The Origins of Inner Child Wounds That Most Frameworks Miss
Most inner child frameworks locate the wound in specific events: the incident that produced the belief, the moment when the pattern was installed, the…
Integrating the parts we’ve hidden, denied, or disowned.
Most inner child frameworks locate the wound in specific events: the incident that produced the belief, the moment when the pattern was installed, the…
Inner child wounds are commonly understood through their content: the belief that formed, the pattern that persists, the self-concept that limits. Less commonly understood…
Most people experience their inner child wound as a collection of separate problems: the pricing they avoid, the visibility they resist, the relationships that…
There’s a version of inner child work that stays entirely in the individual’s experience — personal, private, and without reference to anything beyond the…
After a certain amount of time in inner child work, most people can identify the moment when the quality of the work changed. Not…
Beyond the psychological and somatic dimensions of inner child work is something that gets addressed even less often: the frequency dimension — the way…
Conscious entrepreneurs occupy a specific position in relation to inner child work that most healing frameworks don’t account for: they’re doing the healing while…
“Inner child” can sound soft or unscientific — the language of therapy, spirituality, or personal development rather than of rigorous evidence. But the phenomena…
The word “wound” implies something that should be healed. And the wound’s costs are real — the self-sabotage, the limitation, the ways the pattern…
Most inner child healing approaches work effectively at one or two layers of the wound. The three layers that are most commonly missed —…