How Childhood Trauma Can Wreck Your Relationship And What You Can Do to Heal 

 July 25, 2015

By  Jed Diamond

childhood trauma wreck relationshipWe all want real, lasting love in our lives. We spend a lot of time searching for that special someone, but even when we find them we can’t be sure the relationship will last. The majority of marriages fail, either ending in divorce and separation or devolving into bitterness and dysfunction. Of all the people who get married, only three in ten remain in healthy, happy marriages. Are most of us doomed to failure or is there something we’ve been missing that can help us live happily ever after?

Being a psychotherapist who specializes in helping people with their relationships didn’t save me from making the same mistakes my clients were making. I had been married and divorced, was trying to parent our children while working and trying to have a social life.  I not only felt discouraged about own love life, but I felt like a fraud trying to help others achieve success where I had failed.

Before looking for love once again, I decided to take a break and learn everything I could about what made relationships work and what caused them to fail. I’m happy to say I’ve found some answers. I applied what I learned, met my present wife, Carlin, and we would’ve now been happily married for thirty-five years. I learned that the secret for developing a loving relationship that can last a life-time, was understanding the ways that childhood trauma impacts our lives.

Ongoing research from The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study demonstrates conclusively that childhood trauma can impact our physical, emotional, and relational health. For the first time I made the connection between my father’s attempted suicide when I was five and my adult depression, erectile dysfunction, and attention deficit problems. I understood, for the first time, that my mother’s withdrawal and constant worry contributed to my fears of abandonment and ongoing beliefs that I wasn’t safe.

The ACE study asked ten questions to assess childhood trauma. What surprised me was how many of us suffer from trauma. Two-thirds of the study participants answered “yes” to at least one of the questions and if we answered “yes” to one there was a good chance that we answered “yes” to others. I had 4 Aces (Great in playing poker, not so great for my personal and relationship health). See how many ACEs you’ve experienced:

Prior to your 18th birthday:

  1. [ ] Did a parent or other adult in the household often or very often… Swear at you, insult you, put you down, or humiliate you? or Act in a way that made you afraid that you might be physically hurt?
  2. [ ] Did a parent or other adult in the household often or very often… Push, grab, slap, or throw something at you? or Ever hit you so hard that you had marks or were injured?
  3. [ ] Did an adult or person at least 5 years older than you ever… Touch or fondle you or have you touch their body in a sexual way? or Attempt or actually have oral, anal, or vaginal intercourse with you?
  4. [ ] Did you often or very often feel that … No one in your family loved you or thought you were important or special? or Your family didn’t look out for each other, feel close to each other, or support each other?
  5. [ ] Did you often or very often feel that … You didn’t have enough to eat, had to wear dirty clothes, and had no one to protect you? or Your parents were too drunk or high to take care of you or take you to the doctor if you needed it?
  6. [ ] Was a biological parent ever lost to you through divorce, abandonment, or other reason ?
  7. [ ] Was your mother or stepmother:
    Often or very often pushed, grabbed, slapped, or had something thrown at her? or Sometimes, often, or very often kicked, bitten, hit with a fist, or hit with something hard? or Ever repeatedly hit over at least a few minutes or threatened with a gun or knife?
  8. [ ]  Did you live with anyone who was a problem drinker or alcoholic, or who used street drugs?
  9. [ ] Was a household member depressed or mentally ill, or did a household member attempt suicide?
  1. [ ] Did a household member go to prison?

These experiences actually change the way our brains function and cause us to develop beliefs about ourselves that make us hunger for a relationship where we can heal, but also are triggered by stresses that arise in our relationships. Here are seven common self-limiting beliefs. Check off the ones you feel may be operating in your life today. They probably don’t have these thoughts all the time, but they often play out in our subconscious, and act like a program running in the background, undermining our peace and well-being and coming out more strongly when we feel stressed.

  1. [ ] I am not safe.
  1. [ ] I am worthless.
  1. [ ] I am powerless.
  1. [ ] I am not loveable.
  1. [ ] I cannot trust anyone.
  1. [ ] I am bad.
  1. [ ] I am alone.

Which of these beliefs have you noticed in your own life? Which ones do you feel may be operating in the life of your partner? The bad news is that unhealed trauma can change our brains. Trauma can cause us to be constantly “on alert.” Our brain never shuts down and relaxes. Even when we’re with a loving partner, our brains are constantly scanning for danger. We often misinterpret things our partner says or does as an attack. We become locked in a negative loop, where we see our partner as a source of danger, rather than support.

The result is that we experience physical, emotional, and relationship problems that cause our marriages to fail. Even good marriages bend under the weight of the misunderstandings and lost hopes and dreams. What’s worse is that we come to blame our partner or ourselves and we fail to recognize the real cause of our problems in our early experiences with our first love objects, our parents.

The good news is that healing can occur. There’s a lot we can do ourselves. I highly recommend the book, Childhood Disrupted: How Your Biography Becomes Your Biology and How You can Heal by Donna Jackson Nakazawa. You’ll learn about how our childhood impacts our health and well-being and more importantly the things we all can do to heal. Let us know what you’ve experienced, what questions you have,  and what healing has worked for you.

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Image Credit

Best Wishes,

Jed Diamond


Founder and VHS (Visionary Healer Scholar) of MenAlive

  1. Thank you, Jed, for bringing this important topic forward. I was shocked when I came across the ACE Study (for those interested, the results are available at http://www.ACEStudy.org). I also help people heal from trauma — and it’s amazing how prevalent it is, and how much damage it’s done. I like the distinction that Lawrence Heller makes between Incidental Trauma, such as a car accident, or being beat up, or being in a war zone, and Developmental Trauma – the deficits in our environment as infants and children, when our parents couldn’t provide the safety, security, nurturance, and love we needed. Both kinds of trauma require deep healing. Your article is a great place to begin the healing process.

    1. Lion, Thanks for the comments and additional links. We all need to recognize that doing a better job healing these wounds can help us be better parents so that our children don’t grow up to pass on these wounds to the next generation.

  2. This is huge! I scored a seven….needless to say I’ve had a lot of trauma in my life. Every day is a struggle to some extent for me. I have put my husband of 11 years through the ringer. He has stuck by me. He has been very understanding and supportive. Its been a long journey of discovery and healing. I’m not 100% and may never be, but every day is better than yesterday. I work with kids who have similar backgrounds as mine knowing all of this helps to get them on the path of healing as well. This is something that needs to be shared….some might even believe that what they went through was normal and some might feel completely alone. I hope this reaches and educates people and makes things like this less taboo to talk about and acknowledge that is happened. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Robin and Jess, thanks for the comments. I agree that this IS huge. Most everyone has had some kind of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and when we do they make us more susceptible for later hurts and trauma. I’ve seen that they cause physical and emotional problems later in life, but few of us make the connection to what happened years ago. However, once we understand how these early experiences change our brains and actually down to a cellular level, how our genes are turned on and turned off, it makes what we went through understandable and why they create later problems–everything from heart disease and cancer to depression, anger, and autoimmune diseases.

      The good news is that these can be healed and our relationships can stop taking a beating with interventions we can do ourselves as well as with counseling support.

      I hope everyone will take hope and heal.

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