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 โฆ
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 arenโt truly seen, loved, or valued as children in our precious uniqueness โ when we become mere objects in the mental projections of our caretakers or โthingsโ to use and control โ we experience a deep inner fracture of the psyche.
This fracture is known as โsplittingโ in various psychological fields, and it causes us to unconsciously adopt an artificial role in order to survive and be โacceptable.โ
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 youโre not in a space to look into your pain right now for any reason, or donโt 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 โ as an It โ 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 โ itโs 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 โobject for useโ 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 โitโ and not a โthouโ โ when the very ones that were meant to love us exactly the way we were reject our uniqueness, our lovability, our humanity โ we are severed from our ability to see and cherish ourselves truly.
Lacking this empathic attunement and sensitive mirroring as children, itโs no wonder that so many of us grow up feeling lost and alone.
Itโs 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 itโs 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 โseen,โ 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 โ with the hand, the wooden spoon, and the riding whip. But that physical violation of boundaries as a sensitive girl wasnโt 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 โIโm fundamentally bad.โ
And from that belief sprung an endless array of mental and emotional health struggles like depression, anxiety, self-harm, OCD, and many existential crises โ 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 โ being left behind, physically or emotionally.
- The wound of rejection โ feeling unwanted and therefore withdrawing from others or becoming a people pleaser.
- The wound of betrayal โ losing trust due to deception or broken promises.
- The wound of humiliation โ being shamed, put down, or belittled.
- The wound of neglect โ being uncared for physically, mentally, or emotionally.
- The wound of unworthiness โ feeling that youโre inherently not good enough.
- The wound of shame โ feeling that youโre fundamentally broken or “bad” deep down.
- The wound of isolation โ believing that youโre fundamentally alone or too weird/different ever to belong.
- The wound of powerlessness โ feeling that youโre weak and unable to protect yourself, leading to a sense of learned helplessness.
- The wound of invisibility โ feeling that youโre 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 โ 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 youโve 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, itโs 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 โ 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?
Iโd 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 โno-toleranceโ policy for judgmental comments, which will be deleted if they arise. Thanks for keeping this space warm and welcoming.
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Thank you so much for this! I have always felt like something missing, like if I had a crack in my shield, nothing would happen and I would just be seen as something worthless and belittled. But this article is incredible and inspiring and I can see that I need to find the courage in me to do something. Thank you for this reminder that I don’t need to be always okay, but still pushing forward.
A humble and grateful thank you for sharing your thoughts, inspirations and ideas. Your ideas and inspirations do truly sound so true and accurate. I humbly bless you with your further growth as I have. Continue to strive and grow strong, powerfully and positively forward in your growth. I welcome and look forward to your next inspiration!
I believe that the wound of abandonment is one of the triggers of several other types of wound. It is precisely when we are at the stage of development, where we begin to feel the pain of such a wound. This triggers a myriad of other wounds, and each one leaves a sense of detachment from the movement of life. You do not fit into almost anything, it seems that you are fully out of place. But it is precisely these pains that make you begin to search for your true identity, the construction of yourself, free from external influences, starting from your essence.
โ But it is precisely these pains that make you begin to search for your true identity, the construction of yourself, free from external influences, starting from your essence.โ โ Well said Hans. The wound of abandonment or disconnection, to me, is the core issue here.
Oneness! I would become one with the universe.
Beautiful ๐
I can identify with all of the wounds you mention – some of them, yes, caused by the adults that featured prominently in my own childhood, including teachers at school (my parents weren’t perfect but they did the very best they could & I felt loved by them) – but in particular from the energenetic patterns in my ancestral lineage. Whilst for the vast majority of my adult life I was totally unaware of what I was carrying around deep inside of me (I really was ‘sleep walking’), when I started doing holotropic breathwork regularly in 2013 (having read about it in the book ‘The Holographic Universe’) this revealed itself in all its perplexing, hugely intense, choking darkness.
In 2020 it culminated in me drawing a mandala where I had ‘exploded’ into millions of tiny pieces that were wondering around aimlessly in a desert of utter desolation & hopeless despair. Then at the beginning of 2021 I had an experience whilst doing an online course with the Shift Network where I was again in that desert, but suddenly the desert was no longer a place of isolation & emptiness but it was full of friendly, healing ‘witnesses’ that shared & felt my pain (the sand), heard my pain (the wind) and saw my pain (the sun) and I no longer felt alone and what a difference that made! The desert of desolation & despair had become an ocean of witness, sharing & healing. I now know that I am never alone, even when I am by myself (which is the majority of the time as I live alone), and even though I am still working through the emotional & physical residue of this ancestral trauma and that still challenges me in all kinds of ways on a daily basis, the general feeling I have deep down inside of me is one of a deep, contented fullness, whereas before – although I didn’t recognise it as such – there was a grey, constricted, disconnected, insecure, fearful kind of ’emptiness.’
I read a previous comment by a lady who said that she had an ideal loving, supportive childhood that most of us can only dream of, but it was in adulthood that she acquired these core wounds that you mention. Basically the point of my comment is that our ancestral lineages will also be bringing these core wounds into our lives, even if we don’t recognise them as such, and they will be influencing us in more ways than we know. Yes, most of us will probably have acquired some or all of these wounds in our current lives, but they will just be the outer skin of an onion that is just one layer on top of the much deeper layers of ancestral wounds that also need to be peeled away to get to the true essence at our core. It’s a life long process or perhaps more accurately put a ‘lives-long process’ and it’s certainly not easy but it’s worth doing not just for ourselves but for the whole of humanity.
โ Basically the point of my comment is that our ancestral lineages will also be bringing these core wounds into our lives, even if we donโt recognise them as such, and they will be influencing us in more ways than we know.โ โ Thank you for drawing awareness to this, Bella. What was the course you took out of interest? Ancestral inherited wounds is a topic of huge fascination to me. I appreciate you sharing the beautiful transformative experience youโve had!
Thank you so much for writing this article, reading through it I am I blubbering mess. Although I am familiar with this concept of core wounds and uncovered what mine were a few years ago, now further down my healing journey, I still have moments where I feel broken and needed this reminder of why that is. It’s such a long journey to heal from a childhood where you were not seen or emotionally supported as an individual. Thank you for sharing your experiences, it does help to know other people are doing the same healing work as it often feels like a very lonely road to be on.
“Itโs such a long journey to heal from a childhood where you were not seen or emotionally supported as an individual” โ it is ๐ Thank you for your vulnerability and for doing this precious and powerful work, Steph.
I wonder how the feeling of irrelevance fits into the conversation? That what you do or have done simply doesn’t matter? I can see it in several of the above listed wounds…
That one probably hits especially hard if you’re struggling with nihilism or an existential crisis. Then again maybe it’s helpful too.
I’d say this feeling of irrelevance may fit into the wound of invisibility โ like who you are and what you do or say doesn’t matter. What do you think, Dennis?
Core wound healing I believe is a priority in life. Blessed are those that are aware enough to try to heal from such deep scars. I believe it’s critical not to pass on this pain to the world. I’m still a work in progress after many years. Please continue to provide more insights on this sacred path. Thank you LW
“I believe itโs critical not to pass on this pain to the world” โ I believe that too, Pierre. Thank you for your sensitive and insightful comment ๐
I think I had isolation. I was weird in some way and I felt myself alone. I had written a poem titled “my happy loneliness”. I did not think of my loneliness as something worng or bad however today I can see the damage that has made to me. I always felt that I had to be strong, I had to solve my problems by myself and I thought that this was a very honorable characteristic of me. I still honor myself for being strong but it was very tiring and now I can see that I would have the right to broke sometimes and have somebody to embrace me in hard times. I think if I can heal my wound, I will be able to relax and cherish my life. Instead of always trying to solve problems and stay strong, I can have my emotions and have joy in life. Thanks you.
There is a beauty and power in that strength to deal with problems yourself, but I can see how it can also be burdensome. Both truths can exist together. Thank you for sharing this, Muge โก
There are aspect of each type listed in me, butcm Shame seems the biggest. I have felt that I’m fundamentally flawed and unlovable for 58 years. I’ve only stated to believe otherwise very recently.
A parent tried to choke me while I was asleep as a teenager. That left me feeling so flawed, to be as a human that didn’t deserve to livec in your parent’s eyes.
Others have seen the better of me, I am finally seeing that for myself.
The experience you describe, wow. I hope your inner child/teenager learns more and more just how lovable, unique, and needed they are. Thank you for your vulnerability, Steve โก