10 Strategies For Coping With Childhood Emotional Neglect
10 Strategies For Coping With Childhood Emotional Neglect
10 Strategies For Coping With Childhood Emotional Neglect
Growing up with Childhood Emotional Neglect sets you up to struggle with a series of challenges
as an adult.
Childhood Emotional Neglect (CEN) happens when your parents fail to respond enough to your
emotions as they raise you.
When you grow up this way you automatically block your feelings off as a child to cope with the
implicit messages in your childhood home.
No Feelings Allowed.
With your emotions walled off, you go through your adolescence and adulthood lacking full
access to a potent, vital ingredient from within: your emotions, which should be motivating,
directing, connecting, stimulating, and empowering you.
When you are living this way, it’s hard to see the problem, or even that there is a problem. Most
children in emotionally neglectful homes have no idea that anyone should be noticing their
feelings, validating them, or responding to them. Then, when they grow into adults, they continue
to have no idea.
Yet as an adult who grew up with Emotional Neglect, you surely may sense that something is not
right with you, but you do not know what it is.
Once you understand that you missed out on a key element of childhood, you are finally freed
up to fix the problem. You can give yourself what you never got — emotional attention and
validation — and learn how to connect with your feelings and how to use them.
Childhood Emotional Neglect may leave you feeling somewhat empty and disconnected, lost or
alone. But good news! There are powerful things you can do to cope.
10 Strategies For Coping With Your Childhood Emotional Neglect
1. Deeply acknowledge the way Emotional Neglect happened in your family and how it’s
affected you.
This is not as easy as it might sound. It’s important to try to understand, for example, was it one
parent or both? Did your parents fail to respond to your emotions because they were struggling
themselves? Because they were selfishly focused on their own needs? Or because they simply
did not know that emotions matter? Was your Emotional Neglect active or passive, mean-
spirited or benign? How did it affect you as a child, and how is it affecting you now?
Understanding your CEN on a deep level will free you from self-blame and shame, and validate
your experience.
2. Accept that your emotions are blocked off, but they are still there, waiting for you.
Your child’s brain protected you by walling off your emotions, but it could not make them go
away completely. Today you can still access them. By accepting that they exist, you’ll be able to
learn how to listen to them, use them and manage them.
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3. Pay attention to your feelings.
This is probably the single most powerful thing you can do to cope with your CEN. It’s a way to
do the opposite of what your parents taught you, start to honor your feelings, and reach across
the wall to the richness, color, and connection that lies on the other side: your emotions. Paying
attention to your feelings will allow you to begin to use them as they are meant to be used.