Parenting Psychology & Emotional Health
How Your Childhood Trauma Affects Your Parenting (and How to Break the Cycle)
By Prasad Fernando | Parenting Psychology & Emotional Health | Updated May 2026 | 19 min read
If you are in crisis: If you are experiencing thoughts of self-harm, harming your child, or are in immediate distress, please seek help immediately. US: 988 (Crisis Lifeline) | UK: 116 123 (Samaritans) | Australia: 13 11 14 (Lifeline). You are not alone.
Professional Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute professional psychological, psychiatric, or therapeutic advice. Trauma is a complex clinical subject — if you believe unresolved childhood trauma is significantly affecting your parenting or wellbeing, please seek support from a licensed trauma-informed therapist. You deserve professional care, not only information.
📋 Table of Contents
- What Is Childhood Trauma? A Broader Definition
- How Childhood Trauma Shapes the Developing Brain
- How Childhood Trauma Affects Parenting
- Understanding Generational Trauma Patterns
- Recognising Your Triggers as a Parent
- Breaking the Cycle: What the Research Shows Is Possible
- Practical Steps Toward Breaking Generational Patterns
- When and How to Seek Professional Help
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Sources & References
There is a moment many parents recognise. A child does something — misbehaves, or cries, or refuses to cooperate in a way that is perfectly ordinary — and something shifts inside the parent that feels disproportionate to the situation. The response that comes out is too sharp, or too withdrawn, or too fearful, or too controlling. And in the quiet afterward, the parent thinks: where did that come from?
Often, the honest answer is: from long ago.
The relationship between childhood trauma and parenting is one of the most important and most underexplored dimensions of modern family life. Research in neuroscience, developmental psychology, and trauma theory increasingly confirms what many people have sensed intuitively for generations: the experiences of our own childhoods do not stay in the past. They travel with us into our adult lives and into our parenting, shaping how we respond to our children, what we fear, what we replay, and what we need to do differently.
This article is not a catalogue of ways parents are damaged by their own histories. It is an examination of a well-documented phenomenon, offered with clarity and compassion, that makes the case for something the research strongly supports: breaking the cycle of intergenerational trauma is entirely possible. Not painless. Not guaranteed. But possible — and more achievable than many parents carrying difficult histories believe.
If you have ever found yourself reacting to your child in a way that surprised you — in a way that felt more like your past than your present — this article is for you.
What Is Childhood Trauma? A Broader Definition
Trauma is often imagined in its most extreme forms — war, disaster, severe abuse. But the clinical understanding of trauma has expanded significantly over the past three decades, and the concept that is now most relevant to intergenerational parenting research is considerably broader than its popular meaning.
Trauma therapist and researcher Dr. Bessel van der Kolk, author of The Body Keeps the Score, defines trauma as any experience that overwhelms the individual’s capacity to cope and leaves lasting imprints on the nervous system. By this definition, trauma includes not only catastrophic events but a wide range of childhood experiences that may appear less dramatic from the outside but are deeply significant to the developing child who lived through them.
Big T and Little t Trauma
Clinicians commonly distinguish between what is sometimes called “Big T” trauma — acute, life-threatening, or overwhelming events such as abuse, neglect, domestic violence, or bereavement — and “Little t” trauma — experiences that are less catastrophic in isolation but chronic, cumulative, or formative in their impact. Little t traumas include: growing up with a parent who was emotionally unavailable or unpredictable; repeated experiences of humiliation, criticism, or shaming; persistent insecurity or instability in the home environment; chronic emotional neglect; or the subtle but sustained experience of having one’s feelings dismissed or invalidated.
Both categories of trauma can leave lasting impressions on the nervous system, on attachment patterns, and on the unconscious templates through which adult life — including adult parenting — is experienced and navigated.
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)
The landmark ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences) study, conducted by researchers Vincent Felitti and Robert Anda in collaboration with Kaiser Permanente and the CDC in the 1990s, documented the relationship between ten categories of childhood adversity and long-term health outcomes. The study found that ACEs — including abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction — were common (more than 60% of participants reported at least one ACE), cumulative in effect, and powerfully predictive of adult physical and mental health outcomes.
Critically for the parenting context, ACEs research has been extended to show that unresolved adverse childhood experiences significantly affect parenting capacity, parental mental health, and children’s own risk profiles — creating the empirical foundation for understanding what is commonly called generational trauma.
How Childhood Trauma Shapes the Developing Brain
To understand how childhood trauma travels into adult parenting, it is necessary to understand what trauma does to the developing brain — because the mechanisms involved are not psychological metaphor, but documented neurobiology.
The Stress Response System
When a child repeatedly experiences threatening or overwhelming situations, the body’s stress response system — particularly the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the sympathetic nervous system — is activated chronically. Research on toxic stress, most extensively developed by paediatrician Dr. Jack Shonkoff at Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child, demonstrates that chronic activation of the stress response during childhood has measurable neurobiological consequences: it dysregulates the stress response system itself, making it more reactive to threat; it affects the architecture of the prefrontal cortex (the brain region responsible for executive function, impulse control, and emotional regulation); and it alters the function of the amygdala (the threat-detection centre), making it more sensitive and more prone to rapid, intense responses.
The Body Keeps the Score
Dr. van der Kolk’s research demonstrates that traumatic experiences are encoded not only as memories but as somatic (body-based) patterns — chronic tension, altered breathing, heightened physiological arousal that can be activated by sensory cues that bear resemblance (consciously or unconsciously) to the original traumatic context. This is why a parenting trigger is often not a rational cognitive event — it is a nervous system event, happening faster than conscious thought, driving a response that feels involuntary precisely because, at the neurological level, it largely is.
Attachment Patterns and Internal Working Models
Attachment theory, developed by John Bowlby and elaborated through the research of Mary Ainsworth, Mary Main, and Dan Siegel, provides a second crucial framework. Children form attachment patterns in their earliest relationships — secure, anxious-ambivalent, avoidant, or disorganised — and these patterns become what Bowlby called “internal working models”: unconscious templates for expecting and experiencing relationships. These templates do not automatically update when circumstances change. Adults carry them into their partnerships, their friendships, and — most powerfully — into their parenting relationships with their own children.
A parent who experienced dismissive or avoidant caregiving as a child may instinctively minimise their child’s emotional needs — not from cruelty but from an internal model that learned emotions are not to be expressed or expected to be received. A parent who experienced unpredictable caregiving may oscillate between emotional overinvolvement and unavailability in ways that confuse a child seeking consistent attunement.
How Childhood Trauma Affects Parenting
Research on childhood trauma and parenting identifies several specific mechanisms through which unresolved early experiences affect adult caregiving — not as fixed pathologies but as tendencies, patterns, and vulnerabilities that can be recognised and addressed.
Triggered Responses
The most direct and immediately recognisable way that trauma affects parenting is through triggered responses — moments when a child’s behaviour, expression, or emotional state activates the parent’s own trauma response rather than producing a measured, present-moment reaction. A parent who was humiliated for mistakes as a child may have an extreme reaction to their own child making a small error. A parent who grew up in a chaotic environment may be unable to tolerate normal childhood noise or disorder without anxiety. A parent who experienced emotional abandonment may be overwhelmed by their own child’s normal developmental separation behaviours.
The defining feature of a triggered response is its disproportionality — the internal experience or behavioural response does not match what the present-moment situation warrants. This disproportionality is a signal worth attending to: not as evidence of bad parenting, but as an invitation to understanding.
Emotional Unavailability
Parents who dissociated from their own emotional experience as a coping strategy in childhood — because having emotions in their family of origin was unsafe or unwelcome — may find themselves unable to access emotional availability for their children. They may find it difficult to tolerate their children’s distress, to engage with emotional conversations, or to provide the responsive attunement that research identifies as the foundation of secure attachment. This is not indifference — it is the nervous system’s learned response to emotional exposure.
Overprotection and Anxiety
Parents with trauma histories may also manifest in the opposite direction — hypervigilance to threat, overprotection of their children, or intense anxiety about the child’s safety, wellbeing, or vulnerability. A parent who experienced harm or felt unsafe as a child may project that template onto their child’s ordinary environment, limiting their child’s independence, social engagement, or risk-taking in ways that impair development.
Difficulty with Authority and Discipline
Parents who experienced punitive, harsh, or abusive discipline may either replicate that pattern under stress (the default that was modelled) or swing to the opposite extreme — avoiding all discipline because it feels like cruelty, and thereby failing to provide the structure that children need. Both responses are understandable; neither serves the child well over time. Finding the middle ground — warm authority — requires deliberate work when neither version was modelled in the parent’s own experience.
Impaired Self-Regulation
Effective parenting — particularly in the difficult moments that require the most patience, creativity, and calm — depends on the parent’s capacity for emotional self-regulation. Trauma that dysregulates the stress response system can significantly impair this capacity, making consistent, regulated responses to children’s difficult behaviour harder to achieve and maintain. This is not a character failure — it is the measurable neurobiological consequence of an early environment that did not provide the co-regulation needed to develop robust self-regulatory systems.
📖 Related Reading: Signs of Childhood Depression: A Guide for Parents — Understanding how childhood experiences affect emotional development helps parents recognise when their children need support — and when their own reactions may be reflecting their history rather than the child’s present need.
Understanding Generational Trauma Patterns
Generational trauma — sometimes called intergenerational trauma or transgenerational trauma — refers to the transmission of trauma responses, attachment patterns, and coping strategies from one generation to the next. It is not a mystical or metaphorical concept; it has documented biological and psychological mechanisms.
The Psychological Transmission
The psychological transmission of trauma operates through the same mechanisms described above: attachment patterns, internal working models, triggered responses, and unresolved emotional material that enters the parenting relationship through the parent’s automatic behaviours and emotional responses. A parent who was raised by a parent who was raised in poverty, violence, or deprivation does not inherit those circumstances — but they may inherit the survival strategies, the hypervigilance, the emotional unavailability, or the relational patterns that those circumstances produced in their own parent.
Research by Mary Main and colleagues on the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) found that a parent’s own attachment narrative — the way they make sense of their childhood experiences — is the strongest predictor of their child’s attachment classification. Specifically, it is not what happened to the parent as a child that most strongly predicts their child’s attachment; it is whether the parent has been able to make coherent, integrated sense of that experience. Parents who had difficult childhoods but who have processed those experiences into a coherent narrative are no less likely to raise securely attached children than those with more fortunate histories.
The Epigenetic Dimension
More recent research has explored the possibility of epigenetic transmission of trauma — changes in gene expression (not the genes themselves) that can be passed between generations. Research by Rachel Yehuda at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, studying the descendants of Holocaust survivors, found measurable epigenetic differences in stress hormone systems compared with control groups — suggesting that severe trauma may leave biological marks that are heritable. This research is still developing and should be interpreted cautiously, but it represents a significant dimension of the generational trauma phenomenon that extends beyond psychology into biology.
The Hopeful Counterpart
The same research that documents intergenerational transmission also documents intergenerational healing. If trauma can be transmitted, so can its opposite: security, warmth, and emotional health. The parent who builds secure attachment with their child, who provides consistent and attuned caregiving, who repairs ruptures in the relationship and models emotional intelligence — that parent is not only raising a healthy child. They are changing the trajectory of a family line.
Recognising Your Triggers as a Parent
The first practical step in breaking the cycle of generational trauma is the development of what Dan Siegel calls “mindsight” — the capacity to observe one’s own internal states with enough clarity to distinguish between a present-moment response and a trauma-driven one. This is not easy and does not happen overnight, but it is a learnable skill with direct parenting applications.
Signs That a Trigger Is Active
Recognising a triggered state in real time is challenging precisely because triggers operate faster than conscious thought. Some signals that a trauma trigger rather than a present-moment response may be operating include:
- The emotional response feels larger than the situation warrants
- There is a physical component — chest tightening, heart racing, heat rising, voice changing — that precedes any conscious decision about how to respond
- The response feels automatic and hard to interrupt even when part of you is observing that it is happening
- The behaviour the child is exhibiting reminds you — consciously or vaguely — of a person, situation, or feeling from your own past
- You feel, briefly, more like a child than a parent in the moment
- You regret the response immediately or shortly afterward in a way you do not with more regulated reactions
The Pause Practice
Developing the capacity to pause between trigger and response is one of the most practically valuable skills for parents with trauma histories. Research on parenting intervention programmes consistently identifies a brief, intentional pause — even two to three seconds — as sufficient to interrupt automatic responses and create space for a more considered reaction. The pause can be as simple as a single deliberate breath, a physical movement (stepping back, turning slightly), or an internal phrase: “This is a trigger. This is not the past.”
Keeping a Trigger Journal
One of the most effective self-awareness tools for parents working on trauma-influenced responses is a brief trigger journal — a record of situations in which a disproportionate response occurred, what the child was doing or saying, what the internal experience was, and any connection to the past that becomes apparent in reflection. Over time, this practice creates a map of one’s personal trigger landscape that is invaluable for both self-understanding and for therapeutic work.
Breaking the Cycle: What the Research Shows Is Possible
The most important and most hopeful finding in the intergenerational trauma research is this: the transmission of trauma is not deterministic. Having a difficult childhood does not automatically produce parenting that replicates that difficulty. The cycle can be broken — and research by Dan Siegel, Mary Main, and others has identified what makes the difference.
The Power of Narrative Coherence
Mary Main’s research using the Adult Attachment Interview found that the single strongest predictor of breaking the intergenerational transmission pattern is what she called “narrative coherence” — the adult’s ability to construct a coherent, integrated, and emotionally honest account of their own childhood experience. Adults who can acknowledge what happened, understand its impact, feel appropriate emotion about it, and integrate it into a meaningful narrative — without either idealising their past or remaining overwhelmed by it — are significantly more likely to raise securely attached children, regardless of what they experienced. You do not need to have had a perfect childhood to be an excellent parent. You need to have made sense of the childhood you had.
The Earned Security Pathway
Research identifies the concept of “earned security” — adults who did not experience secure attachment in childhood but who have, through therapy, reflection, or transformative relationships, developed the internal architecture of secure attachment in adulthood. Research by Mary Main, Earned-secure adults show attachment-related brain activation patterns that are functionally indistinguishable from those who were securely attached from birth. The nervous system, it appears, can learn security even when it was not developed in childhood — and that learned security has real, measurable benefits for the children of those adults.
The Role of a Supportive Partner
Research consistently identifies a secure, supportive adult relationship as one of the most powerful protective factors for parents with difficult histories. A partner who provides consistent emotional attunement and who co-parents with warmth and stability can function as a corrective relational experience that supports the development of earned security and provides a regulatory anchor during difficult parenting moments. This is not a reason to defer the individual work of processing one’s own history — but it is a significant evidence-based reminder that no one heals in isolation.
Practical Steps Toward Breaking Generational Patterns
Alongside professional support — which is addressed in the following section and is not optional for significant trauma — there are practical steps that parents with difficult histories can begin taking in their daily parenting lives. These are not replacements for therapy; they are complements to it, and useful starting points for parents who are not yet in or are between therapeutic support.
1. Name What Happened
Many adults who experienced difficult childhoods have never found words for those experiences — either because they were too young to articulate them, because the family narrative minimised them, or because naming them feels like a betrayal of parents who were also doing their best. Finding accurate words for what happened — not to assign blame but to understand — is the beginning of narrative coherence. Journaling, therapeutic writing exercises, or honest conversations with trusted others can be starting points for this process.
2. Learn the Language of Emotions
Adults who grew up in environments where emotions were dismissed, punished, or ignored often have limited vocabulary for their own emotional states — a deficit that directly impairs their capacity to provide emotion coaching for their children. Deliberately building emotional literacy — learning to name what you feel and to tolerate sitting with difficult emotions — is both a personal healing practice and a parenting skill development process. Resources on emotion coaching for adults (and mindfulness practices as described in research by Kabat-Zinn and others) can be useful starting points.
3. Practise the Repair
Research by Dan Siegel and Mary Hartzell identifies rupture and repair as one of the most significant contributors to secure attachment and emotional resilience in children. When a triggered response has produced a parenting moment the adult regrets, the repair is not optional — it is where much of the healing for both parent and child happens. Coming back to the child, naming what happened in age-appropriate terms, reconnecting with warmth, and demonstrating that relationships survive difficulty is both a parenting repair and a lived counter-experience to whatever the parent’s own history taught them about what happens after conflict.
4. Develop a Parenting Vision
Research on intentional parenting — parenting that is driven by deliberate values and goals rather than automatic patterns — suggests that parents who have a clear vision of the parent they want to be are better equipped to make deliberate choices in difficult moments rather than defaulting to automated responses. Writing a parenting vision — not a perfect-parent standard but an honest articulation of the values, experiences, and relationship qualities you want to provide for your child — creates an internal compass that can guide decision-making even when the automatic pull is toward a less conscious response.
5. Tend to Your Own Nervous System
Because many of the effects of trauma are held in the nervous system rather than in conscious memory, somatic (body-based) practices are particularly relevant to parents working on breaking generational patterns. Regular physical exercise, breathwork, mindfulness practice, yoga, and time in nature all have documented effects on nervous system regulation. Research by Stephen Porges on polyvagal theory demonstrates that the vagus nerve — a key regulator of the nervous system — can be deliberately trained through practices that promote parasympathetic activation, building the regulatory capacity that trauma may have impaired.
6. Be Honest with Your Children About Your Own Imperfection
Children do not need perfect parents. Research on what constitutes “good enough” parenting — drawing on Winnicott’s foundational work and subsequent research — consistently finds that parental imperfection, when accompanied by repair, genuine love, and honest accountability, does not damage children. A parent who says “I reacted badly just now and I’m sorry — that was about me, not you” is not only making a repair — they are modelling emotional accountability, demonstrating that adults can take responsibility for their behaviour, and showing that mistakes do not end relationships.
📖 Related Reading: Mom Burnout Is Real: 10 Signs You’re Running on Empty (and What to Do) — Parents carrying unresolved trauma are significantly more vulnerable to burnout. Understanding the connection between the two helps parents approach both as related, not separate, challenges.
When and How to Seek Professional Help
The practical steps outlined above are meaningful starting points — but for parents with significant unresolved trauma, they are unlikely to be sufficient on their own. Therapy is not a luxury or a last resort; it is the evidence-supported first-line response to unprocessed trauma and its effects. The quality of research on trauma-informed therapy approaches has expanded dramatically in the past two decades, and the available options have widened significantly.
Evidence-Supported Therapy Approaches for Trauma
- ✅ EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing): Strongly evidenced for processing specific traumatic memories; recommended by the WHO and NICE for PTSD
- ✅ Trauma-Focused CBT (TF-CBT): Well-evidenced for addressing trauma-related cognitive and emotional patterns; widely available
- ✅ Internal Family Systems (IFS): Growing evidence base for processing complex, developmental trauma; particularly relevant for understanding the different “parts” activated in parenting situations
- ✅ Somatic therapies (SE, EMDR, Sensorimotor Psychotherapy): Body-based approaches that address trauma held in the nervous system; particularly relevant for parents who experience somatic triggers
- ✅ Attachment-Based Therapy: Explicitly addresses attachment patterns formed in childhood and their effects on current relationships including parenting
When to Prioritise Professional Support
Please seek professional support if:
- ⚠️ You are experiencing flashbacks, intrusive memories, or significant dissociation
- ⚠️ Your parenting responses have caused harm to your child or your relationship with them
- ⚠️ You are experiencing persistent depression, anxiety, or emotional dysregulation
- ⚠️ You find yourself replicating specific behaviours from your own childhood that you know were harmful
- ⚠️ You feel unable to access warmth, patience, or connection with your child despite wanting to
- ⚠️ Any of the above has been present for more than two to three weeks
Seeking professional help for childhood trauma is one of the most protective things a parent can do for their children. It is an act of parenting — not a departure from it.
📖 Related Reading: How to Ask for Help as a Parent (Without Feeling Like You’re Failing) — For parents with trauma histories, asking for help carries its own emotional weight. Understanding the barriers to seeking support — and how to move through them — is an important companion to this article.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Cycle Ends Here — If You Choose It
Breaking the cycle of intergenerational trauma is not an act of erasing the past. It is an act of understanding it clearly enough that it no longer operates invisibly — no longer makes choices for you in the moments when you most need to be present, regulated, and genuinely yourself.
The research is both honest about the difficulty and deeply hopeful about the possibility. Parents with significant trauma histories raise secure, healthy, flourishing children every day. They do so not by having had a better past, but by doing the work of understanding the past they had — in therapy, in reflection, in honest relationship, in the daily practice of repair and recommitment.
You are not your history. You are what you choose to do with it. And the choice to do something — to seek understanding, to enter therapy, to practise the pause, to make the repair, to build something different — is one of the most profound acts of love a parent can offer their child.
The cycle can end with you. The research says so. And the child in front of you is counting on the parent you are choosing, every day, to become.
About the Author
Prasad Fernando
Prasad Fernando is the founder and lead writer of ParentalRing, a resource dedicated to practical, research-informed parenting guidance. With a deep commitment to making the science of trauma, attachment, and intergenerational healing accessible to parents, Prasad draws on neuroscience research, clinical trauma literature, and the published work of leading researchers to create content that is both honest about complexity and genuinely hopeful about possibility.
Sources & References
- van der Kolk, B. A. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking Press.
- Felitti, V. J., Anda, R. F., Nordenberg, D., Williamson, D. F., Spitz, A. M., Edwards, V., … & Marks, J. S. (1998). Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 14(4), 245–258.
- Shonkoff, J. P., Garner, A. S., the Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health, et al. (2012). The lifelong effects of early childhood adversity and toxic stress. Pediatrics, 129(1), e232–e246.
- Main, M., & Goldwyn, R. (1998). Adult Attachment Scoring and Classification Systems. Unpublished manuscript, University of California at Berkeley.
- Siegel, D. J. (1999). The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are. Guilford Press.
- Siegel, D. J., & Hartzell, M. (2003). Parenting from the Inside Out. Tarcher/Putnam.
- Yehuda, R., Daskalakis, N. P., Bierer, L. M., Bader, H. N., Klengel, T., Holsboer, F., & Binder, E. B. (2016). Holocaust exposure induced intergenerational effects on FKBP5 methylation. Biological Psychiatry, 80(5), 372–380.
- Porges, S. W. (2011). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-Regulation. W. W. Norton & Company.
- Bowlby, J. (1980). Attachment and Loss: Vol. 3. Loss: Sadness and Depression. Basic Books.
- Winnicott, D. W. (1953). Transitional objects and transitional phenomena. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 34, 89–97.
This article was last reviewed and updated in May 2026. Trauma research is a rapidly evolving field. If you believe childhood trauma is significantly affecting your parenting, please seek support from a trauma-informed mental health professional. Crisis support: US 988 | UK 116 123 | Australia 13 11 14.