Suffering from the same old destructive mental patterns. Never finding a sense of authentic purpose. Toxic invalidating relationships. Feeling disconnected from your deeper Self. Existential dread, loneliness, depression, and burnout …
All of these afflictions can be traced directly back to the primal wound of separation.
The separation from being truly loved. The separation from being truly seen. The separation from being truly valued.

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When we aren’t truly seen, loved, or valued as children in our precious uniqueness – when we become mere objects in the mental projections of our caretakers or “things” to use and control – we experience a deep inner fracture of the psyche.
This fracture is known as “splitting” in various psychological fields, and it causes us to unconsciously adopt an artificial role in order to survive and be “acceptable.”
This role is known as the false self.
Let’s explore this more.
Trigger warning: This article mentions various types of deep-seated trauma. If you’re not in a space to look into your pain right now for any reason, or don’t want to feel any potentially uncomfortable feelings that may arise while reading this post, this might not be the right article for you right now.
Table of contents
Why You Still Feel Broken, Unseen, and Alone (the I-It Relationship)

The deepest core wound that you and I carry comes down to not being seen, valued, and related to as a uniquely lovable human being, but instead being treated as an object – as an It – in the eyes of those who raised us.
This primal wound can be summarized by the following words of philosopher Martin Buber (emphasis mine):

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In the I-Thou relationship, the other is not an object but a presence.
Contrast that with:
I-It can never truly be a relationship – it’s always about detachment, control, or use.
To summarize:
When we encounter another individual truly as a person, not as an object for use, we become fully human.
So what happens when we are treated as an “object for use” growing up?
The result is that we develop a big, gnawing, aching wound at the center of ourselves, one that we try to cover up, pretend isn’t there, and run from our entire lives.
This core primal wound manifests as feelings of emptiness, hopelessness, worthlessness, isolation, numbness, and despair, destroying our sense of love, purpose, and sanity.
When we are treated as an “it” and not a “thou” – when the very ones that were meant to love us exactly the way we were reject our uniqueness, our lovability, our humanity – we are severed from our ability to see and cherish ourselves truly.
Lacking this empathic attunement and sensitive mirroring as children, it’s no wonder that so many of us grow up feeling lost and alone.
It’s no wonder that we have an epidemic of mental health issues, addiction, self-hatred, and disconnection from our Inner Light, our Deeper Self.
My Experience With the Primal Core Wound

Now that the two of us are experiencing firsthand what it’s like to be parents to a young child, I see just how precious and fragile our earliest days, weeks, and months are.
I also feel a sense of deep grief, rage, and loneliness emerge when I contemplate my upbringing and the gaps of empathic connection I still feel to this day.
I was raised in a fundamentalist religious household with parents who, while doing their very best with the level of awareness they had, measured my worth against their dogma and validated my reality only when it aligned with their likes, preferences, and belief system.
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I carry the core wound of never feeling truly “seen,” but only related to through the lens of a toxic belief system that divided the world into perfect/imperfect, right/wrong, saints/sinners, and heaven/hellfire.
Sure, I was hit a lot as a child – with the hand, the wooden spoon, and the riding whip. But that physical violation of boundaries as a sensitive girl wasn’t what did the most damage.
What damaged me the most was the profound loneliness of never feeling truly mirrored, truly witnessed, or truly loved in my own uniqueness. Never feeling seen. Never feeling known. Never feeling witnessed or embraced, just as I was.
On top of that, having a belief system that annihilated my physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual autonomy, replacing it with fearful obedience of eternal hellfire, led me to develop the core belief that “I’m fundamentally bad.”
And from that belief sprung an endless array of mental and emotional health struggles like depression, anxiety, self-harm, OCD, and many existential crises – most of which, through sacred intervention, I have learned to heal through deep inner work and Self-integration.
Through this ‘trial by fire’ initiation into parenthood that Mateo and I are experiencing, we’re starting to see how deeply impactful the core wound is in every single dimension of life.
What Type of Primal Core Wound Do You Have?

The old notion of “naming your demons so they no longer have as much power over you” applies here.
The best place to start when it comes to healing your primal wound, your earliest fracture, is in naming what type of wound you have.
Below, I have summarized a list of the main core wounds.
Take a moment to ground yourself, then read through the list and see which one speaks to you, especially in the context of childhood:
- The wound of abandonment – being left behind, physically or emotionally.
- The wound of rejection – feeling unwanted and therefore withdrawing from others or becoming a people pleaser.
- The wound of betrayal – losing trust due to deception or broken promises.
- The wound of humiliation – being shamed, put down, or belittled.
- The wound of neglect – being uncared for physically, mentally, or emotionally.
- The wound of unworthiness – feeling that you’re inherently not good enough.
- The wound of shame – feeling that you’re fundamentally broken or “bad” deep down.
- The wound of isolation – believing that you’re fundamentally alone or too weird/different ever to belong.
- The wound of powerlessness – feeling that you’re weak and unable to protect yourself, leading to a sense of learned helplessness.
- The wound of invisibility – feeling that you’re not truly seen or valued for who you authentically are.
Pause to breathe and center yourself. How does it feel to give a name to your deepest inner pain? Be sure to practice self-care and allow anything that comes up within you – all of it is valid and important to feel.
(Also, if you think I’ve missed any primal core wound, let me know below in the comments.)
You may also find that you identify with a number of the above wounds. This is normal as the core wound is complex. So, you can and likely do have a blend of several of these wounds (for example, humiliation and betrayal often go hand in hand, as do abandonment and unworthiness).
However, finding one word that crystallizes what you’ve experienced can be a powerful way to anchor that awareness in your psyche and begin an empowered path of healing.
Deep down, all these wounds go back to the primal wound of separation: being cut off from love, belonging, and safety.

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The Great Paradox: Your Wound is Your Medicine

Despite the horrific pain of the core wound and the chaos it unleashes on our lives, it’s also paradoxically our medicine; our path back Home.
In the words of mystic poet Rumi,
The wound is the place where the Light enters you.
Within this deep inner fracture is your unique doorway to the wisdom, love, and truth of your Deeper Self – the center of your being.
As the sage Lao Tzu writes,
At the center of your being, you have the answer; you know who you are and you know what you want.
Tell me, if you could truly heal the wound of disconnection you feel inside, what would change in your life?
I’d love to hear from you below and explore this topic more with you in the future.
Go deeper:
- How to Find Your Core Wound (3 Practices)
- Betrayal Trauma as a Sacred Wound: 3 Ways to Heal
- Self-Compassion: 9 Ways to Heal Your Deepest Wounds
Note: The comments section is a safe space, welcoming to all who want to share. Due to the sensitive nature of this topic, I have a “no-tolerance” policy for judgmental comments, which will be deleted if they arise. Thanks for keeping this space warm and welcoming.
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Great article! I feel the pain of ALL of them. So may wounds from being raised by TWO covert narcissist parents.
It’s been a long journey and probably much more to go. I am not going to give up despite the odds against me right now. And I am also learning so many lessons about truth and true empowerment as well as the darkness and evil others can carry inside them.
As always, thank you Luna and Sol for this very important work. Your site is truly a treasure trove of hard earned wisdom. <3
So much love.
Keep going, one step at a time, Jamiel. This is such vital work you’re doing 💜
Great article! I feel the pain of ALL of them. So may wounds from being raised by TWO covert narcissist parents.
It’s been a long journey and probably much more to go. I am not going to give up despite the odds against me right now. And I am also learning so many lessons about truth and true empowerment as well as the darkness and evil others can carry inside them.
As always, thank you Luna and Sol for this very important work. Your site is truly a treasure trove of hard earned wisdom. <3
So much love.
I have all of these wounds, The first being abandoned by my father at 10 years of age and absolutely no contact. that was a few weeks after my older brother committed suicide,I am a 70 year old lady now, Very youthful though and I am still working. Reading those wounds though made me realise that I am not weak. After that first trauma that I know was the catalyst I have had to go through many many trials. My mother was narcisstic and lied about everything and never saw me at all, I had to learn the art of people pleasing a long time ago and only realised late in life what that does to your soul. I am on my spiritually journey and I found reiki. It is so so painful like peeling layers of an onion but I believe it is necessary to come home to who you are and what you are here for. Patience, perseverance and peace is what it takes. Despite everything, the betrayals that would take to long to explain, the humiliation, I did not give up and I did not sink to that level, I continued to be empathetic and help anyone that needs my help. that is why reading your core trauma wounds helped me to realise I am not weak for keeping my core beliefs that I must have been born with. They certainly did not come from my family. You do such good work here because some people do not understand when they have not experienced this, For the ones that have they feel less alone and misunderstood. It does forge away to growth though and self awareness, wish I could have got to this point sooner. I think you these wounds for a purpose. My purpose is to help people. love and light x
“ I did not give up and I did not sink to that level, I continued to be empathetic and help anyone that needs my help.” — Beautiful and powerful. Thank you for sharing your light with this world, Janet! I appreciate you sharing your story here. 💜
Thanks for this. It took me so long to really get what these wounds and shadow work actually mean, and I thank Lonerwolf for this as it really made me think about important parts of myself. I think my wound has resulted in me repeating the same pain endlessly, like this article said. Invisibility, humilation etc this article really touches on these wounds and how it can make one feel less than human. Thank you for sharing your journey too. If I could truly heal the wound of disconnection, maybe I could have the courage to try again. I stopped long ago.
Thank you for your courage in sharing how the core wound has impacted you, Lala. This is a topic I plan on going much deeper into in the future.
Thank you so much Luna for writing this article. I am feeling the pain of ALL of them. Every single one. I was raised by TWO covert narcissistic parents. Incredible damage. It will take a life time to heal form.
I do feel I have come a long way on my journey and so much more to go. Currently still with my family abusers due to money issues. I pray and hope that this year I will break free and start a new life and go deeper in my healing. Working on it.
I am a mystical warrior at heart I will never give up. Will keep pressing on and continue to work on maturing and growing. Growing my way back home. :)
Thank you so much for all that you do. <3
I think you commented above slightly differently, but again I will commend you for your commitment to this healing path, Jamiel. Having two covert narc parents is deeply traumatic indeed. Keep orienting to your Inner Light 🕯️
If I could really truly heal the wound of disconnection, I would become the essence of who I am. I would honour my values, release my fears and create a life centred in love, understanding and connection.
I love this beautiful vision, Andrea. Thank you for sharing this 💜
I had been experiencing the wounds of rejection and isolation both in my childhood and in my first marriage. At the age of 45 I decided to break free and return to who I really was. I broke all connections with those who couldn’t accept me for who I truly was and I didn’t want or try to defend myself to or for anyone anymore. My moto became this is who I am, you can like it or leave it. It took many years of hard work, self care and healing of my inner child, (that I found very hard to love or even accept at first) but bit by bit I broke free of the past and pain. I am now living a great life surrounded by people who accept me for who I am and I intend to keep it that way although I still, to this day, have moments of reflection that are painful but now I am able to reflect, see what I have learned from it and let it go.
thank you so much for sharing this vulnerable side of yourself, it has helped me to put these bottled up feelings into words for the first time 🙏🏻
Thank you for sharing your inspiring story of healing, Jennifer, and showing that it is possible. Much love and gratitude 💜
Aletheia; I finished the project I shared with you a few weeks ago, don’t know if you saw it or not. If not, “On the Path to a Righteous Extinction” has been published and is currently available. The local chapter of the Ethical Society got its hands on a copy and has invited to talk about it at their next get together. It is a story similar to your own. All of us who have found our way in spite of being brought up with that utterly false view of the history of the cosmos and humankind’s place in the cosmos need to keep in mind that others are facing the same struggle, the same abuse, and be willing to help them along whenever we get the chance. That you are doing so makes me smile. As always, thank you for the work that you do.
Thank you for your own brilliant work, Tj. I’m so happy that, despite the wounds you experienced, you’re using this as the fuel to help others. Much love!
I feel all the wounds listed.
I don’t know who I am anymore.
I don’t know what I want, except to stop hurting. To stop hating myself.
To stop feeling.
I hear you, Bjorn. The fact that you have commented here shows that there is an impulse deep within you to heal, to find yourself again, to love yourself again. I plan to explore this topic more across the coming months. May you find your way back to the Home within. ♡
I’m very happy for this article, but as much as I would like to say that I have the childhood wound would be me lying for the sake of lying, but in all honesty it was the opposite and I was truly blessed to have been able to experience life in a special and unique way and I have my Mexican great grandmother, grandmother, my mother and my grandmother’s oldest sister to thank for bestowing upon me such grace, freedom, wisdom, experience, courage and so on and so forth – I was the unconventional one who disrupted the status quo and natural order of things..
Everything in the article of the wound’s technically occurred the year after I turned 19 and my first year of marriage and ended after a 25+ year marriage ended in divorce, and since then I’ve been able to start building on the self and the fractured parts of the false sense of self that I became and not because I wanted to be that person, but because it started to subtly creep in without warning and before I knew it I had lost myself and who I once was, I lost the connection with the person who was seen, unconditionally loved, because I allowed myself to believe that “Conditional Love” was Unconditional Love which it wasn’t and never has been.. I truly trusted in the illusion that was being created until I realized that it was an illusion and that for each and every time I believed that the words were true and that the actions were merely just words that would be used to keep me around and in a sense it was easier to tell me what I wanted to hear than to create a balance between the words and the actions, but eventually more and more my heart, mind, body and soul began to break out and I realized that something inside was trying to make sense of the things that were happening and the idea of that there was something more out there than the eyes can see, and I am grateful for the opportunities that my new experience with my grandchildren brought me because they awakened this sleeping beauty slowly and eventually enough was enough and I asked for a separation but was literally given the ultimatum of divorce and I didn’t hesitate one second and it was then that I realized that I was either going to allow myself to stay stuck like a bird in a cage whose wings are broken and still expected to fly or be the bird that isn’t afraid to fly into the unknown and spread her wings and so here I am right here and right now
in my early senior golden years rebuilding my life and I may not be the exact person I was originally before my marriage, but perhaps that is because of the circumstances in which I have transformed myself from, but there are many parts of the young little girl and teenager that I used to that still exist inside of me, and she strives every day to rebuild and grow into the happiness, peace, unconditional love and joyous life she had with the adventuresome wanderlust spirit that I fully embraced before who makes sure that she is seen and heard by her children and grandchildren and does it for them at the same time.. Anything fragile that was fractured is a beautiful work in progress worthy of healing from and I am grateful for the “Loner Wolf” because it has been my teaching of many things over the years past and will continue and I am thankful for having the opportunity to grow and transform without having fear or that illusion and sense of self because I have gained so much knowledge, wisdom and learning from this journey and path and something that I can leave behind as my own personal legacy to my children and grandchildren..
So, although I didn’t have the fractured wounds as a child, an instead as an adult, I know my former childhood self would like to say Thank You & I See You from the depths of my heart, mind, body, soul and being inside as well as out..
It’s beautiful that you had support from so many women in your lineage — that must have greatly contributed to building a strong foundation to break free from your toxic marriage. As you point out, these wounds can happen at any age or point in life. Thank you for sharing your inspiring story, Lana 💜