Can ‘Reparenting’ Yourself Make You Happier? - The concept, centered around healing your ‘inner child,’ is catchy. Here’s what experts have to say.

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Laura Wells, 54, a fitness coach in Fort Worth, Texas, felt silly when she first tried giving herself a hug.

Then, she realized, “it really helps.”

It’s one of the ways that she is attempting to “reparent” herself — by meeting emotional needs that she says were neglected during her childhood.

The idea of reparenting has been around for decades, but the practice has flourished in recent years as interest in trauma-informed therapy has soared. It is now the subject of books, podcasts and TikTok hashtags.

In reparenting, the patient is empowered to find their hurt “inner child” and help it feel loved so that they can develop a stronger sense of self and better relationships with others. It’s not an easy process.

“I’m always telling people, reparenting your inner child is messy and uncomfortable and awkward,” said Nicole Johnson, a licensed professional counselor in Boise, Idaho and the author of a new book on the topic.

But when her clients acknowledge their pain and view it through the lens of their younger selves, she said, they tend to have more self-compassion and gradually drop the coping mechanisms from their childhood that are no longer helpful.

Where did the concept come from?​

Reparenting originated in the 1960s, when the therapist Jacqui Schiff encouraged her patients with schizophrenia to live with her and then regress back to childhood. She assumed the role of a caregiver and cradled her clients, even asking them to wear diapers and feeding them bottles.

Initially, Ms. Schiff was widely admired for her unconventional methods, which she claimed could “cure” schizophrenia.
Then a patient died while under her care. She was later found guilty of ethics violations and her techniques were widely criticized and condemned as an abuse of power.

In the 1970s, reparenting was reimagined by the psychotherapist Muriel James. She believed it should be a self-directed pursuit where the patient, not the therapist, played the role of a loving parent to their inner child. This is the version of reparenting that is most accepted and practiced today.

Jordan Bate, an associate professor of clinical psychology at Yeshiva University, said that reparenting resonates with people because it offers a language for talking about how past experiences shape the way we feel now, and highlights the ways in which defense mechanisms are used to navigate pain.

What, exactly, is your inner child?​

The idea that we all have an inner child dates back nearly 100 years.

The concept is often credited to the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, who once wrote that inside every adult “lurks a child — an eternal child, something that is always becoming, is never completed, and calls for unceasing care, attention and education.” But it can also be partly attributed to Sigmund Freud, who emphasized the lasting effects of childhood, and to the clinicians behind attachment theory, who suggested that early emotional bonds with caregivers shape who we become later on.

The self-help evangelist John Bradshaw helped popularize the phrase “inner child” in the 1990s. He argued that physical or emotional abuse or neglect during childhood can create lasting emotional wounds, leading to feelings of shame, self-blame and guilt that have become the “major source of human misery.” As a result, adults may have difficulty forming healthy relationships, engage in self-destructive behavior or develop a harsh inner critic.

At the time, some experts viewed Mr. Bradshaw with skepticism or equated his work with pop psychology. He was even parodied in an episode of ‘‘The Simpsons.”

Today, therapists sometimes invoke the inner child as a conversational tool to help their patients process thoughts, experiences and feelings from childhood that they are carrying into adulthood. The inner child symbolizes the parts of the self that were “not safe to show” during childhood and the “feelings that were not allowed to be expressed,” Dr. Bate said.

Reparenting isn’t the only technique that people can use to explore their inner child. Other options include cognitive behavioral therapy, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy, hypnosis and Internal Family Systems.

What does reparenting look like?​

Some reparenting strategies can be tackled independently, but Dr. Bate said it’s best to seek help from a therapist because exploring unmet needs from childhood can lead to grief, anger, shame and loneliness.
In some cases, therapists might ask patients to imagine interacting with their younger selves and think about what that child is feeling and what they might want to hear in that moment.
Or patients may write letters to their younger selves to validate the pain that they experienced in the past, and practice treating themselves with more kindness.
If a person is speaking to themselves harshly or overreacting, just like their parent used to do, a therapist can help them change that behavior.

Experts said to keep in mind that reparenting is a technique, not a stand-alone therapy.
It’s also not a simple fix, so people should not assume “all I have to do is talk to myself in a kinder, calmer way,” said Erin Hambrick, a researcher and therapist focused on childhood trauma in Kansas City, Mo.
For Ms. Wells, reparenting has been helpful. Before she started it a couple of years ago, she said, she was a perfectionist and a people pleaser who equated emotions with weakness. To avoid getting hurt by others, she relied only on herself.
“There was the me that was put into place to protect me, but also kept me from opening up to anybody,” she said. “And now there’s the real me,” she added, “that is learning how to experience life.”
 
Whenever I hear about kidulting, it always creeped me out. Some people may have traumas, but at some point, you need to tell these manchildren who squeal about the newest happy meal toy to grow the hell up
I know, I just like playing vidya and watching animu in peace, I fucking hate these people who can't shut up about it in public.
 
In order to buy into this bullshit you have to start from a place of relinquished agency. I can sympathize with rough starts but I despise the culture that worships and encourages the constant repetition of muh trauma.
When you enter your mid-teens, you're right to still feel sore about it. When you're in the late ones, it's your job to get away from it. When you finally are, just let it go. It's long over. I'm not saying to forgive the people who screwed you over, but you shouldn't have them living in your head rent free. Those tards should be the last thing on your mind or burning in hell.
 
Reparenting originated in the 1960s, when the therapist Jacqui Schiff encouraged her patients with schizophrenia to live with her and then regress back to childhood. She assumed the role of a caregiver and cradled her clients, even asking them to wear diapers and feeding them bottles.
This sounds like sexual and physical abuse of patients. It’s absolutely mental.
A vast number of people had shitty childhoods, suboptimal childhoods etc. There’s a value in considering this especially as you have your own children, but that consideration should be along the lines of;
- this was bad about my childhood. I will make sure I don’t repeat it with my children, and I don’t go too far the other way.
- my childhood has left me with a tendency to some maladaptive behaviours. I should work on them.
We are the sum of our experience PLUS how we deal with those experiences. You can’t change the past, only learn from it. This seems like dwelling in that past and pretending it’s happening a different way
 
TIL children apparently aren't allowed to choose their own friends or hobbies. TIL I was never a child, I was always an adult.
My mom was psycho so I wasn't allowed to hang out with "the drug addict kids". Which just led me to hanging out with druggies all through school. Good times. Sometimes I miss smoking mexibrick out of a soda can while inside of a storm pipe. But then I make the turn with my car into the dispensary and I forget all about it.
 
This IFS stuff is incredibly weird.

First off, it has a lot of similarities to what therapy for people with Dissociative Identity Disorder (formly known as Multiple Personality Disorder before being lol’d away) looks like. DID is its own can of worms with tons of malingerers, I won’t go into it now.

Secondly, I’m extremely skeptical of any model which tries to compartmentalize the self, or the brain. We experience things as very compartmentalized, but what little modern neuroscience has taught us about consciousness is that everything is highly interconnected. The brain, both within itself, and with the body. We are beginning to understand that the brain is also very connected with our environments too. For humans, social environments are probably a very significant part. See research on how changing animal habitats changes things like process density (axon/dendrite density) in various parts of the brain. Temple Grandin (famous autist) did a bunch of research on this.

I think it’s attractive to break things down and imagine ourselves in the third person (like the inner child, the protector, or whatever), but is this helpful or just overly reductionist? The goal of therapy should be living as a wholistic, complete, and healthy person. To me, IFS feels like you are teaching people to deal with their problems via disassociating. Which might feel healing if you are constantly worked up, but I’m not sure if it actually is. It’s like how smoking addicts will quit smoking by becoming addicted to alcohol. Disassociation is one of the primary ways we can deal with a stressful event. The so-called fight-flight-fright response (see polyvagal theory by porges). So, are you teaching people with an overly active stress induced sympathetic response to deal with things by a stress induced parasympathetic response?

The fact of the matter is that we are still in like the 18th century equivalent of where medical sciences were when it comes to mental health. Like talking about there being an imbalance of humors (blood/bils/phlegm) and using leeches to correct it. The humors are the nebulous emotions, the leeches are often pharmaceuticals. None of this works. There is no therapy you can put someone through which will heal a clinically significant portion of the target population. In fact, there’s a ton of suggestions that putting someone through lots of therapy (including the psychiatry) will do the exact opposite. See Anatomy of an Epidemic by Robert Whitaker where he shows statistically that populations who spend the most on mental healthcare, are the most unhealthy. Or, for a more systematic critique based on a work done for a wonderful 2022 review of the false chemical imbalance theory, Chemically Imbalanced by Joanna Moncrieff.

Anecdotally, the people who dive the most into therapy in my life, become the most unhealthy. My advice, don’t start a family in your head. Go out and start a family in the real world. Find things to volunteer for, community projects. Whatever. Anything to distract you from the hell of listening to your own inner thoughts. Especially if they become disconnected from the present. I think there is a reason that forced isolation pretty consistently drives people crazy. And for a similar reason, individual therapy in the way that psychology currently practices it will always be doomed to fail.
 
But you sure as shit don't need to go back to being in fucking diapers and giving yourself pats on the back just to reclaim it. Just go build shit out of sticks, go play a video game, do weird (but legal) science experiments, being an adult is great no matter how much peoples' subconscious tries to tell them it isn't, because unlike being a kid, you either have the cash or can get the cash to do some, if not most of the stuff you couldn't even do as a kid, and even better, you're the one who's choosing what hobbies you do and what kinda friends you make. I think for people who really do have that sort of issue, realizing this is probably the healthiest way to get over it, not making a tulpa of what you think is your inner child.

I think boomers, among other things, have done the world a disservice in being obsessed what adults are "supposed" to be like, especially as a lot of boomers have turned out to be pretty shitty parents if not outright abusive.

Obviously there are completely wrong ways of going about doing this--don't abandon all responsibility and indulge in wires-crossed sexual fetishes including ADBL or otherwise engage in wildly inappropriate behavior, but don't feel like you can't "have fun" in ways that boomers would find unbecoming (watch cartoons, play video games, etc.). At the same time, you need to realize that you can psy-op yourself into losing all connection with reality and don't do it.
 
I'm getting more and more convinced kids should be miners, chefs, busing tables or cashiers.
 
I'm reasonably fucked up from my childhood; my dad had a hair trigger and would go on screaming tirades at me, my mom, or anyone else, at any time and for pretty much any reason. Guy would be ranting at the McDonalds cashier over some minor fault and I'd be sitting there just wanting my fucking happy meal and being mortified the entire time. He mellowed out as he got older, but I still got a fantastic PTSD case from the whole thing. At this point, it's way too fucking late for me to fix it all by playing with some legos. If someone wanted to give me free legos I'd certainly take them, but not with any illusions of a magical cure; that ship fucking sailed decades ago.
 
To me, IFS feels like you are teaching people to deal with their problems via disassociating. Which might feel healing if you are constantly worked up, but I’m not sure if it actually is. It’s like how smoking addicts will quit smoking by becoming addicted to alcohol. Disassociation is one of the primary ways we can deal with a stressful event. The so-called fight-flight-fright response (see polyvagal theory by porges). So, are you teaching people with an overly active stress induced sympathetic response to deal with things by a stress induced parasympathetic response?

I can speak to this. gonna follow the rule on power leveling

I was never molested, but there was early child hood trama that resulted in what is now called "attachment issues" This created developmental delays and behavoir issues. The result is I was labeled "retarded" Its uncomfortable looking at my moms old journal which mentions this.

Basically I survived via disassociating, and through alot of bad decisions on my parents I was put into communities or enivorments that triggered that response. This lead to a very bad socialization of me. In fact I often think i would ve been a cow on this site if I was on a discord during this shit.

I ve met people like me, I even tried to help a woman once. True story calling her a retard and explaining social rules to her was very effective. I hate that the term autism is thrown around for people like that as well.

My take away is simulair to yours that we are social creatures and our interpersonal relationship and enivorment affect us alot. As much as I love reading the farms I know I need to go out and touch grass. and I do.

The issue of reparrenting in this article is that it tries to say "you ve been damaged, and that damage is not your fault" and acts like you can go back and have a redo. my personal take is that you cant, but you can revisit and understand what the pain is what the cause is and adapt to it.
 
The academic field of psychology and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.

It has especially wrecked women. Tiktok is full of them complaining about their gaslighting abusive boyfriends that gave them complex ptsd. When in reality their boyfriends just told them no.

pop-psychology-can-be-misleading-and-harmful-relying-on-v0-rtuyya7y43jb1.webp
 
This is just ABDL, right?

Reparenting originated in the 1960s, when the therapist Jacqui Schiff encouraged her patients with schizophrenia to live with her and then regress back to childhood. She assumed the role of a caregiver and cradled her clients, even asking them to wear diapers and feeding them bottles.
IT FUCKING IS!
 
What passes for childhood trauma nowadays? Because when I hear childhood trauma, I think domestic violence, drug/alcohol abuse, and sexual abuse.

But when I hear people, specifically women, it's things like "emotional abuse/violence", i.e. receiving proper parenting, criticism, or not getting everything they wanted.
 
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