CONCEPT
Earned Security
The attachment research finding that offers the closest thing to genuine hope in the AI moment: internal working models can be revised later in life through sustained relational experience, producing security functionally equivalent to that which comes from consistent early caregiving.
Earned security was first identified by Mary Main and her colleagues in the development of the Adult Attachment Interview. The critical finding was that some adults who reported difficult or disrupted early caregiving nevertheless demonstrated the linguistic and cognitive markers of secure attachment: coherent narratives, balanced perspectives, the capacity to reflect on painful experiences without being overwhelmed. They had not been lucky in childhood — they had been lucky, or deliberate, later. Through therapy, through a transformative partnership, through some process of sustained reflective engagement with their own history, they had revised their internal working models. The past was still there, fully acknowledged — but it no longer controlled the present. For the AI transition, the finding is decisive: the professional whose fishbowl has cracked is not condemned to detachment. Revision is possible, but only under specific conditions that cannot be manufactured by policy alone.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The finding emerged from
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