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They're dismissive or overwhelmed when the child has an emotional need. They're not interested in the child's life (interests, friend groups, school work). They have difficulty expressing their feelings, even with adults. They're unable or unwilling to provide comfort during emotional distress.
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Read More »Insensitivity and disinterest are common traits of emotional unavailability. Here’s how to recognize it in a parent and how to cope. Being able to identify and respond to another person’s emotional needs can help you connect with them. Feeling connected can encourage relationship building. It can lay a foundation of support and trust for future interactions. Being emotionally available can help you show that you care about someone for who they are as an individual — that you’re invested and interested in what they’re experiencing. When you can’t connect to someone emotionally, it can be challenging to connect with them in other ways, even if they’re your parent. What is an emotionally unavailable parent? Emotional availability is a marker of relationship quality, according to research from 2017. It goes beyond basic features that encourage attachment during childhood and includes a parent’s ability to create a positive emotional environment that supports learning, independence, and personal growth. Emotionally unavailable parents may have been unresponsive in moments when emotions were expected. They may have lacked the ability to offer their emotional reactions in the face of your emotional need. “Emotional unavailability refers to a person’s inability to be emotionally present for another person,” says Sarah Epstein, a licensed marriage and family therapist in Dallas, Texas. “This can include a variety of tactics and manifestations, but the common outcome is that the person on the receiving end feels a sense of absence where there should be emotional presence and engagement.” Example of an emotionally unavailable parent’s behavior Your dog just ran away, and you’re crying — grieving the loss of a beloved companion. Your mother sees your distress but offers no words of comfort or physical display of affection. Instead, she leaves you outside and walks back to the house to make dinner as if nothing happened. The emotional availability assessment Emotional availability can exist on a spectrum. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Dr. Zeynep Biringen developed the emotional availability assessment model to help measure the quality of emotional interactions between parents and their children. It’s a model still widely used in practice today. Parents are assessed on four scales: Sensitivity: behaviors and emotions from the parent that create a positive emotional connection to their child behaviors and emotions from the parent that create a positive emotional connection to their child Structuring: a parent’s ability to support learning, understanding, and personal growth in their child a parent’s ability to support learning, understanding, and personal growth in their child Non-intrusiveness: how successfully a parent can allow their child to be independent how successfully a parent can allow their child to be independent Non-hostility: the level at which a parent regulates the expression of negative emotions toward their child The other two aspects of the emotional assessment model focus on the child: Child responsiveness: how willing and joyful the child is to interact with the parent how willing and joyful the child is to interact with the parent Child involvement: the rate at which a child wants to involve the parent in what they’re doing These six dimensions of emotional availability can then be scored to determine how emotionally available, or unavailable, a parent may be. The emotional availability assessment scores are placed into four scoring categories: Emotionally available: The parent is nurturing and tuned into their child with an overall positive, relaxed presence. The parent is nurturing and tuned into their child with an overall positive, relaxed presence. Complicated: The parent can be warm and positive but also inconsistently tuned into their child. They may also show signs of immaturity or a lack of authenticity.
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Read More »The parent can be warm and positive but also inconsistently tuned into their child. They may also show signs of immaturity or a lack of authenticity. Detached: The parent exhibits distant, cool, and mechanical behaviors, suggesting that they’re avoiding emotional connection. The parent exhibits distant, cool, and mechanical behaviors, suggesting that they’re avoiding emotional connection. Problematic or disturbed: The parent lacks basic-level care and interaction. There may be signs of hostility and intrusiveness. Emotional unavailability and mental health Being emotionally unavailable doesn’t mean that your parent lives with a mental health condition. But mental health conditions can sometimes influence how emotionally available a parent can be. “Emotional unavailability may be connected to mental conditions,” says Epstein. “A highly depressed parent, for example, may be physically incapable of emotional engagement.” Nancy Denq, an associate marriage and family therapist based in Los Angeles, explains that emotional unavailability may be pointing to a mental health condition when signs of a personality disorder are present. “Behaviors like black-and-white thinking, lack of boundaries, high emotional reactivity, attention-seeking behaviors, and emotional unavailability are sometimes found in borderline personality disorder and narcissistic personality disorder,” she notes. She adds that a mental health condition may also be present when emotional unavailability is a part of escapism or a numbing process, such as in substance use disorders. “A sign that a parent’s emotional unavailability may be pointing to a mental health condition is when the parent is constantly numbing themselves or mentally ‘checking out’ in order to cope with their children’s emotional needs,” Denq says. Signs that your parent is emotionally unavailable There’s no clear-cut template for how emotionally unavailable parents may act. But according to Denq and Epstein, common signs can include the following: They lack the ability to “mirror” (reflect the same emotional state that a child is experiencing).
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