Childhood Trauma in Adults: Signs You’re Still Carrying It
Takeaway: Childhood experiences can shape how we relate to ourselves and others in ways we don’t always recognize, even long after they’ve happened.
Have you ever found yourself facing the end of a relationship - whether romantic or platonic - asking yourself “how did the same pattern happen again?” Or maybe you’ve found yourself receiving even positive feedback, but the voice in the back of your head still keeps repeating “Still not enough.” Or maybe you find you can’t let yourself enjoy the present moment because, in the back of your mind, you just know the other shoe is waiting to drop.
You might not connect these patterns to experiences from your childhood. But childhood trauma in adults doesn’t always show up as clear, “lightbulb” memories of the past. Instead, these past experiences of trauma can influence how you respond to stress or overwhelm, how you relate to other people, or even think about yourself and your identity.
As a therapist who specializes in anxiety and trauma at Madison Square Psychotherapy, I’ve seen firsthand how essential it is to help people make sense of how past experiences may still be affecting their lives today. In this post, we’ll explore some of the ways that childhood trauma can continue to affect adulthood and how trauma-informed therapy may help you better understand those experiences.
What Is Childhood Trauma?
Childhood trauma happens when we experience something intensely threatening to our sense of safety and security during childhood or adolescence (before the age of 18 years). This event (or events) often overwhelms our ability to cope or disrupts our sense of safety, stability, connection, or control. Many people think of childhood trauma as just being physical, sexual, or emotional abuse. While these are important examples, childhood trauma can also include experiences such as:
Physical or emotional neglect
Growing up around addiction, violence, or intense conflict
Having caregivers who were unpredictable, highly critical, or emotionally unavailable
Losing a caregiver or experiencing their prolonged absence
Repeated bullying or discrimination
Being expected to take on adult responsibilities too early
Experiencing a serious accident or life-threatening illness
Living through war or being forced to flee your home
Our reactions to trauma as children also depend on how our parents, caregivers, or the other important adults in our lives responded. If, as children, we weren’t given the chance to process traumatic experiences, they may continue having a direct effect on us throughout adulthood.
Symptoms of Childhood Trauma in Adults
Trauma affects everyone differently. This is why trauma responses in adults can vary depending on the type of trauma someone experienced, how long it lasted, whether they had support around them, and many other parts of their lives and experiences.
While symptoms can have many possible causes, the following childhood trauma signs in adults might help give you a useful starting point for reflection:
1. Being Highly Critical of Yourself
Harsh self-criticism sometimes develops when, as a child, getting care, approval, or safety feels tied to achievements or being “good.” In fact, one of the signs of emotional trauma in adults is an inner critical voice that starts repeating specific messages you received as a child. This voice may show up as feeling ashamed when you need help, replaying small mistakes over and over again, or believing that doing anything less than “perfect” means you’re a failure.
2. Having Difficulties Identifying or Expressing Your Emotions
Some children might have felt unsafe expressing their emotions when they were growing up, especially if doing so could lead to criticism, punishment, dismissal, or conflict. So, if you now find it difficult to clearly name what you’re feeling, this may be one of the signs of repressed childhood trauma in adults.
3. Feeling Responsible for Other People’s Emotions
Childhood trauma in adults often shows up as feeling responsible for everyone else’s emotions. For instance, you might feel constantly aware of how others are feeling and change your behavior to make them feel comfortable or to “keep the peace.” Or, when someone feels disappointed, you may think that you need to fix it and assume you are the reason that they feel the way they do. This pattern can sometimes develop when, as a child, you may have felt like you had to manage your caregiver’s emotions or play the role of “peacekeeper” between family members.
4. Finding It Difficult to Trust Others
Childhood trauma often impacts our sense of trust. This is why some of the childhood trauma symptoms in adults involve being distant or guarded around other people – because closeness may have once felt unpredictable or unsafe. So, you might keep the people in your life at arm's length, expecting them to either disappoint or abandon you.
5. Setting Boundaries Makes You Feel Guilty
Childhood trauma, especially abuse, can involve blurred or violated boundaries, which can affect how safe and secure relationships feel later in life. Over time, children may receive the message that relationships are both necessary and dangerous, making healthy boundaries difficult to recognize. If limits were ignored or punished when we were young, asserting ourselves can still feel risky as adults.
Unresolved childhood trauma in adults can make it difficult to say “no”, ask for space, or express our needs. Even setting a reasonable boundary could feel selfish, or bring up fears that the relationship might end.
6. Resting or Letting Your Guard Down Feels Challenging
Childhood trauma responses in adults can be seen when the body continues expecting the worst, even when someone is in a safe situation. So, if you grew up in an unpredictable environment, your body's way of protecting you might have been to always be prepared for the unexpected to happen.
Because your body is holding on to this trauma response, you might feel constantly on edge or become restless when there isn’t anything demanding your attention. This is why resting might bring up feelings of guilt or fears that you are forgetting something important.
How Therapy Can Help You Heal From Childhood Trauma
Therapy for childhood trauma in adults should feel collaborative, tailored to your experiences, and move at a pace that feels manageable for you. Over time, trauma-informed therapy may help you to…
Build a Greater Sense of Safety
By noticing how stress shows up, you can learn how to ground yourself so that you feel safe in your body again. You’ll also have the opportunity to practice setting healthy boundaries and calm down your nervous system, which may have been overactive for a long time.
Understand Where Current Patterns Come From
You might not always recognize the ways that childhood trauma in adults impacts everyday life. However, a trauma-informed therapist can help you explore any unhelpful beliefs you may be carrying with you, such as, I have to earn love or, I can’t depend on anyone.
Knowing how to treat childhood trauma in adults is often about understanding where these beliefs or expectations came from and deciding whether they’re still serving you.
Process Trauma and Practice New Ways of Responding
There is no one-size-fits-all method when treating childhood trauma in adults. Instead, you and your therapist will work together to process the trauma at a pace that feels manageable for you and using an approach that feels right for you. That approach might be trauma-informed talk therapy, trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT), EMDR, internal family systems (IFS), somatic approaches, mindfulness practices, or a combination of these.
Over time, you’ll learn how to respond to stress in more helpful ways and build safer relationships without automatically returning to old patterns.
Begin Treatment for Childhood Trauma at Madison Square Psychotherapy
The patterns you carry aren’t character flaws. Many of them may have developed in response to circumstances that you couldn’t change. At Madison Square Psychotherapy, we understand how childhood trauma in adults can continue to affect their daily life. Our trauma-informed therapists will support you so that you can understand how the past may be affecting your present, all without any pressure to move faster than feels right for you. Whether you’re looking for virtual treatment across New York or New Jersey or prefer in person therapy at our NoMad Manhattan office (located just a few blocks from Madison Square Park and the Flatiron Building), we’re here to meet you where you’re at.
Contact our therapists to get started. We can begin by addressing the concerns that feel most urgent to you right now, and gradually work toward helping you build greater safety, connection, and trust in yourself.
Frequently Asked Questions About Childhood Trauma in Adults
If the effects of childhood trauma are still echoing in your adult life, you might still have some ongoing questions about what the signs might be. To help, we’ve answered some of the FAQs we hear from clients below.
What Are Examples of Childhood Trauma in Adults?
Some examples of how childhood trauma shows up in adulthood include:
Difficulty trusting others
Intrusive memories
Issues with sleep
Feeling constantly alert
Worsening of mental health conditions like depression or anxiety.
Experiencing gaps or “fuzziness” in childhood memories
Feeling detached when talking about your past
While these are some examples of childhood trauma in adults, it’s important to remember that not everyone will experience the same signs or symptoms.
What Is Complex Trauma in Adults?
Complex trauma in adults occurs when you’ve been exposed to multiple traumatic events, especially in childhood, that can severely impact development. It often develops when caregiving relationships feel frightening or harmful and continue throughout childhood. Complex trauma can affect emotional regulation, trust, self-worth, identity, relationships, and your sense of safety.
How Do You Treat Childhood Trauma in Adults?
Treating childhood trauma in adults is often a gradual process that involves building safety and stability before jumping into processing traumatic experiences. In trauma-informed care, you’ll usually start by building coping tools and grounding skills that can help you manage any feelings of discomfort or difficult emotions. You’ll also work to understand your current patterns and practise healthier ways of relating to both yourself and others.
How Does Childhood Trauma Affect Mental Health in Adulthood?
Childhood trauma often stays in the body and shapes how you respond to stress, understand yourself, and relate to others. In adulthood, this can contribute to anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, or intense reactions to conflict and rejection. It may also continue to drive specific patterns or behaviors that started out as ways to keep you safe in unsafe situations, such as perfectionism, people-pleasing, avoiding certain places, or substance misuse.
Written by: Georgia Kulok, MSW
Clinically Reviewed by: Kristin Anderson, LCSW
