Abstract
Associations between relationships maintenance behaviors (positivity, openness, assurances, and sharing tasks) and anxious and avoidant attachment were examined in 265 married couples. Using structural equation modeling to employ the actor-partner interdependence model, the use of positivity, assurances, and sharing tasks were found to be negatively associated with anxious and avoidant attachment for both husbands and wives. Being open and self-disclosing in marriage was not strongly associated with attachment. Results indicated that the use of maintenance behaviors in marriages could have the potential to foster increased security in partners. Research and clinical implications are discussed.
Acknowledgments
Rebekah D. Adams, M.M.F.T., Graduate Student, and Joyce A. Baptist, PhD, Assistant Professor, School of Family Studies and Human Services, Kansas State University, equally contributed to this article.