Participants also worked to
identify emotional avoidance versus emotional acceptance and the consequences of each.
Not exact matches
In their book Marital Conflict and Children: An
Emotional Security Perspective, Cummings and colleague Patrick Davies from the University of Rochester
identify the kinds of destructive tactics that parents use with each other that harm children: verbal aggression like name - calling, insults, and threats of abandonment; physical aggression like hitting and pushing; silent tactics like
avoidance, walking out, sulking or withdrawing; or even capitulation — giving in that might look like a solution but isn't a true one.
In their book Marital Conflict and Children: An
Emotional Security Perspective, Cummings and colleague Patrick Davies from the University of Rochester
identify the kinds of destructive tactics that parents use with each other that harm children: verbal aggression like name - calling, insults, and threats of abandonment; physical aggression like hitting and pushing; silent tactics like
avoidance, walking out, sulking or withdrawing; or even capitulation — giving in that might look like a solution but isn't a true one.