Publication | Closed Access
Recollected Parental Care and Fear of Intimacy in Emerging Adults
26
Citations
39
References
2013
Year
Social PsychologyCouple PsychologyMental HealthUniversity StudentsSocial SciencesPsychologyIntimacy ScaleDevelopmental PsychologyIntimate RelationshipFamily RelationshipFamily InteractionPersonal RelationshipPublic HealthFamily RelationshipsBehavioral SciencesParental Bonding InstrumentAttachment TheoryRomantic RelationshipsChild DevelopmentInterpersonal RelationshipsFamily PsychologyEmerging AdultsFamily Dynamic
Two samples of university students (combined N= 299; mean age = 24.97; 86% female) completed the care subscale of the parental bonding instrument and the Fear of Intimacy scale. Analyses indicated that recollected parental care and fear of intimacy were negatively correlated. Concurrently, it was found that (1) participants who reported having a warm, caring relationship with at least one parent were significantly less likely to suffer from a fear of intimacy and (2) participants who scored low on the measure of fear of intimacy were more likely to have mothers who exhibited high levels of warmth and care. Results supported the proposition that the nature of the parent–child relationship has long-reaching effects on how individuals approach romantic relationships.
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