07:01

Episode 4: Emotional Impact On The Child

by Kamalyn Kaur

Rated
5
Type
talks
Activity
Meditation
Suitable for
Everyone
Plays
33

This episode explores the core emotional needs every child deserves — and what happens when those needs go unmet due to the mother wound. Many high-achieving women still carry these childhood wounds in the form of anxiety, perfectionism, and self-doubt.

Emotional NeedsMother WoundInner ChildAnxietyPerfectionismSelf DoubtEmotional NeglectSelf ValidationEmotional SafetySelf CompassionPeople PleasingHyper IndependenceInner Child HealingHigh Functioning AnxietyUnmet Needs

Transcript

Episode 4.

Emotional impact on the child.

The unmet needs beneath the surface.

Welcome back.

Today we're going to explore something many women feel deep in their bodies but often haven't put into words.

The emotional impact of the mother wound on your inner child.

If you grew up in a home where you were more focused on keeping the peace,

Staying good,

Or meeting your mother's emotional needs,

The chances are your own emotional world was quietly neglected.

This isn't about blame.

It's not about blaming your mother.

It's about making space for truth.

Until we understand what was missing,

We can't begin to give ourselves what we truly need.

Let's begin by naming what all children,

In fact all humans,

Need in order to feel emotionally whole.

A felt sense of safety.

The knowing that we won't be hurt or shamed for being ourselves.

Connection.

Being seen,

Heard,

And loved simply for who we are.

Emotional validation.

Having our feelings acknowledged without being dismissed or punished.

And finally,

Consistent care.

Knowing that our needs won't be ignored but gently tended to.

These aren't luxuries,

They're emotional oxygen.

And when they're missing,

Even subtly,

They leave behind invisible bruises that last long into adulthood.

Unmet needs don't always show up as obvious neglect.

Sometimes they're subtle,

Invisible,

But they do still shape us.

Maybe your mother was too overwhelmed to attune to your emotions,

So you became low maintenance,

Hiding your sadness,

Smiling,

Even when it hurt.

Maybe when you cried,

You were told to stop being dramatic or get over it,

So you stopped expressing pain altogether.

Maybe love felt like something you had to earn,

So you became the good girl,

The achiever,

The helper.

Not because you were praised for who you were,

But for how well you performed.

Perhaps it was the silence,

The things that never were said,

The hugs that never came,

The apologies that never arrived.

These gaps become stories we tell ourselves about what we are worth.

When our core emotional needs go unmet,

We adapt.

That's what children do.

We find ways to survive,

But those survival patterns carry emotional consequences.

You might doubt yourself constantly,

Feeling unsure whether what you feel is real or too much.

You might feel deeply uncomfortable with anger,

Pushing it down or turning it inwards.

You may overgive in relationships,

Afraid of being too needy or abandoned.

You might find it almost impossible to ask for help,

Not because you don't need it,

But because somewhere you learned your needs were a burden.

This emotional inheritance isn't your fault,

But it is something you now have the power to shift.

Let's talk about how this plays out in adulthood,

Especially if you're a high-functioning,

High-achieving woman.

When your emotional needs were unmet,

Your nervous system never got to relax.

You were trained to scan for rejection,

Read the room,

Anticipate everyone's needs,

All in an effort to feel safe.

Over time,

This becomes high-functioning anxiety.

You perform,

You achieve,

You succeed,

But from a place of pressure,

Not peace.

You don't rest well,

You feel guilty saying no,

You overthink everything because any misstep feels like a threat to your worth.

You're outwardly confident,

But inside you second-guess yourself constantly.

This isn't who you are,

It's who you became to survive,

And that's what we're learning to unlearn.

Let's pause for a minute.

Place one hand on your heart,

Close your eyes,

Take a deep breath in,

And then breathe out.

When you are ready,

Ask yourself the following three questions.

What emotions felt unsafe to express in my childhood?

When did I learn that having needs made me too much?

What do I believe today about asking for help,

Resting,

Or being unperfect?

Let these questions land softly.

There is no rush.

This is remembering,

It's not fixing.

If you've recognized yourself in this episode,

Then you need to know this.

Healing begins with awareness,

And you're already doing that.

You can begin,

Even now,

To give yourself what you didn't receive back then as a little girl.

You can begin to validate your own emotions.

You can begin to honor your needs without guilt.

You can begin to speak to yourself with tenderness and kindness.

This is how the story changes,

Not all at once,

Not overnight,

But breath by breath.

Thank you for meeting yourself here today.

In our next episode,

We'll explore the protective habits that often emerge in response to these early wounds.

Habits like perfectionism,

People pleasing,

And hyper-independence.

These are not flaws,

These are strategies,

And when we understand them,

We can begin to release them.

Until then,

Keep returning to your truth,

And the truth is my needs matter,

My feelings matter,

I matter.

Take good care of yourself.

You

Meet your Teacher

Kamalyn KaurUnited Kingdom

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© 2026 Kamalyn Kaur. All rights reserved. All copyright in this work remains with the original creator. No part of this material may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.

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