DiscoverThe Post-Separation Abuse Podcast58. Beyond "Kids are resilient": The neuroscience of attachment disruption
58. Beyond "Kids are resilient": The neuroscience of attachment disruption

58. Beyond "Kids are resilient": The neuroscience of attachment disruption

Update: 2025-09-13
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Attachment theory is a crucial but often misunderstood concept that significantly impacts children's wellbeing after parents separate. Understanding attachment isn't about controlling access to your child, but rather protecting their fundamental developmental needs when deciding upon post-separation parenting arrangements.

• Attachment is a biological survival system ensuring children stay close to caregivers who keep them safe and help regulate emotions


• Children form a hierarchy of attachments with usually one primary attachment figure who provides consistent, responsive care


• Attachment develops through thousands of interactions from infancy through preschool years


• When primary attachments are disrupted, children's stress hormones increase, affecting brain development


• Signs of attachment disruption include regression, clinginess, sleep problems, and emotional dysregulation


• The myth that "children are resilient" often justifies arrangements that harm attachment security, and negatively impact child development


• Secure attachments in childhood lead to better emotional regulation, healthier relationships and improved mental health throughout life


• Post-separation arrangements should prioritise maintaining the child's primary attachment while supporting other relationships


• Young children generally need primary residence with their main attachment figure and shorter, frequent contact with the non-primary parent


• Gradual transitions based on the child's readiness, not adult demands, best support attachment security

Check out the Post-Separation Parenting Blueprint for comprehensive guidance on applying attachment research to real-world parenting arrangement decisions and advocating effectively for your child's needs.

About Danielle Black:

Danielle Black is a respected authority in child-focused post-separation parenting in Australia, helping parents cut through professional pressure and harmful myths to make decisions based on what children actually need.

Having navigated her own complex separation and divorce, and guided hundreds of clients to successful outcomes, Danielle provides evidence-based strategies that challenge inappropriate arrangements and put children's wellbeing first.

The Post-Separation Abuse Podcast helps listeners to understand the nuances of ongoing control and other forms of abuse after separation, and challenges harmful myths about post-separation parenting and provides evidence-based guidance for protective parents.

Ready to transform your approach to parenting after separation?

The Post-Separation Parenting Blueprint™ is your roadmap to optimising child-centred parenting arrangements after separation. Based on evidence, and the foundation of Danielle's proprietary coaching framework, the Blueprint is designed to support protective parents from prior to separation, through to creating parenting plans, or obtaining parenting court orders, and beyond. Learn more by visiting the website: danielleblackcoaching.com.au


Follow Danielle on Instagram: @danielleblackcoaching


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58. Beyond "Kids are resilient": The neuroscience of attachment disruption

58. Beyond "Kids are resilient": The neuroscience of attachment disruption

Danielle Black