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After the
break-up, your "first love" never really leaves you,
according to student research at UC Berkeley
07 Feb 2001
By Kathleen Scalise, Media Relations
Berkeley - Whether your heart belongs to anyone this Valentine's
Day may depend on what happened the first time you fell in love.
This new finding, by University of California, Berkeley, graduate
student Jennifer Beer, challenges the notion commonly held since
Freud that the stability of the parent-child relationship sets
the stage for attachment later in life.
With romance, said Beer, "Some of the problems you have
in the romantic domain may have more to do with your first love
than with your parents." She based her work on the first-love
stories of 303 UC Berkeley undergraduates, mostly juniors, collected
in 1997.
By "first love," Beer doesn't mean a childhood crush
on a teacher or movie star, but the first real relationship of
a romantic nature between two individuals, often experienced
in adolescence or early adult years. Those who remember the experience
positively are more likely to consider themselves securely attached
to their current romantic partners, she said, and to perceive
their romantic partners as securely attached to them.
She now is looking at how such recent and distant "vivid"
representations of self and partner are stored in different memory
systems in the brain and what this might reveal about self-perception.
"Vivid memories are very detailed, self-defining, something
you recall a lot, stories and anecdotes you dwell on or tell
all the time," Beer said.
In the case of first love, such memories often range from
bittersweet but fond - perhaps recollections of a poignant puppy
love tinged with regard or regret for a long-ago sweetheart -
to deeply painful, soul-crushing experiences.
Whatever happened, "it can set you up as thinking, 'This
is what I am like as a relationship partner,' " Beer said.
People who recollect their first romantic experience as involving
good feelings, for instance, citing memories of happiness, excitement,
strength, inspiration, pride and enthusiasm, were more likely
to be in stable relationships years later than those recalling
hostility, upset, stress, guilt, fright or shame, Beer found.
"First love relationships often break up. So people say,
'What do you mean, good feelings? It was a breakup,' " she
said. "But even though the relationship ended, which seems
like it might be negative, the vivid memories surrounding the
experience can be good or bad."
As an example of a good experience, Beer cited one respondent
who suffered greatly because her former boyfriend dated other
women immediately after their relationship ended. But, prior
to that, the experience had been a positive taste of what love
could be, and the woman learned what made her happy in a relationship.
Alternatively, Beer described a stormier experience that left
the respondent years later with the unshakeable suspicion that
all men were untrustworthy.
"This is wrong, but I cannot help myself," the respondent
commented. "One negative experience has been enough to change
my entire outlook on men."
Beer identified four patterns of perception surrounding relationships:
* Secure - A secure, positive sense of both self and partner
in a relationship.
* Dismissive -A positive sense of self, but not of partner.
* Preoccupied - A positive sense of partner, but not of self.
* Fearful - Negative recollections of both.
Those with memories of positive emotion and outcomes from
their first relationship "were more likely to have positive
views of self and others in romantic relationships," Beer
said. "Those with more negative emotions and outcome were
more likely to show one of the other three patterns."
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