Your Inner Child Could Ruin Your Marriage
Sorrel Pindar
Helping business owners & professionals heal trauma and rediscover connection, strengthen their relationships and transform fear into courage | Boarding school survivors
We all have those days. The days when we seem to lose touch with our own adultness and behave like children.
Maybe you fly into a rage because your partner said something hurtful, or maybe you burst into tears over something small. Or anything in between. This kind of behaviour is not constructive when it happens in response to a conflict or problem within a relationship. However it is a kind of survival strategy.
It is completely understandable. For we are all capable of inner child behaviour when we are triggered. We come to our relationships with the same behaviour patterns we created as children when we felt unsafe. Those behaviours come to form a sort of survival kit, and we can all change our survival kit to make it more appropriate to adult life.
It’s useful to think of these inner child behaviours as parts. Think about the way people tend to talk about different parts. For instance someone might say “A part of me really just wants to give up on this and divorce him, but another part of me wants to do everything in my power to get the marriage to work again.”
You may be familiar with other parts, such as your Inner Critic, your Perfectionist or your People-Pleaser. These are like inner voices telling you things like “don’t say anything to upset her” or “that could do with a bit more work.” These parts look like adult voices, but they are driven by the childhood fear of judgement or abandonment. And they enabled you to survive.
What exactly are these parts?
Each part corresponds to a neural pathway which get triggered by specific circumstances. And those pathways developed in response to your need to protect yourself when you were small.
I like to think of them as neural pathways because I know that we have considerable neural plasticity, which simply means you can teach an old dog a new trick.
We all start with the neural pathways we create as small children.
Some of these pathways were formed before the age of six or seven. They correspond to a time in our lives when we did not have much in the way of resources at our disposal.
The young child’s first response to fear or pain is to tend and befriend, but this doesn’t work if the parents are either abusive or emotionally unavailable. And believe me food on the table and clean clothes are not enough on their own. Children need love and attention as well!
When we’ve been abused or neglected, these early pathways wire together to form the Wounded Child, the collection of behaviours which look like those of a very young child.
Later, from about the age of about six or seven, the Adaptive Child emerges. The neural pathways which constitute the Adaptive Child have access to different strategies, including fight or flight and freeze. So in adulthood, if the person’s Adaptive Child gets triggered they may fly into a rage. This is simply the fight pathway that’s being triggered.
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Which strategy we develop as children depends on our circumstances. If we grow up in a violent household where we are encouraged to use violence, then the fight pathway will be the obvious ‘choice’. But this is not actually a choice – at least not yet.
In a family where there is absolutely no safety, flight or even freeze may be the best option, and so we grow up with a strategy of withdrawing or running away when things get difficult. In adults, withdrawal can literally mean leaving the house or it can look like retreating to the shed or into depression.
All of these strategies are the creation of our innate wisdom and intelligence. We should never underestimate the intelligence of the Adaptive Child. Recognise that whatever strategy your Adaptive Child created, it kept you safe.
In an adult relationship, however, it’s really important to engage with your Wise Adult. Because that part of you can put boundaries on your behaviour and is more interested in deepening connection with your partner than with attacking or scoring points.
If your partner is aggressive or neglectful, and you respond from your Adaptive Child, you will simply get caught up in a repeating cycle, which ultimately will lead into the 'death spiral,' and then potentially into divorce.
When you respond from your Wise Adult, you stand a chance of getting back into love and connection.
So what or who is my Wise Adult?
This is the ‘part’ of you which in the words of couples therapist, Terry Real “can stop, think, observe and choose.” Your Wise Adult chooses empathy, compassion and curiosity over judgement and retaliation.
The great thing about your Wise Adult is that not only is it careful of the health of your relationships and your partner’s well-being, but it is much more connected with others, with the world, and with the divine. That gives you access to something so much bigger than either the Wounded Child or the Adaptive Child have access to.
You'll want to start accessing your Wise Adult right now, because it's the best way forward towards more love and connection with your partner and everyone else in your world. And it's part of the repair process which we all need to use when we make mistakes.
Here's a five-step process you can use to access your Wise Adult when you get triggered
Moving from your old Adaptive Child survival kit to a new survival kit fashioned by your Wise Adult isn’t always easy. But it is well-worth the investment. You can make it easier by working through the Survival Kit Workbook, which will help you to understand why you created those childhood behaviour patterns and guide you through a process of creating new adult behaviours.