Ability to bind

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The ability to bond is a specific ability of humans to enter into long-lasting emotional relationships with social partners .

The ability to bond is a typical characteristic of psychophysically stable personalities who have both good emotional resonance and the ability to establish permanent emotional ties with relevant social partners. On the one hand, the lack of attachment ability can be neurotic , e.g. B. a flattening, but also a symptom of psychopathological disorders, e.g. B. in temperament, weakness, autism u. a. be.

Disorders of the ability to bond are often a consequence of brain damage that occurs before, during or after birth. In severe forms of cognitive or physical disability , the ability to bond can be lost just as much as, for example, in psychotic disorders.

Loss of ties is the inability of a person to enter into permanent social contact with individuals or groups. If disconnection is not based on a low temper in the sense of a psychopathic or organic brain disorder and neurological-psychiatric diseases can also be excluded as causes, e.g. B. childhood schizophrenia , it is based on neurotic disorders.

In pathopsychology, the symptoms “lying - stealing - going to school” are largely unanimously viewed as symptoms or syndromes of disconnection. The lack of ties is one of the main causes of escape, in part also the cause of secret crimes of destruction, the aim of which is to harm third parties or to draw their attention by force.

Binding lots minors prone to false information about their parents and guardians when they sign up for antisocial have to answer behavior. The main characteristics of the lack of ties are the tendency to be lonely, loss of social responsibility for relevant social partners, e.g. B. for the family, the surrogate family or the home, and the tendency to quickly change the main social worker , with whom, however, only fleeting and short-term contacts exist.

See also