People feel safer behind some kind of physical barrier. If a social situation is in any way threatening, there is an immediate urge to 16 such a barricade. For a tiny child faced with a stranger, the problem is 17 solved by hiding behind its mother’s body and peeking out at the intruder to see what he or she will do next. If the mother’s body is not 18 , a chair or some other piece of solid furniture will 19 . If the stranger insists on coming closer, then the peeking face must be hidden too. If the 20 intruder continues to approach despite these obvious signals of fear, then there is nothing for it 21 to scream or flee.This pattern is 22 reduced as the child matures. In teenage girls it may still be detected in the giggling cover-up of the face when embarrassed. But 23 the time we are adult, the childhood hiding is expected to disappear altogether, as we 24 stride out to meet our guests, customers, or friends. Each social occasion involves us, once again, in slightly threatening encounters similar to the ones 25 made us hide as scared infants. In other words, the 26 is still there, but their expression is blocked. Our adult 27 demand control and suppression of any primitive urge to withdraw and hide ourselves away. The more formal the occasion, the more 28 the moment of encounter becomes. Watching people under these conditions, it is possible to 29 the many small ways in which they continue to “hide behind their mother’s skirts.”The actions are still there, but they are less 30 . It is these that are the Barrier Signals of adult life.
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