Childhood trauma is surprisingly common and understandably painful, but healing is possible.
I didn’t figure out what love wasn’t until I went through my tsunami of a divorce and came face-to-face with the ongoing trauma causing by experiences of childhood abuse — all at the same time.
You see, I was a victim (sorry, I hate that word, but it is what it is) of childhood abuse, what those in the clinical world refer to as Adverse Childhood Experiences.
What Are Adverse Childhood Experiences?
According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) definition, “Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) is the term used to describe all types of abuse, neglect, and other potentially traumatic experiences that occur to people under the age of 18.”
The term originated in the 1990s, after Dr. Vincent Felitti, head of Kaiser Permanente’s Department of Preventive Medicine in San Diego, discovered a correlation between childhood trauma and unhealthy coping mechanisms “for depression, anxiety, and fear”.
Subtle Ways Childhood Trauma Affects You As an Adult (Even If You Think You’re Over It)
The resulting ACE Study “has produced more than 50 articles that look at the prevalence and consequences of ACEs … Subsequent studies have confirmed the high frequency of adverse childhood experiences, or found even higher incidences in urban or youth populations … [and the] original study questions have been used to develop a 10-item screening questionnaire.”
As NPR explains, “An ACE score is a tally of different types of abuse, neglect, and other hallmarks of a rough childhood. According to the Adverse Childhood Experiences study, the rougher your childhood, the higher your score is likely to be and the higher your risk for later health problems.”
As it turns out, adverse childhood experiences are surprisingly common, with about two-thirds of survey respondents reporting experience with at least one of the following as a child:
- Physical abuse
- Sexual abuse
- Emotional abuse
- Physical neglect
- Emotional neglect
- Exposure to domestic violence
- Household substance abuse
- Household mental illness
- Parental separation or divorce
- Incarcerated household member
Personally, I didn’t deal with my own childhood trauma until I was 39 years old, my marriage in tatters.
It wasn’t because I didn’t want to deal with what had happened to me, but rather because I only remembered it at the age of 29, while recovering in hospital after being hit by a car (gotta love the way the brain works).
Once I remembered, I tried keeping quiet about it for a decade.
Throughout my teens and early 20’s, I believed that in order to get love, I had to have sex with someone.
I didn’t realize this was how I was operating until I attended Tony Robbin’s Date With Destiny seminar. Since then, I’ve worked with many women who’ve been in physically and emotionally abusive relationships and can’t understand why they stayed as long as they did — until they look back and realize they grew up watching their father being emotionally and physically abusive to their mom.
People who’ve been through adverse childhood experiences not only face increased physical health risks, but they also love differently because of the negative expectations they’ve come to associate with love.
They don’t do this consciously. They are playing out the patterns running through their unconscious mind, their brain controlling the show on auto-pilot.
Until you gain an awareness of your own unconscious patterns, limiting beliefs and fears, the same tape will keep on playing out for you in the conscious world.
Consider this: If you looked back over the timeline of your life, would you see a pattern of broken relationships with abusive and disrespectful partners? Or a pattern of meeting someone great, only to self-sabotage the relationship because it seemed too good to be true?
When you’ve been through adverse childhood experiences, your unconscious mind may become your own personal bully, telling you to believe lies such as these:
- “All the people I love will hurt or abuse me”
- “I deserve to be treated badly”
- “I am not worthy of lasting and loving relationships”
Our wonderful unconscious brain then seeks out to prove us right and keep us safe. The patterns then keep on playing out in our version of what love is.
The good news is that you can heal, learn positive coping mechanisms and live a long, healthy, happy life full of true, satisfying love.
3 Ways Traumatic Childhood Events Really Hurt Your Adult Relationships
“There are people with high ACE scores who do remarkably well,” Jack Shonkoff, a pediatrician and director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, told NPR.
“Resilience, he says, builds throughout life, and close relationships are key. Recent research also suggests that for adults, trauma informed therapy — which can center on art, yoga or mindfulness training — can help.”
In my own experience, dealing with your childhood trauma as an adult is a powerful opportunity to learn what real love is.
When you learn how to love yourself absolutely and unconditionally, because you are more than enough, you learn how to love others while setting boundaries around what you will and will not accept.
Learning to love yourself means learning that you can say no and not settle for any man or woman who happens to come along because you feel lonely. Instead, you’d rather be alone to do more self-discovery, then set out a course that makes you a magnet for the kind of romantic love you want as well.
I never really knew what love was until I loved my self unconditionally. Once I did, I found an amazing new partner.
Along the way, I’ve learned so much.
I’ve learned that love is a verb, and we can choose who we love.
I’ve learned that I am so worth loving.
I’ve learned to let go of the past so that I can be in love with the now.
I’ve learned how to love my perfect imperfections that make me me.
I’ve learned to trust my intuition and see the good in someone.
I’ve learned to love me even more so that I have more love to give others.
Maybe you, like me, didn’t have great experiences growing up.
Now I know that I have the power to choose to see the flip side of adverse childhood experiences.
If I can do that, so can you.
This guest article originally appeared on YourTango.com: How People With Adverse Childhood Experiences Love Differently.
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