Feeling left out, forgotten, ignored, and cast to the side is something most of us have experienced at least once in life.
But what happens when the feeling of being abandoned forms the very foundation of our existence?
What happens when no matter what we do, where we go, who we befriend or romance, we still feel that deep gnawing ache of dread that tells us that someday, somehow, we will be abandoned?
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Abandonment trauma is one of the most painful, debilitating, and tormenting wounds to carry within us.
Not only does it eat us away from the inside out, but it can also cripple and sometimes destroy the relationships we hold dearest to us.
On the spiritual awakening journey, learning to face, explore, and heal these wounds are of paramount importance – they often compose a central part of the inner work that we do (comprising self-love, inner child work, and shadow work).
One of the reasons many of us find ourselves adopting the path of the lone wolf and spiritual wanderer in the first place is precisely due to the fact that we have been chronically abandoned in the past.
These feelings of being abandoned can lead to a disturbing inner sense of homelessness that can pervade our entire lives, often resulting in a Dark Night of the Soul and other inner crises.
In this article, I’m going to pick apart the nature of abandonment trauma and explore how you can find healing and rediscover the wholeness of your core Self from a psychospiritual perspective.
Table of contents
What is Abandonment Trauma?
Abandonment trauma is a deep inner psychological, emotional, and spiritual wound that is created when we experience some form of severe abandonment, typically starting in our childhood.
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Abandonment can be physical, emotional, or mental (and sometimes a combination of all three).
Examples of abandonment that can create this wound include:
- having a parent/caretaker die or leave,
- being a child of divorce,
- being a foster or adopted child,
- being the child of an alcoholic or drug addict,
- being the child of someone with a personality disorder such as narcissism or antisocial personality disorder,
- being the child of someone dealing with chronic mental or physical health issues,
- being an unwanted child,
- being a child living within a large family that couldn’t provide adequate physical, mental, or emotional nurturance,
- being a child raised in a physically, emotionally, mentally, or spiritually abusive environment.
There is a spectrum of abandonment trauma, with some people experiencing it more intensely or persistently than others.
How Abandonment Trauma Happens
Being abandoned as a child can happen in a multitude of ways as I explored above.
We can have an irresponsible and immature parent who takes off and leaves us behind. We can be the child of a drunk or a narcissistic abuser.
We can even experience abandonment with certain unspoken rules like “children should be seen and not heard” or “my needs are more important than yours.”
Overall, abandonment trauma happens when we don’t get our basic needs for mental, emotional, or physical security met as a child.
Psychiatrist M. Scott Peck says it well in his book The Road Less Travelled where he explores how childhood abandonment leads to being an insecure adult:
There are some parents, for instance, with their desire to enforce discipline as easily and quickly as possible, will actually use the threat of abandonment, overtly or subtly, to achieve this end. The message they give to their children is: “If you don’t do exactly what I want you to do I won’t love you anymore, and you can figure out for yourself what that might mean.” It means, of course, abandonment and death. These parents sacrifice love in their need for control and domination over their children, and their reward is children who are excessively fearful of the future. So it is that these children, abandoned either psychologically or in actuality, enter adulthood lacking any deep sense that the world is a safe and protective place.
As we can see, insecurity is at the heart of the abandonment wound within us.
When we’re raised to feel unseen, unlovable, or unworthy in some chronic persistent way, the result is not just a growing sense of insecurity within us, but also a profound sense of shame.
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Abandonment, Toxic Shame, and the False Idealization of Our Parents
Toxic shame is perhaps one of the most heinous poisons that can exist within the heart and mind, and yet it’s often deeply hidden and repressed within us.
Toxic shame says “I didn’t just do that wrong, I AM wrong” and “I didn’t just behave embarrassingly, I AM an embarrassment” – it is an illness of the mind and a mental illness in the truest sense of the term.
This shadow within us is at the very root of our sense of chronic unworthiness and low self-worth.
While there is healthy shame which we need in order to know when we’ve done something harmful to correct our behavior (i.e., when our actions misalign with our values), toxic shame is totally different.
In my article on toxic shame, I write what I believe is a simple and direct explanation of this experience, “Toxic shame is the internalized and buried shame that rots within us.”
So how does this toxic shame begin?
Well, it begins within those of us who experienced abandonment trauma of some kind, and had to falsely idealize our parents and internalize their shame-based narratives so that we could survive.
As one of my favorite mental and emotional health educators, John Bradshaw writes,
The magical part of the child’s thinking deifies the parents. They are gods, all-powerful, almighty and all-protecting. No harm can come to the child as long as he has parents.
This magical idealization serves to protect the child from the terrors of the night, which are about abandonment and to the child, death. The protective deification of the parents, this magical idealization, also creates a potential for a shame-binding predicament for the child.
For example, if the parents are abusive and hurt the child through physical, sexual, emotional or mental pain, the child will assume the blame, make himself bad, in order to keep the all-powerful protection against the terrors of the night. For a child at this stage to realize the inadequacies of parents would produce unbearable anxiety.
In other words, to truly realize how flawed and, in some cases, deeply mentally sick our parents were as young children would have been too much to bear. Abandonment, on an unconscious level as a child, equals, quite literally, death.
So as a way to protect ourselves against the terror of these primal fears, especially being so young and vulnerable, we had to internalize the shame-based messages we were sent.
Instead of seeing the harmful behavior from our parents as what it truly was – their fault and their lack of responsibility and empathy – we turned the blame, shame, and hate on ourselves.
Rather than seeing that “they did something bad to me,” the child sees it as “I am bad.”
Stop to pause for a moment. Can you sense the reality of this tragically sad false narrative within you?
9 Signs You May Be Dealing With Abandonment Trauma
Being abandoned – whether physically, emotionally, or mentally – by our primary caretakers as children leaves deep cuts in the psyche.
Here are some signs you may be dealing with abandonment trauma as an adult:
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- You experienced some form of ongoing neglect and abuse as a child
- You suffer from toxic shame (“I am bad, worthless, unlovable”)
- You’re a people-pleaser who’s always trying to win the affection/approval of others
- You have either overly rigid or porous boundaries with others
- You feel/behave in an excessively needy way in relationships, wanting the other to meet all your needs all the time (as if they were your surrogate parents)
- You have an anxious, avoidant, or disorganized attachment style in relationships (as opposed to a secure attachment style)
- You’re hypervigilant to signs that others or your loved ones dislike you
- You tolerate toxic behaviors from others instead of leaving or creating distance
- You’re deeply afraid of being abandoned, so you will either hold on too tightly to others or abandon them before they can abandon you
How many of these signs can you relate to?
You can also take our free emotional trauma test to explore this further.
3 Ways to Heal & Find Wholeness From Abandonment Trauma
Feeling abandoned is something I’m familiar with.
Although both of my parents physically stuck around, from as early as I can remember I felt emotionally, mentally, and spiritually abandoned and alone.
Having a strict fundamentalist Christian upbringing (that also involved occasional “spare the rod spoil the child” physical abuse), caused me to become an anxious hypervigilant people-pleaser, with deep shame at the core of my being.
While most of our parents were just doing the best they could with the level of maturity and knowledge they had at the time, often their unresolved abandonment wounds are passed on to their children.
Working through this deep feeling of insecurity and shame within us caused by abandonment is, however, possible.
We can find more inner security, groundedness, and wholeness – something we develop in the warrior stage of the spiritual wanderer’s awakening journey.
Here are some ways to find that inner healing:
1. Meet and befriend your Protective Soldier part
We all have a Protective Soldier part within us whose main role is to keep us small, quiet, safe, conforming, and agreeable. (By the way, if this name doesn’t resonate with you, you can always call this part something else like “the Protector” or “the Guardian.”)
This part initially emerged within us as a shielding force when we experienced abandonment as children, and they are often the earliest guardians and protectors of our psyches.
We need to meet and befriend this part of ourselves so that we can both be free of its constricting energy and also find more inner wholeness.
To do this, I recommend journaling about this part of you. What does your Protective Soldier look like, sound like, and how do they try to protect you in everyday life?
When did you first notice their appearance in your life? How does your body feel when this part has taken over?
Next, like any hero, make a habit of noticing this part of you and thank them for their service. Express your gratitude to them for helping you all these years.
If it’s safe, and if you aren’t part of a dysfunctional family system that requires you to psychologically fend for yourself (as is the case of young adults living at home or older adults caring for their dysfunctional parents), remind your Protective Soldier over and over that the danger has passed. Let them know that they can finally let go, and you, as a caring and mature adult, can take over now.
If you do find yourself in an unsafe environment, the Protective Soldier part will still be needed to an extent, and will be unwilling to let go. In this case, you’ll need to find psychological support, such as a therapist, who can help you to develop inner and outer coping skills.
2. Understand your attachment style and find balance
Other than secure attachment, which is what we would have ideally developed growing up, those who suffer from abandonment trauma typically develop one of three attachment styles:
- Anxious Attachment – characterized by neediness, lack of boundaries, and people-pleasing tendencies
- Avoidant Attachment – characterized by fear of closeness, emotional coldness and distance, and overly independent tendencies
- Disorganized Attachment – characterized by unstable moods, dissociation, and desiring closeness but fearing it
Of course, my breakdown of each dysfunctional attachment style is very brief, so you’ll need to do your own research to get the intricacies and nuances.
However, once you determine what your attachment style is, you can find a bit more inner direction and balance.
For instance, if you have an anxious attachment style, you can work at developing more clear boundaries and self-esteem.
If you have avoidant attachment tendencies, you can explore how to be intimate and vulnerable in safe containers with others or learn how to express your emotions.
Or if you have disorganized attachment, you can work on emotional regulation and staying grounded.
3. Connect with your heart and re-parent yourself
I love this poem by spiritual author Jeff Foster, who writes:
If abandonment is the core wound
the disconnection from mother
the loss of wholeness
then the most potent medicine
is this ancient commitment
to never abandon
Yourself
to discover wholeness in the whole-mess
to be a loving mother
to your insides
to hold the broken bits
in warm open awareness
and to illuminate the sore places
with the light
of love.
The heart is the doorway to the Soul, our deeper True Self, and so to find that sense of wholeness, we need to connect with our hearts through the power of self-compassion.
Re-parenting ourselves, that is, being kind and loving mothers, fathers, and parents to ourselves, is one of the most deep and powerful methods I know of to heal the abandonment wound.
To re-parent yourself, you need to develop a strong foundation of self-love, which will allow you to then have the inner safety, openness, and space to connect with your hurt inner child.
I have written guides on how to love yourself and working with the inner child which you can take a look at.
However, I highly recommend that if you need more guided support that can help you to proactively go deep, please check out my Inner Work Journal Bundle (composed of the Self-Love Journal, Inner Child Journal, and the Shadow Work Journal), which can powerfully support you on your re-parenting journey.
Find a Home Within Yourself
Abandonment trauma is an affliction that impacts more people than I believe are aware.
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When we are discarded, deserted, or rejected whether physically, emotionally, or mentally as children, the message we’re sent is that we’re “unlovable” and “unworthy,” which creates profound inner wounds that ripple into our adult lives.
The essence of healing this pain is self-compassion.
We need to vow to no longer abandon ourselves through self-hatred and self-abuse, but instead to reconnect with the warm and wise parent within us who can help us to feel more secure and at peace.
In other words, we need to find a home within ourselves, within our own hearts.
I hope this article has been of help and support to you. Please know you’re not alone if you do struggle with this, and I welcome you to share any experiences you’ve had with this topic in the comments below. You never know who might feel comforted by mirroring your own thoughts and feelings.
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Ah yes, mentally ill parents. Are there really any other parents. No. I presumed my father’s illness came from his Irish Mother which suffered from the potato famine. Past sins in the bloodlines run deep and long. Just knowing this relieves some of the burden we carry.
i’m an anxious who just got dumped by an individual who’s one of the other 2 styles of attachment. it all went very fast, the person asked me out (at work) at 1st i was like ‘no, you don’t wan’t to go out with me etc’ . a few days later they asked again & were very insistent. i couldn’t/wouldn’t say no. they were so cute & after spending time with them, they smell so good & were so much fun to be with… they even sort of ‘escorted’ me to work a couple of mornings in a row. i had mentioned that one morning when he was on his motorcycle he was driving fast & i followed him like he was a rabbit. i love doing that, i won’t drive fast on my own. i didn’t know who he was at that time. suddenly, after our 1st date which lasted like 10 hours or something (no, no sex). after i told him about the motorcycle following, for 2 days in a row he appeared right in front of me as i left for work in the am. i don’t believe this was a coincidence. he even mentioned something about… Read more »
Thank you for such a heartfelt article. This one touched home for me and I have a lot of self love and inner child work to do. I feel just feel like I keep doing it but I’m getting no where. Not getting any better. I guess it takes a lot of time and patience. Thank you again.
I appreciated this article, and identified with it as well. My parents separated when I was 5 and divorced when I was 7. I never saw my father again after 7, so my mom (with the help of grandmas) continued raising me. As an only child, I spent most of my time around adults and was over-protected in a Christian-based household. I had a son in my 1st marriage, and…now I’m in my 3rd and last marriage 😀 Third time’s the charm for me but “happily ever after” is a myth and it takes work, but is worth it.
Oh how well I can relate! I am #5 of 7, so being seen and not heard was normal. My childhood was infused with abuse, neglect, etc. when I was 10 my mother ran away from home, my grandmother informed me that the man I believed was “Dad” was not my dad, I was sent to live with my grandparents along with my 2 younger brothers, who went with dad the same year. When I was 11 I was sent to live with my cousin. I was moved 6 hours away from all my family and felt I had no one. At the end of that year my mom was told to come get me or I was going into foater care. I was then placed with dad who wasnt dad. Abandonment is still a huge issue for me and I just turned 58.
What about a mother they tells you, that you were an unwanted pregnancy, an unwanted child, and calls you the bad son?
I was in my early twenties when I was told this. It wasn’t until later I realized my mother was mentally ill, which explained a lot of her behavior. Regardless of that I still feel the sting and hurt from that day.
this was nice, thank you. u provide better guidance than my local mental healthcare team. i appreciate you sharing this touching article on trauma and tips to recover
This was a timely article. Thank you. I don’t feel alone in my struggle. Last night I cried myself to sleep after my older sister shared that she was having doubts about being roommates with me because of our tulmoutous past history. We both were raised by a narcissistic mother who also had bipolar depression and was emotionally, verbally and physically abusive to us which fostered all kinds of issues within us both. And as adults we’ve been trying to pick up the broken pieces of both of our hearts to heal ourselves and our relationships with each other but it has been extremely difficult and painful a lot of times. I’m feeling a lot of different emotions from anger to shame about it all. At the end of the day I am hoping to use all of my hurt and anger in a constructive way to help other women who are survivors of traumatic childhoods. Thank you for your work and encouragement 🙂
I appreciate the opportunity to understand this topic further. Thank you for sharing. I’m grateful for the moments that serve to remind me that I can accept myself as I am and that this life has been an amazing experience of teaching. Some lessons hold much pain, the suffering I’ve learned can be brief. I choose. Yes, people often disappoint. Currently, I was trying to rekindle a relationship with my mom. She lives 1600 miles away. I Invited her alone to join me for a graduation in her state. She’s elderly with health issues, so I offered to help her travel 2 hours to stay at my hotel with me. She let me know just now that she Invited my sister to join. A sister who does not treat me kindly and has been in competition and jealous of me, not wanting my mom to see only me, throughout our lives. I’ve a choice. I’ll accept the outcome, be gracious but I am disappointed. Trying hard to stay present and not allow former disastrous visits influence me or my body. Torn. I want to tell my mom, I thought this would be our time for a quiet dinner, conversation and… Read more »
I have lived with abandonment my whole life, father, husband, boyfriend and now My daughter recently blocked me on whatsapp and out of her life. Its a very difficult, heart wrenching thing to live with. Deeply lonely and empty.