Texas Christian Counseling Logo

  • CounselorsFind the best counselor for your needs
  • ServicesRead about the expertise available
    • Individual ServicesAddress your personal concerns confidentially
      • Abandonment Issues
      • ADHD
      • Aging and Geriatric Issues
      • Anger Management
      • Anxiety
      • Bipolar Disorder
      • Coaching
      • Codependency
      • Counseling for Children
      • Counseling in Spanish
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Depression
      • Eating Disorders
      • EMDR Treatment
      • Family Counseling
      • Grief Counseling
      • Individual Counseling
      • Infidelity and Affairs
      • Men’s Issues
      • OCD
      • Personal Development
      • Premarital Counseling
      • Professional Development
      • Relationship Issues
      • Spiritual Development
      • Trauma
      • Women’s Issues
    • Christian Couples CounselingWork through challenges together
      • Couples Counseling
      • Family Counseling
      • Marriage Counseling
    • Family CounselingEstablish the peaceful home you desire
      • Couples Counseling
      • Counseling for Teens
      • Family Counseling
    • Group CounselingBenefit from the support of others
      • Men’s Christian Recovery Groups
      • Men’s Sexual Addiction
        Recovery Group
      • All Counseling Groups
    • Online Counseling
    • Anxiety
    • Depression
    • Marriage Counseling
  • LocationsChoose from our variety of office locations
    • Alamo Ranch
    • Allen Christian CounselingAllen
    • Carrollton Christian CounselingCarrollton
    • Don't Tough it Out Alone: Thoughts on Grief CounselingFort Worth
    • Harlingen
    • Keller Christian CounselingKeller
    • Killeen
    •  1Laredo
    •  1Mansfield
    • How to Deal with Chronic AnxietyMcKinney
    • How to Cope with Anxiety: 6 Practical Techniques 2Plano
    • How to Deal with Chronic AnxietyRichardson
    • Bible Verses About Hope: How to Stay Afloat When You’re in a Storm 1Rockwall
    •  1Rowlett
    • What the Bible Tells Us About Mental HealthRoyse City
    • Stone Oak Christian CounselingStone Oak
    • Sulphur Springs
    •  1Online Counseling
  • CareersBecome an affiliated Christian counselor
  • (469) 333-6163Please give us a call, we are here to help
header-image

Common Childhood Experiences that Can Cause Emotional Trauma

Texas Christian Counseling
https://texaschristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/common-childhood-experiences-that-can-cause-emotional-trauma-2.jpg 1920 1282
https://texaschristiancounseling.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-TexasCC-1080-min.jpg
1255 West 15th Street Suite 445
PLANO, TX 75075
United States
1255 West 15th Street Suite 445
PLANO, TX 75075
United States
Photo of Tammy Varghese

Tammy Varghese

Jul
2025
23

Common Childhood Experiences that Can Cause Emotional Trauma

Tammy Varghese

Individual CounselingTrauma

Everyone starts life with a limited frame of reference for how the world works. It is a handful of adults and peers who shape us, teach us, help us grow. Sometimes, they damage us. It is only as we navigate adult relationships, intimacy, and careers that we begin to realize how we are damaged. We begin to wonder what went wrong.

Though we start life with a small frame of reference for what is “normal,” we later learn that some of the common childhood experiences we had at home and school were damaging. They resulted in deep emotional trauma that we now have to confront and heal.

A Bent Sapling

Children can be resilient, but they will only thrive when they experience healthy conditions. Essentially, children are like delicate saplings of trees growing, taking shape, and bearing fruit. How well they grow, what heights they will reach, and what shape they will take is determined by their experiences in early childhood.

Like us if you are enjoying this content.

All forms of violent abuse are like axes directed at the sapling. It is little wonder that they won’t grow if they had to endure those experiences at so tender an age. On the other hand, some children endure subtle forms of emotional trauma and are deeply affected by it, though they won’t immediately show it.

Common Childhood Experiences That Cause Emotional Trauma

The Silent Treatment

Many adults are not equipped to handle their emotions. They go one of two ways when they are upset: either they blow up and externalize their emotions on their kids, or they internalize their emotions and use the silent treatment. This is damaging for many reasons, but mainly because children do not understand what their parents are doing when they suddenly become distant and silent.

They are left to fill in the gaps using context clues, but without the proper understanding, they will likely come to the wrong conclusion and end up taking all the blame while feeling abandoned by their parents. This is emotional trauma.

Other parents use the silent treatment as a form of discipline. When they are upset, they might tell their kids to “go and think about their actions.” The reason this is a toxic form of discipline is that children can’t intellectualize their actions in the same way as adults. Likewise, they shouldn’t be forced to try.

They will simply feel the distance grow between them and their parents, especially in times when they need closeness and tenderness. They will likely grow into adults who can’t work through issues in relationships because they never had dialogue with someone else when things went wrong.

Policing of Emotions

“Stop sulking.”
“Don’t talk back to your mother.”
“Stop crying or I’ll give you something to cry about.”

All of these statements are an adult’s way of trying to police a child’s emotions, usually in an attempt to de-escalate a situation or set a boundary.

There are times when children are unruly and need to be reminded to be respectful. However, adults need to remember that children can’t be disciplined into regulating their emotions; most adults struggle with regulating their emotions, too. Disciplining a child because they have a powerful emotion will simply teach them that feeling and expressing an emotion is unacceptable.

They will likely grow up repressing their emotions because they have been taught that certain emotions must not be expressed or even felt. Policing emotions is emotional trauma.

Blaming the Children for The Parent’s Moods

“You’ve made me mad.”
“You’ve given me a headache.”
“I can’t with you right now.”

Statements like these come from parents who never learned to take responsibility for their moods and emotions. Yes, adults are just people too, and people who are often flawed. However, saying these kinds of things causes the children to feel responsible for their parents’ mood, and that is emotional trauma.

Common Childhood Experiences that Can Cause Emotional TraumaThese kids will learn to walk on eggshells so as not to offend their parents, or “rock the boat” too much. They will become anxious and afraid of causing an upset, because they believe that they are the reason for all of their parents’ upset emotions. As adults, they will feel guilty and anxious in relationships, likely afraid of confrontation. Those with ADHD may not be willing to be vulnerable, lest they cause their partners to become upset with them.

Having to Be the Parent

Some children are called “mature for their age” because they take an extra amount of responsibility around the house as a child. This might include cooking meals, taking care of younger siblings, feeding pets, tidying and cleaning, and generally making sure the household is functioning as it should at a level that is beyond just learning life skills through chores.

When children assume too much responsibility at too young an age, they will likely develop issues like abandonment trauma, feelings of betrayal, and an avoidant attachment style. They learn that no one can be trusted. They become independent to the point of never being able to ask for or accept help.

Hard or Strict Parenting

When parents rely on warnings and discipline all the time, they are not just strict; they are trying to dominate a child. Tough love does not work on children; it just makes them traumatized. Parents who feel the need to dominate their children do so because they feel out of control. Asserting dominance over a child because the parent wants to establish a dynamic where they are on top doesn’t have the child’s interests or future in mind.

History and culture have often praised this type of parenting, deeming it acceptable because it retains a traditional idea of hierarchy. However, it teaches children that the only way to attain power is by forcefully asserting dominance and bending other people’s wills.

They may grow up to be narcissistic bosses who bully their employees, abusive partners who don’t need consent, and hard parents who believe they are doing the right thing. On the other hand, they might grow to be fearful and submissive, seeking out toxic power structures in work and love because that is what they are used to.

Being Denied Privacy or Personal Space

Many strict parents employ policies that do not allow children to have any privacy except in the bathroom. They establish households that are forbidden to have locked doors, and even bedrooms might be monitored under the guise of safety and concern for the children’s well-being. As with other expressions of strict parenting, this policy is not truly for the children’s well-being but rather for a parent who needs to control every aspect of their children’s lives.

Most young children don’t even consider their need for privacy or personal space. As they grow, however, many children take pride in having a space like a bedroom to call their own, and it becomes a vital part of their development.

Being denied a basic human privilege like privacy and personal space is emotionally traumatizing to the natural development of a child. It teaches them that they are untrustworthy and unimportant as individuals. Giving them personal space and freedom teaches them that there is trust in the relationship and allows them to be a steward of physical things and personal time.

Growing Strong

One of the most difficult balances to walk as adults is acknowledging how we were traumatized in our childhood while at the same time taking responsibility to fix that damage. That might involve confronting our parents for certain things, or we might simply find freedom in reframing childhood experiences as “traumatic.” However, we begin working on ourselves as adults. It is never too late to start living a healthier emotional life that bears fruit and protects others.

If you would like to add counseling to your journey of confronting your childhood, call our offices today. Talking with a counselor is an excellent way to understand the impact of your childhood experiences while discovering helpful tools to confront trauma. We have therapists at our practice ready to assist you.

Photo:
“Pink and Purple Flowers”, Courtesy of Liana S, Unsplash.com, CC0 License

  • Share on Facebook
  • Tweet it
  • ↑ Back to top
Photo of Tammy Varghese
Tammy is currently not accepting new clients

Tammy Varghese

Licensed Professional Counselor
(469) 333-6163 connect@texaschristiancounseling.com

Life brings joy as well as sorrow, frustration, and disappointments. By God’s grace, He does not leave us alone. He offers a peace that passes understanding and support through brothers and sisters in Christ. When times are difficult and your struggles seem unmanageable, I offer a safe place for you to go – a place for you to share your story and navigate what the next steps might look like. My passion is to provide effective tools for you to use throughout life so you can see clearly through the clouds of despair, allowing God's peace to intercede and work in your life as your mind and heart are open to Him. Read more articles by Tammy »

Other articles that might interest you...

Adverse Childhood Experiences and the ACE Study 3
Texas Christian Counseling

Adverse Childhood Experiences and the ...

🎧 Listen to this article Adverse childhood experiences are traumatic events that take place in a child’s life before the...

continue reading »
spacer

7 Ways That Childhood Trauma Can Appear in Your Adult Life 3
Photo of Marissa Erickson

Marissa Erickson

7 Ways That Childhood Trauma Can Appear ...

You might have realized by now that the past has a way of affecting the present. Childhood trauma can follow...

continue reading »

About Tammy

Photo of Tammy Varghese

Tammy Varghese, MA, LPC

Licensed Professional Counselor

Life brings joy as well as sorrow, frustration, and disappointments. By God’s grace, He does not leave us alone. He offers a peace that passes understanding and support through brothers and sisters in Christ. When times are difficult and your struggles seem unmanageable, I offer a safe place for you to go – a place for you to share your story and navigate what the next steps might look like. My passion is to provide effective tools for you to use throughout life so you can see clearly through the clouds of despair, allowing God's peace to intercede and work in your life as your mind and heart are open to Him. View Tammy's Profile

Recent articles by Tammy

  • Jul 23 · Common Childhood Experiences that Can Cause Emotional Trauma
  • Jun 20 · Creating a High-Functioning Depression Resource Guide for Your Team
  • May 30 · 4 Indications That You Have Abandonment Anxiety
See all articles by Tammy »

Related Services

  • Individual Counseling
  • Trauma

Tammy's Office Locations

  • Photo of the Plano office

    Plano

    Texas

    General Office Number

    (469) 333-6163
    1255 West 15th Street, Suite 445 Plano, TX 75075

    View Office Details
  • Photo of the Online Counseling office

    Online Counseling

    Texas

    General Office Number

    (469) 333-6163
    TX,  

    View Office Details
Texas Christian Counseling Logo
Texas Christian Counseling
Professional help with faith-based values
Welcome to Texas Christian Counseling. We are an association of professional, independently licensed Christian counselors and therapists. We offer multiple office locations throughout the state of Texas for your convenience, including the Plano, Frisco, Flower Mound, and Rowlett communities. We look forward to serving you!
© 2025 Plano Christian Counseling. All rights reserved.
1255 West 15th Street, Plano, TX 75075. Tel (469) 333-6163.
Facebook Sitemap Online Counseling Privacy Policy Terms of Use Feel free to contact us!