logo

The Global Domain Name (url) Families.com is currently available for acquisition. Please contact by phone at 805-627-1955 or Email for Details

Bonding and Attachment: Will My Child Love Me?


Will my child love me? This is the question that I asked myself the most when we were waiting to adopt. It was my greatest concern and fear. When I had read adoption books, I always skipped to the chapter on attachment. However, like the question, “Will I love my child?” I soon found that this fear was very natural and normal to have.

The concept of bonding and attachment between parent and child is not a simple one. Before going further to explain bonding and attachment, I would like to mention that most adopted children and their parents can bond and do maintain healthy relationships. But, at times adoptive parents and their children are faced with challenges of attaching and bonding. The extreme cases are often picked up by the media or written about. Prospective adoptive parents hear these cases and then become concerned they may be faced with similar challenges. It is also important to understand that there can be difficulty in bonding and attachment between biological parents and their children.

In the book “Real Parents, Real Children” by Holly van Gulden and Lisa M. Bartels-Rabb, it is discussed that a healthy parent/child relationship is composed of three parts. These three parts are trusting or bonding, positive interaction, and claiming and belonging.

Bonding happens in the first six months after a baby is born. It is the initial form of trust between a caregiver and the baby. Bonding is established by repeatedly meeting your child’s needs in infancy. Such needs are feeding, diaper changing, and comforting. When bonding is established successfully between the initial caregiver and infant, then trust can be transferred to other individuals later in life.

Attachment is the emotional and psychological ties that develop from the bond. It continues to grow and change as a child matures. Attachment is built through mutually positive interactions between parent and child. Examples of the positive interaction between parent and child are, smiling, giggling, and playing. Attachment is also further established by the parents claiming the child and the child having the sense of belonging in the family.

Additional influences that play a role in attachment are, past bonds, trauma or loss, personalities of the parent and child, feelings about the adoption process, and attraction.

Love is the attachment and the emotional result of bonding. It is also the result of positive interaction, claiming, and belonging.

When a couple or individual is in the process of adopting a child, they plan on loving their baby or child. As I mentioned in the beginning of the post, most of the time a healthy relationship does form between the parent and child. However, at times underlying issues do occur that can hinder this process. It is always best to address the issues head on and seek professional help. Fortunately, today there are many therapists that specialize in bonding and attachment issues. With time, patience, and guidance a healthy and loving relationship can be built.

This entry was posted in About Adoption by Kathy Sheldon. Bookmark the permalink.

About Kathy Sheldon

My name is Kathy Sheldon and I live in Northern NJ with my husband, Jeff, my 15 month old son, Connor, two cats, a bird, and the newest addition our 10 week old Bernese Mountain puppy. I graduated from Buffalo State College and then went on to earn a Masters Degree in Counseling Psychology from Pace University. Prior to my son being born I worked for 7 years in a Domestic Violence Shelter in New York City with women and their children. I counseled women and their families individually and in groups. For the last five years at the shelter I was in administration and management. I resigned from my position as Director of Client Services after Connor was born because my commute into New York City was too long from where we live. When my son Connor was 4 months old I decided to start my Direct Sales Business with the Traveling Vineyard. I chose In Home Wine Tastings because I really enjoy wine and wanted to learn more about it. It was then that I started to write my first blog, "Traveling Wine Adventures." Since my son was adopted and my husband, and I had such a wonderful experience with our adoption and American Adoptions, I inquired with them about doing Adoption Home Studies and was hired contractually in September. I also have started to do Adoption Seminars locally for prospective adoptive parents. In August of 2005 I started my second blog "Working Moms Wanted". I started it because I found myself in place like many new Moms, needing to find work but not knowing if it would be better to work out of my home or get an outside job. My husband and I are socially active people and enjoy spending a lot of our time with families in the neighborhood and our own families. In addition we enjoy many hobbies. I enjoy running, reading, writing, cooking, and of course spending time with Connor.