
It emerges and develops slowly, like an electric current, when emotion is awakened by and invested in someone or something, and that someone or item "connects back" responsively. 'Relationship is a human being's sensation or sense of emotional connectedness with another,' writes Helen Harris Perlman (1957). The parent-child relationship is the most important since it helps to establish the groundwork for one's personality development, confidence, attitudes, and self-esteem. All people have their first contact with their mothers when they are born. Emotionally charged relationships with other humans provide the climate for the development of human personality, the nutrient for its development, and the impetus for its subtle adjustments. People's vital relationships emerge from shared and emotionally charged events. Relationships serve as a catalyst, an enabling dynamism in the support, nurturing, and liberation of people's energies and motivation for issue solving and the application of assistance. Human partnerships are famous for their warmth, comfort, security, nurturing, and feelings. The formation of a person's personality is heavily influenced by his or her connections with significant persons.

In the previous article, we discussed approaches of social casework now let's learn the importance of relationships in social case work.Humans, as social animals, live and prosper from social interactions with other people.
