meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Suzanne Venker Show

89. Are You a Product of Childhood Emotional Neglect?: Erica Komisar

The Suzanne Venker Show

Suzanne Venker

Society & Culture

4.9650 Ratings

🗓️ 21 March 2021

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Most of us are aware that what happens to us in childhood has a huge effect on who we become as adults. But what if the opposite is also true? What if what doesn’t happen in childhood has an equal, or even greater effect?

The absence of emotional support in childhood is as damaging as other traumas. Childhood Emotional Neglect (CEN) is not a form of childhood abuse because it's subtle and usually unintentional. Rather than a direct act, it is the absence of action.

It’s inaction.

The result of a parent who’s disengaged in this way is that a child learns to ignore and hide his feelings from others, even from himself. Children in these homes learn very early in life that emotions are troublesome and inconvenient, and they take this mindset with them into their adult lives.

In contrast, children whose emotional needs are treated as important are encouraged to pay attention to their emotions and are either taught or modeled how to manage and express them. But children who experience emotional neglect are taught that their feelings don’t matter.

A child who receives this message is not consciously aware of it because it's rarely stated outright. It's a subliminal message delivered by the absence of a response from parents. But the result is that the child suppresses his emotions by pushing them away so they do not bother his parents or himself.

Years later, this same individual will continue to lack access to his emotions, which will almost certainly wreak havoc on his marriage and relationships.

Here to discuss what I believe is a prolific problem today is author and psychoanalyst Erica Komisar.

IN THIS EPISODE:

3:20  What are some signs of childhood emotional neglect?

6:20  Erica describes the different types of attachment disorders

6:50  Secure attachment is the ideal because your primary caregiver is consistently present this leads to an emotionally healthy person

9:30  Avoidant attachment disorder: Babies use this strategy to cope with the “loss” of their mothers due to physical or emotional absence. This produces trouble with connection, committing to relationships and being overly “independent."

14:00  The types of parents that may cause childhood emotional neglect: depressed parents, addicted parents, workaholic parent, the narcissistic parent and achievement focused parent

17:30 Narcissistic Personality Disorder is the hardest to treat

19:40  Alcoholism, drug addiction and eating disorders are all a result of Narcissistic Personality Disorders

22:00  Depression is connected to avoidant detachment disorder

23:30  Disorganized attachment disorder is typically the worst and relates to borderline personality disorder. These babies have no strategy and usually are a combination of all three. They are angry, emotionally erratic, paranoid, etc.

28:00  Babies know when the mothers desperately want to be with them

32:00  Many kids don’t get help and carry these things well into adulthood, Unless we get to the root of our pain, it stays with us

34:10  The mothers who raise anxious children are anxious themselves

35:00  Ambivalent mothers are resentful of their children

37:00  What is the difference between abuse and neglect?

39:00  What are the ramifications of emotional neglect on adult relationships/marriages?

41:00 Erica talks about her new book about raising resilient adolescents

47:00  Erica and Suzanne talk about anxiety

48:45  The difference bw depression and anxiety

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

From the magnificent Midwest, it's the Suzanne Venker Show, where men and women are equal in value, but wildly different by nature.

0:21.8

Join us here every week when we challenge the culture's hugely flawed narratives about men,

0:26.2

women, sex, and love. From coast to coast and from around the world, thank you for joining us.

0:33.2

So most of us are aware that what happens to us in childhood has a huge effect on who we become as adults.

0:39.6

But what if the opposite is also true? What if what doesn't happen in childhood has an equal or even

0:44.8

greater effect? The absence of emotional support in childhood is as damaging as other traumas.

0:51.5

Childhood emotional neglect is not a form of child abuse because it's subtle

0:55.8

and usually unintentional. Rather than a direct act, it's the absence of action. It's essentially

1:02.0

inaction. The result, when a parent is disengaged in this way, is the child learns to ignore

1:08.7

and hide his feelings from others, even from himself.

1:12.2

Children in these homes learn very early in life that emotions are troublesome and inconvenient

1:15.9

and they take this mindset with them into their adult lives. In contrast, children whose

1:20.8

emotional needs are treated as important are encouraged to pay attention to their emotions

1:24.2

and are either taught or modeled how to manage and express them.

1:28.0

But children who experience emotional neglect are essentially taught that their feelings don't

1:32.3

matter. A child who receives this message isn't consciously aware of it because it's not stated

1:37.3

outright. It's a subliminal message delivered by the absence of a response from a parent. But the result is that the child

1:46.5

suppresses his emotions by pushing them away so he doesn't bother his parents or even himself

1:52.1

with his own emotions. And years later, the same individual will continue to lack access to his

1:57.1

emotions, which will almost certainly wreak havoc in his life.

2:06.3

Here to discuss what I believe is a prolific problem today is author and psychoanalyst,

2:11.8

Erica Komisar, who if you've been following this show for a while, you will know that I have had her on several times because she is the go-to person on anything having to do with

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Suzanne Venker, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Suzanne Venker and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.