Destruction of Attachments

From The SpiritWiki

The Destruction of Attachments, a component of a Toxic Socialization, involves the systematic destruction of the emotional and psychological bonds that connect parents and children, friends, and others, to each other.

Elements of Toxic Socialization

Toxic Socialization > Chaos, Destruction of Attachments, Indoctrination, Neglect, Parentification, Violence

Related LP Terms

Destruction of Attachment >

Non-LP Related Terms

Destruction of Attachment >

Notes

Attachments may be categorized into primary, secondary, and tertiary. Primary Attachments are attachments to parents and siblings. Secondary Attachments are attachments to friends. Tertiary Attachments are attachments to your job and the community at work. [1]

Attachments are destroyed intentionally, to ensure a ready supply of mobile labour (if you're not attached to your family, it's easier to move away), to decrease cognitive and emotional function, particularly in the blue-collar classes, and increase controllability across all social classes.

Note, the breaking of family attachments was a central feature of residential schools in Canada

The residential schools also broke family bonds. Daniel Nanooch remembers being separated from his siblings:

“So even though I was there with my sister and I only seen her about four times in that year and we’re in the same building in the same mission. They had a fence in the playground. Nobody was allowed near the fence. The boys played on this side, the girls played on the other side. Nobody was allowed to go to that fence there and talk to the girls through the fence or whatever, you can’t.”[2]

Attachments can be classified into Active Attachments, Broken Attachments, and Inactive Attachments

Related LP Courses

Template:Lp200

Footnotes

  1. Sosteric, Mike, and Gina Ratkovic. Lightning Path Workbook Two - Healing. Vol. 2. Lightning Path Workbook Series. St. Albert, Alberta: Lightning Path Press, 2017. https://www.lightningpath.org/lp-workbooks/
  2. https://pressprogress.ca/14_first_hand_stories_underlining_how_residential_schools_tried_to_get_rid_of_indigenous_cultures/