored or unloved.

References edit

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  2. ^ Eisenberger, Naomi I; Lieberman, Matthew D (July 2004). "Why rejection hurts: a common neural alarm system for physical and social pain". Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 8 (7). Elsevier: 294–300. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2004.05.010. ISSN 1364-6613. PMID 15242688. S2CID 15893740.
  3. ^ Lipking, Lawrence (1988). Abandoned Women and Poetic Tradition. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-2264-8452-5.
  4. ^ Makino, Maria; Tsuboi, Koji; Dennerstein, Lorraine (2004-09-27). "Prevalence of Eating Disorders: A Comparison of Western and Non-Western Countries". Medscape General Medicine. 6 (3): 49. ISSN 1531-0132. PMC 1435625. PMID 15520673.
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  6. ^ Li, T.; Chan, D.K.S. (2012). "How anxious and avoidant attachment affect romantic relationship quality differently: A meta-analytic review". European Journal of Social Psychology. 42 (4): 406–419. doi:10.1002/ejsp.1842.
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  14. ^ a b Hofer, Myron. "An Evolutionary Perspective on Anxiety." In Anxiety as Symptom and Signal, edited by S. Roose and R. Glick. Hillsdale: Analytic Press, 1995. p. 36.
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  21. ^ Free Dictionary: "Abandonment"
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  29. ^ Decasper, A.; Fif, W. P. (1980). "Of Human Bonding: Newborns Prefer Their Mother's Voices". Science. 208 (4448): 1174–1176. Bibcode:1980Sci...208.1174D. doi:10.1126/science.7375928. PMID 7375928.
  30. ^ LeDoux, Joseph (1998). The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9780684836591.
  31. ^ Seligman, Martin. Helplessness: On Depression, Development and Death. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1975.
  32. ^ a b Balint, Michael. The Basic Fault: Therapeutic Aspects of Regression. Evanston: North Western University Press, 1992.
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  34. ^ a b Weiner, Herbert. Perturbing the Organism: The Biology of Stressful Experience. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992.
  35. ^ Tiffany Field, "Attachment as Psychobiological Attunement: Being on the Same Wavelength," in The Psychobiology of Attachment and Separation, pp. 445-448.
  36. ^ L. Monti-Bloch, and B. I. Grosser, "Effect of Putative Pheromones on the Electrical Activity of the Human Vomeronasal Organ and Alfactory Epithilium," Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 1001.
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  38. ^ Goleman, Daniel. The Emotional Brain and Emotional Intelligence: New Insights. North Hampton, Mass, 2011.
  39. ^ Susan Anderson, The Journey from Abandonment to Healing: The Five Stages that Accompany the Loss of Love. Berkley 2000, page 27.
  40. ^ Lancaster, Cynthia L.; Teeters, Jenni B.; Gros, Daniel F.; Back, Sudie E. (2016-11-22). "Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Overview of Evidence-Based Assessment and Treatment". Journal of Clinical Medicine. 5 (11): 105. doi:10.3390/jcm5110105. ISSN 2077-0383. PMC 5126802. PMID 27879650.
  41. ^ Kagan, Jerome. The Nature of a Child. New York: Basic Books, 1984.
  42. ^ a b Borderline Personality Disorder. The British Psychological Society & The Royal College of Psychiatrists, National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health (UK). 2009. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  43. ^ Gould, Dr. George Milbry (1910). The Practitioner's Medical Dictionary (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: P. Blackiston's Son & Co. p. 101.

External links edit

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abandonment, emotional, other, uses, abandon, disambiguation, this, article, needs, more, reliable, medical, references, verification, relies, heavily, primary, sources, specifically, citations, need, follow, medrs, some, incomplete, date, unreliable, sources,. For other uses see Abandon disambiguation This article needs more reliable medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources specifically citations need to follow WP MEDRS some are incomplete out of date or unreliable sources Please review the contents of the article and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Abandonment emotional news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Emotional abandonment is a subjective emotional state in which people feel undesired left behind insecure or discarded People experiencing emotional abandonment may feel at a loss They may feel like they have been cut off from a crucial source of sustenance or feel withdrawn either suddenly or through a process of erosion Emotional abandonment can manifest through loss or separation from a loved one 1 Feeling rejected which is a significant component of emotional abandonment has a biological impact in that it activates the physical pain centers of the brain and can leave an emotional imprint in the brain s warning system 2 Emotional abandonment has been a staple of poetry and literature since ancient times 3 Contents 1 Impairment and treatment considerations 2 Separation anxiety 3 Psychological trauma 3 1 Post traumatic stress disorder 3 2 Borderline personality disorder 3 3 Autophobia 4 References 5 External linksImpairment and treatment considerations editFeelings of emotional abandonment can stem from numerous situations According to Makino et al Whether one considers a romantic rejection the dissolution of a friendship ostracism by a group estrangement from family members or merely being ignored or excluded in casual encounters rejections have myriad emotional psychological and interpersonal consequences People not only react strongly when they perceive that others have rejected them but a great deal of human behavior is influenced by the desire to avoid rejection 4 Our perception of rejection or of being rejected can have a lasting effect on how an individual acts 5 6 7 One s perception may impair one s ability to establish and maintain close and meaningful relationships with others 5 8 Individuals who experience feelings of emotional abandonment are likely to also experience maladaptive thoughts irrational beliefs and behaviors such as depressive symptoms and relationship avoidance and or dependence This may cause abundant difficulty in daily life with interpersonal relationships and social settings While such maladaptive thoughts and behaviors are sometimes present in the context of certain psychological disorders e g borderline personality disorder antisocial personality disorder depression anxiety disorders not all individuals who experience feelings of emotional abandonment will meet criteria for such a psychological disorder These individuals may function within normal limits in spite of the presence of these emotional difficulties 9 8 Such feelings should only be considered by a mental health professional in conjunction with all available information and diagnostic criterion prior to drawing conclusions about the state of someone s mental health 9 When treatment is deemed appropriate by a mental health professional there are several treatment plans that are helpful in improving maladaptive thoughts and behaviors commonly manifested in those who feel emotionally abandoned For example cognitive processing therapy CPT is effective in treating depression anxiety disorders and PTSD 10 Emotion focused therapy EFT is effective in treating depression 10 Dialectical behavior therapy DBT is effective in treating negative emotionality and impulsive behaviors commonly seen in those diagnosed with borderline personality disorder 11 12 Another form of therapy that is suited to this population is acceptance and commitment therapy ACT ACT focuses on an individual s avoidance of painful emotions and memories ACT techniques are designed to cultivate thought processes that are focused on being present in the moment and accepting uncomfortable or painful thoughts and feelings Reframing maladaptive perceptions of one s thoughts to adaptive perceptions of thoughts and committing to aligning one s behaviors with one s goals and values is fundamental to ACT treatment 11 Just like the process of arriving at diagnostic conclusions all modes of therapy and treatment plans should be based on individual presentation and should be evaluated by a mental health professional before beginning treatment Separation anxiety editMain article Separation anxiety disorder Separation anxiety a substrate of emotional abandonment is recognized as a primary source of human distress and dysfunction 13 When we experience a threat or disconnect within a primary attachment it triggers a fear response referred to as separation stress or separation anxiety 14 Separation stress has been the subject of extensive research in psychological 15 and neurobiological 16 fields and has been shown to be a universal response to separation in the animal world 17 When conducting experiments on rat pups researchers separate the pups from their mothers for a period of time They then measure their distress vocalizations and stress hormones to determine varying conditions of the separation response 14 As the rats mature their subsequent reactive behaviors and stress hormones are reexamined and are shown to bear a striking resemblance to the depression anxiety avoidance behaviors and self defeated posturing displayed by human beings known to have suffered earlier separation traumas 18 Owing to the neocortical component of human functioning when human beings lose a primary relationship they are slow to grasp its potential repercussions i e they may feel uncertain about the future or fear being unable to climb out of an abyss There are additional factors that add to these fears such as Unusual distress about being separated from a person or a pet excessive worry that another person will be harmed if they leave them alone heightened fear of being alone physical symptoms when they know they will be separated from another person soon excessive worry surrounding being alone and needing to know where a spouse or loved one is at all times 19 All the aforementioned factors add an additional layer of separation stress 20 To abandon is to withdraw one s support or help from especially in spite of duty allegiance or responsibility desert abandon a friend in trouble 21 When the loss is due to the object s voluntary withdrawal a common response is to feel unworthy of love This indicates the tendency for people to blame the rejection on themselves Am I unworthy of love destined to grow old and die all alone bereft of human connection or caring Questioning one s desirability as a mate 22 and fearing eternal isolation are among the additional anxieties incurred in abandonment scenarios 23 The concurrence of self devaluation and primal fear distinguish abandonment grief from most other types of bereavement 24 Psychological trauma editMain article Psychological trauma The depression that might accompany abandonment can create a sustained type of stress that constitutes an emotional trauma which can be severe enough to leave an emotional imprint on an individual s psychobiological functioning This can affect future choices and responses to rejection loss or even disconnection 25 One after effect of abandonment is that of experiencing triggers These triggers are linked to our primal fear of being separated This type of fear is referred to as primal abandonment fear We fear being left alone and having no one to take care of our needs People usually first experience anxiety as a fear of being separated from their mother 26 This sensation is stored in the amygdala a structure set deep into the brain s emotional memory system responsible for conditioning the fight freeze flight response to fear 27 Primal fear may have been initiated by birth trauma and even have some prenatal antecedents 28 The emotional memory system is fairly intact at or before birth and lays down traces of the sensations and feelings of the infant s separation experiences 29 These primitive feelings are reawakened by later events especially those reminiscent of unwanted or abrupt separations from a source of sustenance 30 In adulthood being left arouses primal fear along with other primitive sensations which contribute to feelings of terror and outright panic Infantile needs and urgencies re emerge and can precipitate a symbiotic regression in which individuals feel at least momentarily unable to survive without the lost object 22 People may also experience the intense stress of helplessness 31 When they make repeated attempts to compel their loved one to return and are unsuccessful they feel helpless and inadequate to the task This helplessness causes people to feel possessed of what Michael Balint calls a limited capacity to perform the work of conquest the work necessary to transform an indifferent object into a participating partner According to Balint feeling one s limited capacity is traumatic in that it produces a fault line in the psyche which renders the person vulnerable to heightened emotional responses within primary relationships 32 Another factor contributing to the traumatic conditions is the stress of losing one s background object A background object is someone on whom individuals have come to rely in ways they did not realize until the object is no longer present 33 For instance the relationship served as a mutual regulatory system Multiple psychobiological systems helped to maintain individuals equilibrium 34 As members of a couple they became external regulators for one another They were attuned on many levels their pupils dilated in synchrony they echoed one another s speech patterns movements and even cardiac and EEG rhythms 35 As a couple they functioned like a mutual bio feedback system stimulating and modulating each other s bio rhythms responding to one another s pheromones 36 and addicting to the steady trickle of endogenous opiates induced by the relationship 37 When the relationship ends the many processes it helped to regulate go into disarray 34 As the emotional and bio physiological effects mount the stressful process is heightened by the knowledge that it was not the person but their loved one who chose to withdraw from the bond 22 This knowledge may cause people to interpret their intense emotional responses to the disconnection as evidence of their putative weakness and limited capacity to perform the work of conquest 32 Post traumatic stress disorder edit Main article Posttraumatic stress disorder Some people who experience the traumatic stress of abandonment go on to develop post traumatic symptoms 38 Post traumatic symptoms associated with abandonment include a sequela of heightened emotional reactions ranging from mild to severe and habituated defense mechanisms many of which have become maladaptive to perceived threats or disruptions to one s sense of self or to one s connections 39 Such symptoms are all very common regardless of how traumatic the event They include recurrent intrusive memories traumatic nightmares and flashbacks Avoiding trauma related thoughts and feelings and or objects people or places associated with the trauma Distorted beliefs about oneself or the world persistent shame or guilt emotional numbing feelings of alienation inability to recall key details of the trauma etc These symptoms all stem from devastating events that can have lasting effects on the brain through adulthood 40 There are various predisposing psycho biological and environmental factors that go into determining whether one s earlier emotional trauma might lead to the development of a true clinical picture of post traumatic stress disorder 25 One factor has to do with variation in certain brain structures According to Jerome Kagan some people are born with a locus coeruleus that tends to produce higher concentrations of norepinephrine a brain chemical involved in arousal of the body s self defense response 41 This would lower their threshold for becoming aroused and make them more likely to become anxious when they encounter stresses in life that are reminiscent of childhood separations and fears hence making them more prone to becoming post traumatic Borderline personality disorder edit Main article Borderline personality disorder The most distinguishing symptoms of borderline personality disorder BPD are marked sensitivity to rejection or criticism and intense fear of possible abandonment 42 Overall the features of BPD include unusually intense sensitivity in relationships with others difficulty regulating emotions issues with self image and impulsivity 42 Fear of abandonment may lead to overlapping dating relationships as a new relationship is developed to protect against abandonment in the existing relationship Other symptoms may include feeling unsure of one s personal identity morals and values having paranoid thoughts when feeling stressed depersonalization and in moderate to severe cases stress induced breaks with reality or psychotic episodes Autophobia edit Main article Autophobia Autophobia is the specific phobia of isolation a morbid fear of being egotistical or a dread of being alone or isolated 43 Sufferers need not be physically alone but just to believe that they are being ignored or unloved References edit Lancer Darlene May 17 2016 What is Emotional Abandonment PsychCentral Archived from the original on 2015 05 02 Retrieved February 1 2021 Eisenberger Naomi I Lieberman Matthew D July 2004 Why rejection hurts a common neural alarm system for physical and social pain Trends in Cognitive Sciences 8 7 Elsevier 294 300 doi 10 1016 j tics 2004 05 010 ISSN 1364 6613 PMID 15242688 S2CID 15893740 Lipking Lawrence 1988 Abandoned Women and Poetic Tradition University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 2264 8452 5 Makino Maria Tsuboi Koji Dennerstein Lorraine 2004 09 27 Prevalence of Eating Disorders A Comparison of Western and Non Western Countries Medscape General Medicine 6 3 49 ISSN 1531 0132 PMC 1435625 PMID 15520673 a b Blatt S J Zuroff D C 1992 Interpersonal relatedness and self definition Two prototypes for depression Clinical Psychology Review 12 5 527 562 doi 10 1016 0272 7358 92 90070 O Li T Chan D K S 2012 How anxious and avoidant attachment affect romantic relationship quality differently A meta analytic review European Journal of Social Psychology 42 4 406 419 doi 10 1002 ejsp 1842 Leary Mark R December 2015 Emotional responses to interpersonal rejection Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 17 4 435 441 doi 10 31887 DCNS 2015 17 4 mleary ISSN 1294 8322 PMC 4734881 PMID 26869844 a b Rosenthal M Z Gratz K L Kosson D S Cheavens J S Lejuez C W Lynch T R 2008 Borderline personality disorder and emotional responding A review of the research literature Clinical Psychology Review 28 1 75 91 doi 10 1016 j cpr 2007 04 001 PMID 17544188 a b American Psychiatric Association 2013 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders 5th ed Arlington VA American Psychiatric Publishing a b Sloan Denise 2016 Cognitive Processing Therapy for Post Traumatic Stress Division 12 of the American Psychological Association Archived from the original on 2019 07 08 Retrieved May 24 2021 a b Nolen Hoeksema S 2014 Abnormal psychology 6th ed New York NY McGraw Hill Education Psychological Treatments 2016 In Division 12 of the American Psychological Association Retrieved from https www div12 org treatments Fromm Erich 1989 The Art of Loving New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 0609 1594 0 a b Hofer Myron An Evolutionary Perspective on Anxiety In Anxiety as Symptom and Signal edited by S Roose and R Glick Hillsdale Analytic Press 1995 p 36 Colin Virginia L 1996 Human Attachment Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 978 1 5663 9459 8 Coe Christopher Sandra Wiener Leon 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2909 117 3 497 ISSN 0033 2909 PMID 7777651 S2CID 13559932 Free Dictionary Abandonment a b c Vormbrock Julia K 1993 Attachment theory as applied to wartime and job related marital separation Psychological Bulletin 114 1 American Psychological Association 122 144 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 114 1 122 ISSN 0033 2909 Rogers Carl Ransom 1980 A Way of Being Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 9780395299159 Anderson Susan 2010 08 12 Helping people overcome the aftermath of heartbreak and loss Susan Anderson Retrieved 15 February 2016 a b van der Kolk Bessel A McFarlane Alexander C Weisaeth Lars 1996 Traumatic Stress The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind Body and Society New York Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 5723 0088 0 Hofer Myron An Evolutionary Perspective on Anxiety in Anxiety as Symptom and Signal pages 25 27 LeDoux Joseph E June 1994 Emotion Memory and the Brain Scientific American 270 6 50 57 Bibcode 1994SciAm 270f 50L doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0694 50 ISSN 0036 8733 JSTOR 24942732 PMID 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2000 page 27 Lancaster Cynthia L Teeters Jenni B Gros Daniel F Back Sudie E 2016 11 22 Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Overview of Evidence Based Assessment and Treatment Journal of Clinical Medicine 5 11 105 doi 10 3390 jcm5110105 ISSN 2077 0383 PMC 5126802 PMID 27879650 Kagan Jerome The Nature of a Child New York Basic Books 1984 a b Borderline Personality Disorder The British Psychological Society amp The Royal College of Psychiatrists National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health UK 2009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Gould Dr George Milbry 1910 The Practitioner s Medical Dictionary 2nd ed Philadelphia P Blackiston s Son amp Co p 101 External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Abandonment at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abandonment emotional amp oldid 1214001020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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