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The Importance of Connecting with Your Inner Child

 

When I first started therapy, every time I heard the words "inner child" I wanted to puke. First of all, the only memories I have from my childhood aren't really memories. They are home videos. I have no idea how I felt as a child, and I certainly didn't care to do so. I wanted to put all of that in the past. After all, could my so-called "inner child" really play that big of a role in my life today?

Well, as it turns out, she does. Sometimes, my inner child takes over, and I become an emotional four-year-old who can't control her own life. After years of therapy, I finally learned why it was so important to connect with that scared little girl. 

4 Reasons Why You Should Learn to Connect With Your Inner Child

 

1. It will increase your self-awareness.

For a long time, I didn't even know my inner child was relevant because I didn't understand how she played a role in who I am today. However, when I started to work with a trauma therapist on this, it was like opening this portal to a new place I didn't even know existed. 

Whenever I felt insecure or afraid, that was my inner child. I'm a grown. successful woman, who has no reason to feel scared of standing up to others. However, as a child, I wasn't allowed to have an opinion. As a result, I turned that viewpoint inwards and stopped allowing myself to be assertive. 

Once I was able to identify that the fear stemmed from my inner child, I was able to soothe her, and tell her that everything is okay, that "I got this." Although I haven't perfected this art, when I do soothe my inner child, I am set free from the fear that holds me back. Gaining that self-awareness was the first step I had to take to start healing. 

2. It helps you heal.

Although I love my parents, I do have to acknowledge and admit that they are human and made mistakes. Similarly, they were doing the best they could while raising me. I constantly have to remind myself of that. Unfortunately, simply being aware of this doesn't take away any of the pain or trauma from my childhood. 

I let that pain fester for far too long. It has caused me to sit it resentments, become a victim, and be held hostage by my own sadness. 

Fortunately, when I did begin to connect with my inner child, I could be compassionate to the wounds she had suffered from. I could nurture her and help her heal. In turn, the healing of my inner child enabled the healing of myself as an adult. 

3. It is empowering.

When I am no longer run by self-doubt, insecurity, and a million forms of fear, I am able to be the courageous woman I am today. By connecting with my inner child, I can take control of my emotions and stand up for myself when needed.

In the past, I coped with my trauma by using drugs and alcohol. It progressed into a near-fatal addiction that turned my life upside down and caused more trauma, as it usually does. This allowed me to play the victim role. I could look at others and say, "well, if this happened to you, you would drink/use, too.'"

Today, I don't have to be a victim. As my therapist always said, "that is no way to live." Instead, I am a woman who has a voice, values, opinion, and self-worth. 

4. It enables you to connect trauma with behaviors in order to change your behaviors. 

Due to my childhood experiences, I was always afraid to speak up for myself. I thought that my emotions were overdramatic, my opinions didn't matter, and that everything was my fault. Once I recognized that these thought patterns induced unhealthy behaviors and coping mechanisms, I began to change the way I acted.

Now, when my emotional security feels threatened, I can recognize that it is my inner child and that my inner child is not who I am today. This didn't happen overnight, it happened through years of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), but it was completely worth it.

I now know the importance of self-soothing and identifying emotions rather than avoiding them. It's made me a happier person today. 

The Lesson I Learned

 

Although I've learned a lot of things in sobriety, the most important lesson is that the things that make me uncomfortable are the things that cultivate the most healing. The biggest thing that has allowed me to heal and to develop a happy life is by connecting with my inner-child. She went from being a girl I barely knew, to an important and driving factor in the person I am today. My emotional childhood trauma no longer as to run my life - instead, I get to run my life.

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Haley, I connected with your article in so many ways. I too felt that my opinion as a  child did not matter and took that into adulthood,I too had to get sober ,finally at age 35 and through meetings,therapy,self help groups,seminars,courses and socialization with sober friends finally in my 40s I grew up emotionally and was able to mend relationships with my children,stand up for myself and mover forward socially and in business. I had put it all behind me,meaning the seemingly "bad things" in my life but as we know they are still there and we still carry them. Being sober did not stop the "seeming bad" things from happening to me and I call them seemingly bad because they are what really finally opened to the doors of life to me as I realized that this is how I grew after I had finally accepted my failures, and losses in my life but it wasn't until my second child passed away,yes, I lost 2 of my 5 children,did I realize after the urging from friends that I should write a book about my life of  my adversities,tragedies ,traumas, and triumps.It wasn't till I finished writing my book and after it was published and on the market for about 6 months that it finally hit me; I have lived a life of adversity and the pain is still here and although I may get through it I will never get over it and that is ok. I accept that I  have losses ,traumas,tragedies and that it hurts and that the realization is that it should hurt and I will just have to deal with the pain and that some days are better than others.Somehow that is healing for me.That acceptance of the events,my personal failures,and losses. My body has reacted ,just as the studies show,that my many ACEs and continued adversities has caused a lifetime of illnesses with the latest being cancer in my cirrhotic liver from all of the drinking to medicate myself from these events. I am 70 years old and now with all of the knowledge that I have now,I have work to do as I continue to write and mentor young adults . It is in reading your article and  of others on this website that I feel that I am not alone in this. Thank you and all of the others for being here. 

Thank you for sharing! I connected to much of what you wrote. Particularly in the first paragraph when you wrote about childhood memories as being "home videos". Oh so true. But, through EMDR therapy I was finally able to see my life and past through my own eyes in lieu of the dissociated state of watching something horrible happen to a little girl (me) as if I was watching a movie. 

I wish you (and your inner child) continued growth, healing, empowerment, and peace.

Teri

Very encouraging post. I'm not sure anyone who's experienced childhood trauma can recover from its effects without connecting with their inner child, and I suspect that getting to know one's inner child is helpful even for those with no history of childhood trauma. Our childhood experiences -- good, bad, indifferent, and everything in between -- really do lay the foundation for all else to come. I think too that when we connect with our inner child, it's easier for us to cultivate self-compassion for ourselves -- both today's adult and the past's child. 

Thanks for a thought-provoking post, Hailey. Hope to see more posts from you around here.

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