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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago

the big confusion i have around attachment theory atm is like, what the hell was going on with everyone's attachment prior to the 20th century? were most people somehow better parents back then? were people running around with huge attachment issues but it didn't matter as much? were there other mitigating factors like stronger communities or, like, just more pressing practical issues to deal with? because it just doesn't seem like there were a ton of people running around with horrendous attachment issues in the same way as it seems like there are now (or is that impression totally wrong, idk)?

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sympathetic opposition@sympatheticopp6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan idk in general but i think that courtly love poetry for instance is extremely unsurprising content for men who'd had at least two attachment disruptions (i love it but)

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Vivid Void@VividVoid_6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan The sexual revolution drastically changed the way we think about relationships. back in the day if you got married to somebody with attachment problems you just had a spouse with attachment problems until they resolved in the relationship, if at all

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @VividVoid_

@VividVoid_ so everyone just kinda dealt with it, you mean?

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Vivid Void@VividVoid_6 months ago
Replying to @VividVoid_

@QiaochuYuan Paradoxically, the extremely high social and moral cost of divorce probably provided a psychological security that's inconceivable to us now

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @VividVoid_

@VividVoid_ that does seem plausible 🤔 just kinda had to make it work. i mean people talk about women sort of quietly absorbing a ton of costs

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Bernard Stanford ✡︎@stanfordNYC6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan The past is just layers and layers of "everyone just dealt with it." Yet, when that's the default, and there's no real alternative, it's easier to do.

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Chaitin's goose@chaitinsgoose6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan my hunch is that the answer to this is the same as to "did people not have gender dysphoria/autism/whatever in the past or?" i.e. that society just wasn't built in a way that could allow this issues to emerge. it didn't matter. things closest to "surviving" mattered

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Loquitur Ponte Sublicio@loquitur_ponte6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan The answer is pretty straightforwardly that attachment theory is wrong. If something is obviously inconsistent with observed results you dont have to try and salvage it.

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Divia Eden 🔍@diviacaroline6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan My best guess is that in the past there were a ton of people running around with what we would call horrendous attachment issues What makes you think there weren’t?

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @diviacaroline

@diviacaroline idk i guess i just don't know enough about history to really say but that's not the very cursory very surface-level impression i get? people seem like they just did stuff (worked or whatever)? there wasn't like therapy culture etc

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@diviacaroline like okay here's a random example from the 18th century. this somewhat randomly selected group of men was able to pretty casually form relationships with women who didn't even speak their language. these guys were not like, scared to talk to women lol https://t.co/x3ZNXssDg5

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Divia Eden 🔍@diviacaroline6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

I guess maybe we have different meanings of horrendous? To me, people working when the alternative is starving isn’t much evidence about whether they have attachment issues My guess is stuff like the soldiers befriending locals could easily happen today? I also see the second half of the story about escalating abuse as evidence that those people didn’t have especially secure attachment styles 🤷🏽‍♀️

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Divia Eden 🔍@diviacaroline6 months ago
Replying to @diviacaroline

@QiaochuYuan My impression is also that in past times what we would now call domestic violence was extreme common, which I see as in tension with the idea that people in the past were more securely attached

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @diviacaroline

@diviacaroline hm this makes sense but doesn't really get at the question i was trying to ask. but i'm not sure how to verbalize the distinction

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Divia Eden 🔍@diviacaroline6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Something more about paralyzing levels of social anxiety?

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @diviacaroline

@diviacaroline yeah closer to anxiety in general i guess 🤔

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Emmett Shear@eshear6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan @diviacaroline People have less anxiety when they have real urgent fears. We have more autoimmune disorders now for the same reason more or less.

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Rudra Dakini@the_wilderless6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

i'm in thailand rn and i see a lot of couples where the man and woman don't really speak the same language in any reliable way,, and ngl i do not envy the situation, and it mostly makes me feel that they have entirely different values of what a relationship is i don't think things like attachment theory and forming a deep soul to soul bond are anywhere on their radar

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maeby@maebichka6 months ago
Replying to @the_wilderless

@the_wilderless @QiaochuYuan @diviacaroline Yeah I really think most people are actually pretty satisfied with a nice warm body they can get along with and feel fond feelings for over time Also what are you seeing River? do you mean like expat men and local women or something? Or ppl from different tribes..?

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Greensleeves@grnsleeves6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I think they were just running around with bad attachment issues, like a couple barely tolerate each other but divorce was too shameful. Men would sometimes leave, and start an entirely new family. Ppl got married regardless of attachment bc fewer choices + pressure on marriage

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Stephen L@sunofdopamine6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Society was much more structured, there was less awareness, and less confusion. Certain types of what would now be viewed as unacceptable externalized mental illness were common.

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ꜱᴘᴀᴄᴇ ᴘᴜɴᴋ ✝️❤️@_space_punk_6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I think religion was just more common and having God (or some bodhisattva or whatever) as an ideal parent figure actually probably helped a lot

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J. M. Perkins@JMPerkins6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Stronger norms/more social pressure to conform made personal imbalances feel different; the recent past humans more rigid social exoskeletons which changed the experience of/conversation around individual issues massively.

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daniel brottman 🪷@danielbrottman6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan also wondering this

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🌾🍁🍂 bosco 🍂🍁🌾@selentelechia6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I think having to do repetitive manual/physical labor and whatnot actually helps a lot with attachment something about the abstract cognition/"physical" cognition ratio I may be completely wrong about this

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @selentelechia

@selentelechia probably something to this yeah 🧐

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

i don't think i explained my question well but this gets at some of the vibe of what i'm confused about - people seem to me to have been more functional in the past despite living lives that seem like they could be objectively worse / more traumatizing or whatever https://t.co/isNFyWMehf

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wooblewoof@wooblewoof6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Maybe related to replacing the social/physical interface with a system that gives a low sense of agency?

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Alex Lags Ever Xanadu@gpu_thief6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan People are much more resilient when they have to be to survive

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Daniel and 10 others@techwraith6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan What evidence do you have to support this claim? "people seem to me to have been more functional in the past"

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Jake@vokaysh6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan "people were wildly productive" huh

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Alex@softminus6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan since facing adversity, struggle, conflict, and death do not inherently make life worse or traumatizing. What makes life worse/traumatizing is living in a world/society that has no real need for you (or is outright working to make you unnecessary) because of what that opens up

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Alex@softminus6 months ago
Replying to @softminus

@QiaochuYuan (Have you read Sebastian Junger's books "War" or "Tribe"? You might find them very apt to the questions you are asking.)

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Sarah Constantin@s_r_constantin6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan people don't want to do as much as they possibly can, if they don't need to. necessity-driven feats aren't pretty and come with costs. every animal evolved to "function" broken. we'd mostly "function" too in harsh conditions, but we wouldn't want that.

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Fanged Desire@fanged_desire6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan More functional in the confines of much more narrowly defined roles. That's probably half the answer to your riddle. The other part is that to be 'traumatized by conflict', you first have to have a worldview that makes cruelty abhorrent to you. Monkeys don't get PTSD from war.

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emily@emily_for_now6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan i'm confused about this too! my best guess is that effects of insecure attachment interact with culture such that we are negatively impacted in ways our culture affords, and in the past culture afforded different expressions

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Alex@softminus6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan QC reactionary arc (sincerely based). I like your thinking and approach, this is giving me good threads for my writing project btw.

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QC@QiaochuYuan6 months ago
Replying to @softminus

@softminus oh this isn't me lol this is a friend commenting

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Halina.eth 💎@halina_eth6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan maybe naming it made it worse! also re:tweet 2, society kinda moved up maslows hierarchy together, so if your peers were all on level 1 or 2 as well, it probably didn’t strike as painful comparison not absolutes makes us happy

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jp@inflammateomnia6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan First thing the women did when they got the vote was ban alcohol cause a third of them were getting beat up on the reg We're a couple generations removed from causeless death and casual violence as a typical lifestyle, we are just now moving up the hierarchy to attachment stuff

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AI Liberateeveryoneism Memes 🚫⛓️@AIHegemonyMemes6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

Prior to the 20th century, traumatic life experience was nearly ubiquitous for everyone, with the exception of small numbers of elites. Relationships formed around dynamics of trauma-bonding and mutual needs for survival, due to the ever-present immediate threats of starvation and violence.

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Flower Ornament@flowerornament6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Haven't had a chance to delve into this, but there was a micro-field called "psychohistory" (not the Asimov thing) in the 70s that attempted to study parenting historically—you might find answers there: https://t.co/iXoB7pSA3Y

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ivan@IvanVendrov6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan reading in the gospels how Jesus is constantly telling people how their Dad loves them, no really he really does, makes me think ideal parent figure protocol and christianity have at least some active ingredient in common and hence attachment issues were probably widespread

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divya venn@divya_venn6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan 1) Pressing practical issues 2) marriage was primarily an economic/practical proposition, it didn’t occur to people that romantic love was the primary source of happiness

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Emmett Shear@eshear6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Anxious attachment is only maladaptive if it’s actually safe to relax hypervigilance. Avoidant attachment is only maladaptive if it is actually safe to rely on other people. Secure attachment becomes maladaptive if it’s not actually safe to do both.

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——@itinerantfog6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan Banger

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DeadMenDon'tTweet@PoemsWeBurned6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan Bars

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C ⭐️💖🙂 (Cody)@pyrofrogg6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan makes sense to me. I think it shows how a bad environment early on can really screw a person up if you extrapolate on the assumption that attachment behaviors are 'learned' in early childhood relationships.

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Kaj Sotala@xuenay6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan Yes! Attachment styles are points on a quadrant of low/high avoidance (safeguarding autonomy) and low/high anxiety (safeguarding connection) drive. In different circumstances, it's optimal to be at different points of that spectrum. Screencaps from Jessica Fern's "Polysecure". https://t.co/3bBJ1SSh0m

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PaulaGhete@PaulaGhete6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan This makes sense. I definitely became more anxiously attached when I realized I cannot fully trust my partner, so I needed to pay attention to get more information. I relax around people I can trust and who are responsible and reliable.

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alice maz@alicemazzy6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan this gets at the correct frame for undoing trauma imo: recognize the patterns are actually adaptive, but adaptive for a reality you're no longer in (unless you're still in it). allows one to treat themself with grace and kindness and gently rehabituate to the new reality

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alice maz@alicemazzy6 months ago
Replying to @alicemazzy

@eshear @QiaochuYuan instead of getting stuck in self-blame, trying to snap out of it and failing, punishing self for failure, etc

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Θωμᾶς del Vasto@Thomasdelvasto_6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan And funnily enough I think the last few centuries were WORSE for anxious attachment than before Early Christian culture is where a lot of “secure attachment” ideas come from anyway

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🌲@Lazartree6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @mudscryer @QiaochuYuan Very simple and true I think in a way I hadn’t thought of before but already kind of knew

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shb@himbodhisattva6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan oh

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princely hope-glorious 🇹🇿@thisisprincely6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan In my model, a securely attached person withdraws from unsafe scenarios as they recognize them – and they’re attuned enough to do this (Secure attachment doesn't imply indiscriminate connection. Can detach when unsafe.) I guess it depends on how final the specific “unsafety” is

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Unidentified Animal@OneSeaElephant6 months ago
Replying to @eshear

@eshear @QiaochuYuan makes sense

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loading…@sonikudzu6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan i think most people just did not have to consider it fr for most of human history, because there was not nearly so much churn in their social networks it was quite literally impossible until fast, affordable long-distance travel became a thing

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Richard D. Bartlett@RichDecibels6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan don't know how to say this but I think there's a lot more subjectivity now than there used to be

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alice maz@alicemazzy6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan thinking about however many thousands of little life stories I've picked up from books/wiki/etc, I think the majority of people were messed up forever. but there were social scripts, material constraints, and ugly outlets that meant it was just suppressed for life

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Rick Benger@rickbenger6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan yeah all the intuitions in your question seem important. And combining this from Emmett + having fewer relationships/looser social fabric = less surface area for reattunement, growth baked in? https://t.co/94dtyZm66n

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Emmett Shear@eshear6 months ago

@QiaochuYuan Anxious attachment is only maladaptive if it’s actually safe to relax hypervigilance. Avoidant attachment is only maladaptive if it is actually safe to rely on other people. Secure attachment becomes maladaptive if it’s not actually safe to do both.

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🐦🔬🔭🌴🕺🏋️‍♂️🧘‍♂️🤸‍♂️🧍‍♂️👨‍👩‍👦@ben_r_hoffman6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan Lots of object-level acting out various dramas, but less pressure to pretend you're OK. In the West, under the rule of the Roman church most people were functionally pagans who just had to keep their heads down and submit. Prior to that people were just unambiguously oppressed.

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🐦🔬🔭🌴🕺🏋️‍♂️🧘‍♂️🤸‍♂️🧍‍♂️👨‍👩‍👦@ben_r_hoffman6 months ago
Replying to @ben_r_hoffman

@QiaochuYuan But at the same time, less of a reward for *showing off* how psychically wounded you were. This starts to break down with Romanticism, e.g. The Sorrows of Young Werther inspired lots of real suicides.

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𝓁𝓊𝓂𝓅 🐠@lumpfished6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan I do think people were running around with attachment issues, I just think they didn’t have the language to describe it yet

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gt.dad@gtdad6 months ago
Replying to @QiaochuYuan

@QiaochuYuan It was almost certainly worse in the past.

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