There’s a particular kind of pain that’s hard to put into words. It doesn’t come from a single event you can point to. There’s no clear story of something terrible happening. In fact, if someone asked about your childhood, you might say it was ‘fine.’ You were fed, clothed, kept safe. And yet something has always felt missing.
That ‘something’ often has a name: emotional neglect. And its impact, quiet as it may have been, runs deeper than most people realise.
What Is Emotional Neglect?
Emotional neglect isn’t about what happened to you, it’s about what didn’t. It’s the absence of emotional attunement: the feelings that weren’t acknowledged, the needs that weren’t noticed, the times you were hurting but no one came. It can happen in households that, by all outward measures, were functioning just fine.
Parents don’t have to be unkind or absent to emotionally neglect a child. Sometimes they’re simply struggling themselves: emotionally unavailable, overwhelmed, or just not taught how to connect. The result, however, is the same: a child who learns that their emotional world is either invisible or inconvenient.
“It’s not what happened to you. It’s what didn’t happen, and what that absence taught you about yourself.”
Pioneering neurobiologist and psychiatrist Dr. Daniel J. Siegel has spent decades documenting the profound impact of emotional attunement on the developing brain. His research shows that when a caregiver consistently responds to a child’s emotional cues, what he calls ‘feeling felt’, and it actually shapes the neural pathways responsible for emotional regulation, self awareness, and connection. When that attunement is absent or inconsistent, those pathways develop differently. The child’s nervous system learns to survive without the support it was designed to receive.
What the Research Tells Us
The evidence linking unmet emotional needs in childhood to adult mental health challenges is substantial, and sobering. Two major research frameworks have helped us understand the scope of this impact.
The ACE Study
The Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Study, one of the largest investigations of its kind, examined the relationship between childhood experiences and adult health outcomes across more than 17,000 participants. Its findings were landmark:
67% of people have experienced at least one adverse childhood experience (ACE), with emotional neglect among the most commonly reported.
4.6 times more likely to experience depression, for those with an ACE score of 4 or more compared to those with none.
7 times more likely to develop alcohol dependence, for those with 4 or more ACEs, reflecting the profound link between unmet emotional needs and substance use as a coping mechanism.
12 times more likely to attempt suicide, for those with the highest ACE scores compared to those with a score of zero.
53.3% prevalence of childhood emotional neglect among people diagnosed with eating disorders, according to a systematic meta-analysis, significantly higher than in the general population.
3.3× greater risk of developing an eating disorder in adolescents who experienced emotional neglect, compared to those who did not.
Felitti, V.J. et al. (1998). Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. / Pignatelli, A.M. et al. (2017). Childhood neglect in eating disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. PubMed. / Ujhelyiová Nagy, A. et al. (2022). Adverse childhood experiences increase the risk for eating disorders among adolescents. Frontiers in Psychology.
These numbers aren’t meant to frighten. They’re meant to validate. For many people, seeing this data for the first time is the first moment they understand that what they’ve been carrying has a cause. That it makes sense.
The International Trauma Questionnaire (ITQ) and Complex PTSD
Not everyone who experiences emotional neglect develops PTSD as it’s traditionally understood. But research using the International Trauma Questionnaire (ITQ) has illuminated something important: many adults who grew up with emotional neglect present with what’s now recognised as Complex PTSD (CPTSD), a profile that goes beyond standard trauma symptoms.
Where PTSD tends to involve re-experiencing and hypervigilance tied to a specific event, CPTSD includes what researchers call Disturbances in Self-Organisation (DSO):
- Difficulties managing and regulating emotions
- A deeply negative sense of self: shame, emptiness, feeling fundamentally flawed
- Persistent problems in relationships: difficulty trusting, chronic fear of abandonment, or emotional withdrawal
Research using the ITQ consistently finds that interpersonal trauma in childhood, including emotional neglect, is more strongly associated with CPTSD than single-incident trauma. In other words, growing up in an environment of chronic emotional unavailability can be more damaging to the self than a single acute event.
Cloitre, M. et al. (2019). Evidence for Proposed ICD-11 PTSD and Complex PTSD: A World Health Organization International Study. World Psychiatry.
How It Lives in the Body
In his landmark work The Body Keeps the Score, psychiatrist Bessel van der Kolk demonstrates with striking clarity that trauma, including the trauma of chronic emotional neglect, doesn’t just live in our thoughts or memories. It lives in the body.
When a child’s distress is repeatedly unmet, the nervous system adapts. The stress response systems, the same ones designed to protect us in moments of threat, become chronically dysregulated. Over time, people learn to disconnect from their physical experience. Emotions that were never safe to feel get stored in the body as tension, fatigue, numbness, or pain. This is why many adults with histories of emotional neglect describe a strange flatness, not quite depression, not quite anxiety, just an unsettling sense of disconnection from their own experience.
“The body keeps the score: if the memory of trauma is encoded in the viscera, in heartbreaking and gut wrenching emotions… it can only be healed by working with these body responses directly.” Bessel van der Kolk
This is also why talk therapy alone is sometimes not enough. When the wound is relational and preverbal, existing before language, it often needs to be addressed at the level of the body and the nervous system, as well as the mind.
How It Shows Up in Relationships
Some of the most painful consequences of unmet emotional needs emerge in our closest relationships as adults. Dr. Sue Johnson, the founder of Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), dedicated her career to understanding how early attachment wounds shape the way we connect, and disconnect, in love.
Johnson’s research and clinical work showed that adults who experienced emotional neglect often enter relationships carrying a hidden set of fears: Am I lovable? Will I be abandoned? If I show who I really am, will they leave? These fears drive the patterns that so often erode intimacy, the pursuer who needs constant reassurance, the withdrawer who goes silent when things get hard, the couple who fight about logistics when what they’re really fighting about is ‘Do you see me?’
EFT informed research has found that these patterns are not character flaws or communication failures, they are attachment responses, rooted in early experiences of not feeling emotionally held. The good news is that they can be understood, worked with, and changed.
Johnson, S. (2008). Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love. Little, Brown Spark.
How It Shows Up Day to Day
Emotional neglect can manifest in ways that are easy to mistake for personality traits or ‘just the way I am.’ Some of the most common signs include:
- Chronic difficulty naming or describing your emotions (alexithymia)
- A persistent feeling of emptiness or numbness, even when life is going well
- Feeling like a burden when you have needs, or not knowing what your needs are at all
- High self-sufficiency and difficulty accepting help or support
- People-pleasing and an excessive sensitivity to others’ moods
- Difficulty trusting people, or swinging between over attachment and emotional shutdown
- Shame that feels deep and structural: ‘I am wrong,’ not just ‘I did something wrong’
- Disordered eating, substance use, or other strategies that help manage feelings that were never learned
These aren’t weaknesses. They are adaptations, very clever ones, built by a younger version of you to survive in an environment that didn’t meet your emotional needs. They made sense then. In therapy, we gently look at whether they’re still serving you now.
There Is a Way Through
What makes emotional neglect so difficult to treat, and so important to name, is that it often isn’t recognised. You can’t grieve what you didn’t know you were missing. Many people spend years in therapy treating the symptoms (anxiety, depression, relationship conflict, addiction) without ever reaching the root: the developmental wound of not having been emotionally seen.
But repair is possible. In fact, the relational origins of emotional neglect mean it is particularly responsive to corrective emotional experiences, the kind that happens in a safe, attuned therapeutic relationship.
At CSC, our therapists are trained in evidence-based approaches designed to work with exactly this kind of wound:
- Identifying the unmet core needs that drove early patterns, and gently works to meet them in new ways: Parts work, Schema Therapy, Attachment Focused EMDR
- Processing the implicit memories and body-held experiences of being unseen or unheard: EMDR
- Helping you get to know the parts of yourself that learned to hide, shut down, or perform in order to survive: Parts work, Schema Therapy, Attachment Focused EMDR, Schema Therapy
- Reconnecting you with a body that may have learned to go numb, restoring the felt sense of safety from the inside out: Somatic Therapy
- Building a values led, present-focused life even while difficult feelings and histories are present: Acceptance & Commitment Therapy
These aren’t quick fixes. They are deep, thoughtful, evidence-informed processes that honour the complexity of what you’ve been through. What they share is a commitment to one thing: helping you finally feel seen, perhaps for the first time.
You Don’t Have to Keep Carrying This Alone
If any of this has resonated with you, if you’ve spent years feeling like something was missing but couldn’t name what, we want you to know that there is language for your experience, and there is support available.
You didn’t get the emotional nourishment you deserved as a child. That wasn’t your fault. And it’s not too late to receive something of what you missed.
Therapy can’t rewrite the past. But it can profoundly change how the past lives in you today.
If you’d like to explore what therapy might look like for you, we invite you to reach out. Our team is here to help you find the right pathway, with warmth, without judgment, and at your pace.
🔗 Visit our website to learn more about our services and book a free initial consultation.
References
Felitti, V.J. et al. (1998). Relationship of childhood abuse and household dysfunction to many of the leading causes of death in adults. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 14(4), 245–258.
Cloitre, M. et al. (2019). Evidence for Proposed ICD-11 PTSD and Complex PTSD: A World Health Organization International Study. World Psychiatry, 18(3), 361–362.
Siegel, D.J. (2012). The Developing Mind: How Relationships and the Brain Interact to Shape Who We Are (2nd ed.). Guilford Press.
van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma. Viking.
Johnson, S. (2008). Hold Me Tight: Seven Conversations for a Lifetime of Love. Little, Brown Spark.
Teicher, M.H. & Samson, J.A. (2016). Annual Research Review: Enduring neurobiological effects of childhood abuse and neglect. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 57(3), 241–266.
Pignatelli, A.M. et al. (2017). Childhood neglect in eating disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Eating and Weight Disorders, 22(1), 1–17. DOI: 10.1007/s40519-016-0295-5
Ujhelyéiné Nagy, A. et al. (2022). Adverse childhood experiences increase the risk for eating disorders among adolescents. Frontiers in Psychology, 13. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1063693
Kimber, M. et al. (2017). Consequences of child emotional abuse, emotional neglect and exposure to intimate partner violence for eating disorders: a systematic critical review. BMC Psychology, 5(1), 33. DOI: 10.1186/s40359-017-0202-3