Darcia 2022
Darcia 2022
Darcia 2022
Darcia Narvaez
To cite this article: Darcia Narvaez (2022) First Friendships: Foundations for Peace, Peace
Review, 34:3, 377-389, DOI: 10.1080/10402659.2022.2092398
Article views: 31
What if our first friendships matter more than any others? What if first
relationships guide us toward peace or violence? What if the ways we are
treated in the earliest months and years of life matter for how we treat
others as adults? Converging evidence suggests that these issues should of
concern to peace studies.
gestalt of form, energy and beauty —not separating out, identifying, and
abstracting the “contents” of the other.
I-Thou relationships align with the notion of mattering, the feeling
that one is significant in the eyes of others. “The person who matters is
secure in the knowledge that he or she has meaningful connections with
other people and that close social bonds have been forged” (Flett 2018,
31). Indeed, mattering to others is a fundamental protective factor against
self- and other-harming (Drabenstott 2019; Prihadi et al. 2020; Rosenberg
and McCullough 1981; Schlossberg 1989). Mattering studies (Flett 2018)
identify several elements that characterize mattering, including attention
(being noticed), importance (being cared about), and ego extension (emo-
tional investment in what happens to you). Developmental research indi-
cates that babies and young children are especially impacted by being
treated as mattering, as Thous instead of Its, because the psychobiology
of their being is in formation, shaped by social experience.
Attachment theory (Bowlby 1988) was advanced for its time in draw-
ing scientific attention to the importance of the caregiver-child relationship
as an interaction between nature and nurture that establishes a child’s pat-
tern of social relations, often carried forward into the rest of life. As Kagan
and Fox (2006) point out, all phenomena in the psychological realm
emerge from biological properties, yet most biological, psychological and
social systems that develop over the course of childhood are not genetically
fixed. Instead, like attachment style, they are profoundly shaped by experi-
ence in early life. That is, the type of human nature developed emerges not
only from the individual’s genetic history but their life history.
Early life experiences shape embodied systems, psyche and person-
ality. For example, particular caregiving practices that foster secure
attachment appear to bring about well-regulated, happy, healthy people
who are agreeable and cooperative (Kochanska 2002; Sroufe et al. 2005).
Early life attachment relationships are vehicles for the child’s develop-
ment, forming a bridge of connection for fostering psychosocial as well
as moral character development (Narvaez 2008, 2014). The regulation of
an individual’s stress response and vagus nerve, both related to social
capacities, is based on the quality of early care received (Lupien et al.
2009; Porges 2011). Of course, some plasticity remains throughout life,
but early childrearing practices are fundamental for optimal hormone,
immune, stress and neurotransmitter system development, as well as pre-
frontal cortex functions, all of which undergird personality and everyday
functioning (Narvaez 2014; Schore 2019). The human brain/body is
understood as a dynamic system that is “experience dependent” (LeVay,
Wiesel, and Hubel 1980), with “heightened epochs of brain plasticity,
during which sensory experiences produced long-lasting and large-scale
FIRST FRIENDSHIPS: FOUNDATIONS FOR PEACE 379
Responsive Care
Alloparents1
Biochemical/Nutritional Needs
Ideally, the child’s needs are satiated with breastfeeding on request with
minimal delays. As a result of their small stomachs, young babies may
request feeding every few minutes at first (Hewlett and Lamb 2005). Why
is breastfeeding on request important? Breast milk contains brain and
body building ingredients. Children need the biochemical growth stimula-
tion that breast milk provides (Power and Schulkin 2016) in contrast to
growth-inhibiting cortisol that is released during distress (Murgatroyd and
Spengler 2011). The child is growing thousands of brain connections
every minute and building the immune system (which resides mostly in
the gut), the “gut-breast axis” that is foundational for lifelong health
(Rodrıguez et al. 2021). Infant formula, an emergency food, does not
have all the brain-and-gut-building ingredients of breastmilk. Evening
breastmilk has agents that induce relaxation and sleep (e.g., tryptophan)
whereas morning milk has energizing agents (Italianer et al. 2020).
Good enough caregivers provide lots of time and opportunity for daily
self-directed solo and social play. Such play characterizes our ancestral
childhoods and turns out to be the best way for a child to learn life skills,
self-control, cooperation and creativity (Gray 2013; Scott and Panksepp
2003), especially with playmates of all ages (Hewlett and Lamb 2005).
Good enough care encourages the child’s free movement. There is
limited use of carriers and strollers. Instead, the young child is allowed to
crawl then walk as they go through multiple developmental stages of
body-mind learning. Good enough caregivers avoid interfering with the
movement of the child through the world. The child is assumed capable
of taking care of self in normal natural environments (Liedloff 1977). (Of
course, this does not hold on a busy street where a child might run out
into the traffic). The child is allowed to be exuberant, honored for their
dignity as a person (Cavoukian and Olfman 2006). Overall, the motivation
to learn from the world is encouraged and efforts at autonomy are not
punished (Panksepp 1998; Panksepp et al. 1984). The child is given as
much freedom as the context allows (and contexts are selected for their
safety and openness) (Skenazy 2010).
Meaningful Community
Good enough communities not only provide support for mothers or pri-
mary caregivers but immerse the child in experiences with multiple differ-
ent others who provide stable, warmly responsive care (Laursen and
FIRST FRIENDSHIPS: FOUNDATIONS FOR PEACE 383
Birmingham 2003). They embrace the child with meaningful stories about
the child’s positive place in the family and community. Adults who have
been well-supported are able to model self-control, generosity and all the
other virtues desired. The child practices mutual sharing with community
members (Widlok 2017). They welcome the child into active community
membership, understanding that the child is learning their way, and devel-
oping their skills through observation and imitation (Liedloff 1977). The
community understands that the child seeks to fulfill their human poten-
tial, to become a full human being, with integrated heart and mind, but
also help discern what particular gift they have to offer the community.
When the child is nurtured all along the way, their uniqueness will be pol-
ished and prepared for gifting to the community in adulthood. Among
traditional First Nation/Indigenous Peoples, the child moves from the bio-
logical mother to the mothering provisioned by the broader community, to
a feeling that the universe, traditionally concretized in the forest or desert
(the landscape), also nurtures the self (Four Arrows and Narvaez 2022).
Without mothers and motherers, the child’s unique self would not unfold
naturally and the individual may require therapy in adulthood to heal
wounds and integrate mind and heart (Hilton 2012).
When babies initially don’t get their needs met, they move from dis-
comfort, to pain, to rage for assistance: The sympathetic nervous system
has mobilized to seek assistance in maintaining the baby’s wellbeing. A
baby who regularly gets help only after raging may turn into an angry or
manipulative personality (since that worked habitually for getting needs
met), called anxious attachment (Crittenden 1995). But if the baby is pun-
ished for raging or is not helped even when raging, the baby will lead to
emotional withdrawal and despair —a signal that the parasympathetic sys-
tem has been activated in order to preserve energy and life. The baby
who regularly reaches this stage may develop into a shy, withdrawn per-
sonality. Babies who have inconsistent parents (sometimes intrusive,
sometimes neglecting, mismatching with baby’s needs) may learn to intel-
lectualize life (detached imagination), indicative of avoidant attachment.
Sometimes brain systems have gaps in development from missing experi-
ence or can be underdeveloped, leading to various forms of mental dis-
order based on the timing, intensity and duration of unnestedness.
Early toxic stress enhances survival systems that focus on self-pres-
ervation (van der Kolk 2014). An overactive stress response can be estab-
lished (for life) when baby is frequently left in distress (Lupien et al.
2009). When the stress response is activated, it redirects blood flow away
from higher order thinking (Arnsten 1998, 2009), away from social open-
ness. The body is mobilized for self-protective action making the individ-
ual relationally and cognitively ‘stupid” (Sapolsky 2004). Early life stress
impairs developing psychosocial biology, seeding fear and habitual anti-
social tendencies (Sandi and Haller 2015). Harsh parenting, such as
spanking, shifts the trajectory of development toward habitual pre-human
orientations of dominance-submission relations (i.e., authoritarianism;
Milburn and Conrad 2016). Prosocial growth is curtailed. Threat reactivity
can become ingrained in personality, making it hard for the child to learn
(Cozolino 2013) and to cooperate (Niehoff 1999). The individual may not
develop the brain systems that underlie deep reciprocity of sociality, limit-
ing their options for the future (Narvaez, 2014). They may not develop
the capacities that are otherwise characteristic of our species—the flex-
ible, connected self who is responsive to the Other that is characteristic of
“preconquest” cultures (Sorenson 1998).
As Aristotle noted, one must cultivate the right sensibilities to
behave virtuously. Little did he know that this begins in infancy, in the
mother-child relationship with mutual emotional regulation (Sroufe 1996;
Schore 1994). The unnested—truly unfriended—baby whose relational
treatment was as an It instead of a Thou will learn to treat others the
same way, to categorize others as Its, to be used instrumentally as objects
for particular ends. Unnested individuals will be less empathic, more self-
FIRST FRIENDSHIPS: FOUNDATIONS FOR PEACE 385
CONCLUSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to Mary S. Tarsha for reviewing the manuscript.
386 DARCIA NARVAEZ
RECOMMENDED READINGS
Arnsten, Amy F. T. 1998. “The Biology of Being Frazzled.” Science (New York, N.Y.)
280 (5370):1711–1712. doi:10.1126/science.280.5370.1711.
Arnsten, Amy F. T. 2009. “Stress Signaling Pathways That Impair Prefrontal Cortex Structure
and Function.” Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 10 (6):410–422. doi:10.1038/nrn2648.
Bergman, Nils. 2005. “More than a Cuddle: Skin to Skin Contact is Key.” The Practicing
Midwife 8 (9):44.
Bergman, Nils, L. L. Linley, and S. R. Fawcus. 2004. “Randomized Controlled Trial of
Skin-to-Skin Contact from Birth versus Conventional Incubator for Physiological
Stabilization in 1200- to 2199-Gram Newborns.” Acta Paediatrica 93 (6):779–785. doi:
10.1111/j.1651-2227.2004.tb03018.x.
Bowlby, John. 1988. A Secure Base: Parent-Child Attachment and Healthy Human
Development. New York: Basic Books.
Buber, Martin. 1970. I and Thou. Translated by Walter Kaufmann. New York: Simon &
Schuster.
Buckley, Sarah J. 2015. Hormonal Physiology of Childbearing: Evidence and Implications
for Women, Babies, and Maternity Care. Washington, D.C.: Childbirth Connection
Programs, National Partnership for Women & Families.
Burkart, Judith M., Sarah B. Hrdy, and Carel P. Van Schaik. 2009. “Cooperative Breeding
and Human Cognitive Evolution.” Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and
Reviews 18 (5):175–186. doi:10.1002/evan.20222.
Cavoukian, Raffi, and Sharna Olfman. eds. 2006. Child Honoring: How to Turn This
World Around. Westport, CT: Praeger.
Cozolino, Louis. 2013. The Social Neuroscience of Education: Optimizing Attachment and
Learning in the Classroom. New York: W.W. Norton.
Crittenden, Patricia M. 1995. “Attachment and Psychopathology.” In Attachment Theory:
Social, Developmental, and Clinical Perspectives, edited by Susan Goldberg, Roy Muir,
and John Kerr, 367–406. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press.
Drabenstott, Matt A. 2019. “Matter of Life and Death: Integrating Mattering into the
Interpersonal-Psychological Theory of Suicide.” Suicide & Life-Threatening Behavior
49 (4):1006–1018. doi:10.1111/sltb.12504.
Flett, Gordon L. 2018. The Psychology of Mattering: Understanding the Human Need to
Be Significant. London: Academic Press.
Four Arrows and Darcia Narvaez. 2022. Restoring the Kinship Worldview: Indigenous
Voices Introduce 28 Precepts for Rebalancing Life on Planet Earth. Berkeley: North
Atlantic Books.
Gomez-Robles, Aida, William D. Hopkins, Steven J. Schapiro, and Chet C. Sherwood.
2015. “Relaxed Genetic Control of Cortical Organization in Human Brains Compared
with Chimpanzees.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 (48):
14799–14804. doi:10.1073/pnas.1512646112.
Gray, Peter. 2013. “The Value of a Play-Filled Childhood in Development of the Hunter-
Gatherer Individual.” In Evolution, Early Experience and Human Development: From
Research to Practice and Policy, edited by Darcia Narvaez, Jaak Panksepp, Allan N.
Schore, and Tracy Gleason, 362–370. New York: Oxford.
FIRST FRIENDSHIPS: FOUNDATIONS FOR PEACE 387
Narvaez, Darcia 2014. Neurobiology and the Development of Human Morality: Evolution,
Culture and Wisdom. New York: Norton.
Narvaez, Darcia, Julia Braungart-Rieker, Laura Miller-Graff, Lee Gettler, and Paul
Hastings. 2016. Contexts for Young Child Flourishing: Evolution, Family and Society.
New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Narvaez, Darcia, Jaak Panksepp, Allan Schore, and Tracy Gleason, eds. 2013. Evolution,
Early Experience, and Human Development: From Research to Practice and Policy.
New York: Oxford.
Narvaez, Darcia, Kristin Valentino, Agustin Fuentes, James McKenna, and Peter Gray.
eds. 2014. Ancestral Landscapes in Human Evolution: Culture, Childrearing and Social
Wellbeing. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Narvaez, Darcia, Ryan Woodbury, Tracy Gleason, Angela Kurth, Alison Cheng, Lijuan
Wang, Lifang Deng, Evelin Gutzwiller-Helfenfinger, Markus Christen, and Caterine
N€apflin. 2019. “Evolved Development Niche Provision: Moral Socialization, Social
Maladaptation and Social Thriving in Three Countries.” SAGE Open 9 (2):
215824401984012. doi:10.1177/2158244019840123.
Niehoff, Debra 1999. The Biology of Violence: How Understanding the Brain, Behavior,
and Environment Can Break the Vicious Circle of Aggression. New York: Free Press.
Panksepp, Jaak 1998. Affective Neuroscience: The Foundations of Human and Animal
Emotions. New York: Oxford University Press.
Panksepp, Jaak, Steve Siviy, and Larry Normansell. 1984. “The Psychobiology of Play:
Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives.” Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
8 (4):465–492. doi:10.1016/0149-7634(84)90005-8.
Porges, StephenW. 2011. The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of
Emotions, Attachment, Communication, Self-Regulation. New York: W.W. Norton.
Power, Michael L., and Jay Schulkin. 2016. Milk: The Biology of Lactation. Baltimore,
MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Rodrıguez, Juan M., Leonides Fernandez, and Valerie Verhasselt. 2021. “The Gut–Breast
Axis: Programming Health for Life.” Nutrients 13 (2):606. doi:10.3390/nu13020606.
Prihadi, Kususanto D., Charon Y. S. Wong, Erina Y. V. Chong, and Kate Y. X. Chong.
2020. “Suicidal Thoughts among University Students: The Role of Mattering, State
Self-Esteem and Depression Level.” International Journal of Evaluation and Research
in Education 9 (3):494–502. doi:10.11591/ijere.v9i3.20587.
Rosenberg, Morris, and Claire B. McCullough. 1981. “Mattering: Inferred Significance
and Mental Health among Adolescents.” Research in Community and Mental Health 2:
1630182.
Sandi, Carmen, and Jozsef Haller. 2015. “Stress and the Social Brain: Behavioural Effects
and Neurobiological Mechanisms.” Nature Reviews. Neuroscience 16 (5):290–304. doi:
10.1038/nrn3918. PMID: 25891510.
Sapolsky, Robert M. 2004. Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers, 3rd ed. New York: Holt.
Schlossberg, Nancy K. 1989. “Marginality and Mattering: Key Issues in Building
Community.” New Directions for Student Services 1989 (48):5–15. doi:10.1002/ss.
37119894803.
Schore, Allan N. 1994. Affect Regulation. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Schore, Allan N. 2019. The Development of the Unconscious Mind. New York: W.W.
Norton.
Scott, Eric, and Jaak Panksepp. 2003. “Rough-and-Tumble Play in Human Children.”
Aggressive Behavior 29 (6):539–551. doi:10.1002/ab.10062.
Shepard, Paul. 1982. Nature and Madness. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
FIRST FRIENDSHIPS: FOUNDATIONS FOR PEACE 389
Shonkoff, Jack P., and Andrew Garner. 2012. “The Lifelong Effects of Early Childhood
Adversity and Toxic Stress.” Pediatrics 129 (1):e232–e246. doi:10.1542/peds.2011-
2663.
Siegel, Daniel J. 1999. The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact
to Shape Who We Are. New York: Guilford Press.
Skenazy, Lenore. 2010. Free-Range Kids, How to Raise Safe, Self-Reliant Children (with-
out Going Nuts with Worry). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Sorenson, E Richard. 1998. “Preconquest Consciousness.” In Tribal Epistemologies, edited
by Helmut Wautischer, 79–115. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.
Sroufe, L Alan. 1996. Emotional Development: The Organization of Emotional Life in the
Early Years. New York: Cambridge.
Sroufe, L Alan. Bryan Egeland, Elizabeth A Carlson, and W. Andrew Collins. 2005. The
Development of the Person: The Minnesota Study of Risk and Adaptation from Birth to
Adulthood. New York: Guilford.
Stern, Daniel N. 1985. The Interpersonal World of the Infant. New York: Basic Books.
Trevathan, Wenda R. 2011. Human Birth: An Evolutionary Perspective, 2nd ed. New
York: Aldine de Gruyter.
Van der Kolk, Bessel. 2014. The Body Keeps the Score. New York: Penguin.
Vaughan, Genevieve. 2015. The Gift in the Heart of Language: The Maternal Source of
Meaning. Milan: Mimesis International.
Welch, Martha G. 2016. “Calming Cycle Theory: The Role of Visceral/Autonomic
Learning in Early Mother and Infant/Child Behaviour and Development.” Acta
Paediatrica (Oslo, Norway: 1992) 105 (11):1266–1274. doi:10.1111/apa.13547.
Widlok, Thomas. 2017. Anthropology and the Economy of Sharing. London: Routledge.
Winnicott, Donald W. 1957. Mother and Child. A Primer of First Relationships. New
York: Basic Books.
Winnicott, Donald W. 1987. Babies and Their Mothers. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Darcia Narvaez is professor emerita of psychology at the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame
Indiana USA. She can be reached at dnarvaez@nd.edu