{"id":3290,"date":"2013-12-26T07:30:57","date_gmt":"2013-12-26T12:30:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/njcts.org\/tsparents\/?p=3290"},"modified":"2013-12-26T07:30:57","modified_gmt":"2013-12-26T12:30:57","slug":"oxytocin-and-attachment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/njcts.org\/tsparents\/oxytocin-and-attachment\/","title":{"rendered":"Oxytocin and attachment"},"content":{"rendered":"

A couple years ago, I began researching bonding, attachment and oxytocin.<\/p>\n

\"oxytocinOxytocin is a powerful hormone that is necessary for bonding and attachment.\u00a0 It is often called the \u201clove\u201d molecule.\u00a0 My son with tactile sensory sensitivity as well as TS Plus was not getting any oxytocin and it worried me.<\/p>\n

When Nathan was a baby he pushed his body away from mine and cried louder when I tried to soothe him.\u00a0 It was a painful phenomena not being able to comfort or soothe your child with cuddling, contact and kisses. \u00a0Every time he pulled away or reacted with anger or violence to intimate touching was painful for everyone and it is hard not to just stop reaching out due to how uncomfortable he obviously was with touch.<\/p>\n

When we hug or kiss a loved one, oxytocin levels drive up. It also acts as a neurotransmitter in the brain. In fact, the hormone plays a huge role in pair bonding. If Nathan fell off his bike, I learned not to go and see if he was okay because I would end up physically hurt and not have been able to comfort him in any way in the process.\u00a0 By age 7 or 8 his combined disorders made it difficult to tell if he would notice if I was suddenly not there.\u00a0 I had a difficult time answering the question at that point and I didn\u2019t like that at all.<\/p>\n

\"OxytocinSo we needed a plan to get his body to make some oxytocin and hopefully in the process, bring us closer together.\u00a0 Plans work better when we make them together so I talked to Nathan.\u00a0 I told him about oxytocin, what it does and how we could potentially get more.\u00a0 We came up with cuddle time. \u00a0We did have to implement a minimum time as it was very difficult and sometimes painful for Nathan with his disorders and sensitivities.<\/p>\n

Cuddle time would happen at bedtime, when he was finishing a last game on his Ipod, I could read to him, I could scratch or rub his back\u2026anything, even tickles.\u00a0 The only rule was that it had to have skin on skin contact. The proposed benefits:<\/p>\n