Thu. May 7th, 2026

Why Some Children Cling to One Parent: Rethinking the Oedipus Complex


Quick summary: The push and pull complex revives a genuine childhood pattern of intense exclusive bonds and rivalry with one parent that Freud and Jung observed but misexplained as sexual desire. Rooted in attachment theory this arises from emotional absence inconsistency or overinvolvement by a caregiver which chronically activates the childs need for connection and creates hypervigilance towards perceived competitors. For mental health and therapy this reframing shifts treatment away from outdated notions of repressed sexuality towards addressing early attachment disruptions offering more practical support for wellbeing and clinical practice in diverse family structures.




Few ideas in psychology have attracted as much debate and rejection as the Oedipus and Electra complexes. Introduced by Freud in the early 20th century and elaborated by Jung, these theories propose that children develop an unconscious sexual desire for the opposite-sex parent, accompanied by rivalry with the same-sex parent. They have since been largely abandoned by mainstream psychology, dismissed for lacking empirical support and for sitting awkwardly with the realities of single-parent and same-sex families.

But something is being thrown out along with them. The phenomenon these theories were trying to explain is real. Some children do form intensely exclusive, rivalrous bonds with one parent. Something is clearly happening. The problem is not the observation but the explanation.

The push and pull complex offers a different account, one grounded in attachment theory rather than libidinal speculation.

The theory draws on the work of John Bowlby, who argued that children are biologically driven to form attachments that allow them to feel safe and to explore the world. When that attachment is disrupted, whether through physical absence, emotional unavailability, or inconsistency, the child does not simply adapt and move on. The attachment system becomes chronically activated. The need for the caregiver intensifies precisely because that caregiver cannot be relied upon.

Three parenting patterns are identified as the root of the complex. The first is emotional absence: a parent who is physically present but disengaged, leaving the child to interpret the lack of warmth as rejection and respond with escalating bids for attention. The second, and arguably most damaging, is inconsistency: a parent who oscillates between affection and withdrawal, producing what attachment researchers call disorganised attachment, a state in which the child can neither settle into closeness nor safely disengage. The third is overinvolvement: a parent so enmeshed with the child that boundaries dissolve, and the child ends up carrying the parent’s emotional needs rather than having their own met.

In each case, the result is the same. The child becomes intensely preoccupied with one parent, hypervigilant to that parent’s emotional state, and rivalrous towards anyone perceived to be competing for that parent’s attention. This is precisely the pattern Freud and Jung described. What they misread as sexual desire was, the theory argues, the emotional signature of a disrupted attachment system.

The Push and pull complex is also fully gender-neutral, which marks a significant departure from its predecessors. In Freudian theory, the direction of desire and rivalry is fixed by the child’s sex. In the push and pull account, what matters is not the gender of the child or the parent but the nature of the attachment. A daughter can develop the complex in relation to her mother; a son in relation to his father. The determining factor is which parent offers unreliable or distorted emotional responsiveness, and which is perceived as the rival for it.

This reframing has direct implications for therapy. Adults presenting with the symptoms classically associated with the Oedipus or Electra complex, intense attachment to one parent, persistent rivalry with the other, and ambivalent feelings that seem disproportionate, should not be understood as harbouring repressed sexual wishes. They should be understood as carrying the effects of early attachment disruption, and therapy should focus accordingly.

The theory also addresses a more troubling edge case: what happens when, in a small number of severely enmeshed situations, something resembling erotic feeling does emerge. The Push and Pull account does not dismiss this but reframes it. The body responds to chronic emotional tension by seeking to process it through whatever register is powerful enough to contain the intensity. Sexual arousal is that register. What arises is not desire in any meaningful sense but a physiological misclassification, and the shame that typically follows compounds the problem through a cycle of suppression and heightened awareness. The appropriate clinical response, the theory argues, is not interpretation but normalisation.

The phenomenon Freud and Jung observed was real. Their explanation was not. The Push and Pull Complex is an attempt to correct that, replacing a framework built on repressed sexuality with one built on the more verifiable, more clinically useful territory of early attachment experience.

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