Understanding and Healing the Lasting Impacts of Childhood Emotional Neglect

Childhood emotional neglect is a form of trauma that often goes unrecognized. Unlike physical abuse, which leaves visible marks, emotional neglect can be harder to identify because it involves the absence of necessary care rather than the presence of visible harm. Yet its impacts can be profound and long-lasting, affecting an individual’s emotional well-being, relationships, self-concept, and overall quality of life well into adulthood.

What is Childhood Emotional Neglect?

Childhood emotional neglect occurs when a child’s developmentally appropriate emotional needs are consistently unmet by their caregivers. This can include a lack of affection, validation, and attention to the child’s feelings. Emotional neglect isn’t generally characterized by active abuse or malice, but rather by a pervasive sense of emotional absence or unavailability. When parents or caregivers fail to attune to a child, provide comfort, or offer consistent emotional support, the child internalizes damaging messages about their worth and the validity of their feelings, perceptions, and needs. While emotional neglect may not leave physical scars its effects can be just as damaging, shaping how an individual interacts with the world and themselves.

Lasting Impacts of Emotional Neglect

  1. Low Self-Worth and Shame
    Children who experience emotional neglect often internalize the message that they are not deserving of love or care. They may grow up feeling unworthy or unimportant, leading to low self-esteem and related challenges. This sense of inadequacy can persist throughout life, contributing to feelings of shame, self-doubt, and a constant need for external validation.

  2. Difficulty Identifying and Expressing Emotions
    Emotional neglect teaches children to suppress or ignore their feelings because their emotions were either ignored or invalidated. As adults, they may struggle to identify what they are feeling or may experience emotional numbness. This disconnection from their emotional experiences can make it difficult to communicate their needs or form intimate, fulfilling relationships.

  3. Challenges in Relationships
    Because emotional neglect often leaves individuals with an underdeveloped sense of emotional connection, they may find it difficult to trust others or feel comfortable with emotional intimacy. They may either avoid relationships altogether or become overly dependent on others for validation.

  4. Anxiety and Depression
    The lack of emotional support in childhood can lead to chronic feelings of anxiety and depression in adulthood. Individuals may feel constantly on edge, anticipating rejection or abandonment, or they may struggle with feelings of sadness and hopelessness. Without the coping mechanisms developed through healthy emotional support in childhood, these individuals may have trouble managing stress and emotional challenges.

  5. People-Pleasing and Perfectionism
    In an attempt to gain approval or love, many individuals who suffer from emotional neglect develop people-pleasing tendencies. They may experience debilitating preoccupation with how others perceive them and go to great lengths to make others happy, often at the expense of meeting their own basic needs. Similarly perfectionism, which is often rooted in shame, results in unrealistic standards that ultimately exacerbate feelings of inadequacy.

Healing Through Therapy: Reclaiming Emotional Health

The good news is that the impacts of childhood emotional neglect, like other forms of trauma, can be healed. Therapy provides a safe space to process the emotional wounds of the past and develop healthier ways of relating with ourselves and others. 

  1. Developing Emotional Awareness
    One of the first steps in healing emotional neglect is learning to recognize and validate our emotions. Therapy can help us reconnect with our emotional experiences, practice identifying our feelings, and express them in healthy ways. This process often involves developing a deeper understanding of how childhood neglect has shaped emotional responses and behavior.

  2. Building Self-Compassion
    Healing from emotional neglect involves understanding, challenging and replacing negative views of self with more realistic versions. Therapy can help us learn to interrupt cycles of self-criticism and shame and cultivate more compassion and understanding toward ourselves. This can help rebuild self-esteem and create a stronger sense of self-worth.

  3. Learning to Set Boundaries
    For individuals who struggle with people-pleasing tendencies or have difficulty asserting themselves, therapy offers an opportunity to learn how to set healthy boundaries. Learning to prioritize and care for ourselves in this way is a crucial part of healing from emotional neglect and building healthy relationships.

  4. Building Trust and Emotional Intimacy
    Therapy can help us deepen our capacity to trust ourselves and others, fostering deeper emotional intimacy in relationships. By providing a space to examine and process the roots of our emotional wounding in past attachment relationships, therapy helps us create more secure and fulfilling connections, leading to greater emotional well-being in the present.

Conclusion

Childhood emotional neglect can have lasting impacts on an individual’s mental and emotional health, relationships, and sense of self. The effects may not always be visible, but they nonetheless shape the way we interact with ourselves and others throughout life. However, healing is possible. Through therapy, individuals can reclaim their emotional health, learn to express their feelings, build healthier relationships, and develop a stronger sense of self-worth. If you or someone you know is struggling with the impacts of childhood emotional neglect, remember that healing begins with understanding. By addressing the wounds of the past with compassion and support, it’s possible to change these patterns and build a more fulfilling, connected life.


Finding Your Glimmers: Small Moments That Spark Joy and Safety

As a therapist, I spend a lot of time talking to people about their triggers—those moments,

memories, or sensations that activate the body’s stress response. Triggers often feel like alarms

going off, pulling us back into old patterns of fear, anxiety, or pain. But what if I told you there’s

another side to this story?

Enter glimmers.

What are Glimmers?

Coined by Deb Dana, a pioneer in polyvagal theory, glimmers are those micro-moments of

safety, connection, and ease that signal to your nervous system, “You’re okay” (Dana, 2018).

They’re the opposite of triggers—small, often subtle experiences that activate your parasympathetic nervous system and help your body shift out of fight-or-flight, and into a state of calm and regulation.

Glimmers are the tiny sparks that bring a sense of warmth or comfort—like feeling the sun on your face after a long winter, hearing your favorite song unexpectedly, or sharing a genuine laugh with a friend.

Why Glimmers Matter


Our brains are wired to scan for threats, a survival mechanism that’s been essential throughout

human history (Porges, 2011). But in today’s world, where chronic stress is often the norm, we can get stuck in that hyper-alert state. Recognizing glimmers helps retrain your nervous system, teaching it to notice and savor moments of safety and joy.

When you intentionally look for and embrace glimmers, you are:

  • Strengthening your ability to self-regulate

  • Building resilience in the face of stress

  • Creating a stronger foundation for emotional well-being

Glimmers can act as your emotional anchors. Just as triggers can throw you off balance, glimmers can help you reset. Being aware of your glimmers can add to your emotional toolkit for navigating challenging moments. A recent study found that experiencing daily positive moments can have a profound positive impact on your mood, suggesting that intentionally taking time to notice and engage with glimmers can boost your mood and overall wellbeing.

Additionally, attending to your glimmers can help rewire your brain with “micro-doses” of healing. Similarly to the way that experiencing stress can make anxiety feel second nature, regularly noting your glimmers can rewire your brain to find comfort more easily. Since our brain is always learning and adapting, if you are constantly attending to perceived threats, it will become wired toward stress and hypervigilance. Conversely, consistently attending to positives like gratitude and glimmers can serve to counteract stress responses by conditioning the brain to recognize safety and notice calm, supporting in regulating the nervous system. Just as chronic stress can wire the brain for anxiety, consistent attention to glimmers can help train it to default to calm.

How to Start Noticing Your Glimmers

  1. Slow Down and Pay Attention. Glimmers are subtle. It might be the warmth of a cup of coffee in your hands, the sight of your pet curling up nearby, or the smell offresh grass after a rain. Pause and notice how these moments feel in your body.

  2. Engage Your Senses. Glimmers often show up through sensory experiences. What sights, sounds, tastes, or textures bring you a sense of comfort or peace? Pay attention to those.

  3. Name and Claim Them. When you notice a glimmer, acknowledge it. Say to yourself, “This feels good,” or “I feel safe right now.” Naming the experience helps your brain create a positive association (Siegel, 2010). Sharing your glimmers with a friend can also serve to reinforce the experience.

  4. Create Space for More Glimmers. Build routines that invite these moments into your day. It could be a few minutes of stretching, stepping outside for fresh air, or intentionally spending time with someone who makes you feel seen and valued.

Think of glimmers as breadcrumbs leading you back to a place of balance. As with anything, practice and repetition are essential, so be sure to remind yourself that this will take time and that it will be time well spent. Over time, the more you intentionally and consistently take time to recognize and cultivate these moments, the more resilient and regulated your nervous system becomes, as your brain rewires itself to seek out and attend to these positive, calm moments. Instead of living in a state of constant vigilance, you can begin to experience more calm, connection, and joy.

In a world that often moves too fast and demands too much, glimmers remind us that safety, beauty, and peace still exist—even in the smallest of moments. They’re not just nice-to-haves; they’re essential for restoring balance and nurturing your well-being.

So, what’s one glimmer you can notice today?

References

Cherry, K. (2022). What does it mean to be triggered? Verywell Mind.

https://www.verywellmind.com/what-does-it-mean-to-be-triggered-4175432

Dana, D. (2018). The Polyvagal Theory in Therapy: Engaging the Rhythm of Regulation. W. W. Norton &

Company.

Porges, S. W. (2007). The polyvagal perspective. Biological Psychology, 74(2), 116–143.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsycho.2006.06.009

Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment,

Communication, and Self-Regulation. W. W. Norton &Company.

Siegel, D. J. (2010). Mindsight: The New Science of Personal Transformation. BantamBooks.

VanBeek, M., & Grady, S. M. (2022). Individual differences in emotional reactivity to triggers:

Exploring the role of personality traits. Personality and Individual Differences, 184, 111204.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2021.111204