As my Social Psychology professor used to say “Nature vs. Nurture: either way it’s your parents’ fault!”
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
hahah!!! I've never heard that, but it is true!
@lorrainedarcy5316 жыл бұрын
Ive read this when I studied Physchology.
@bedhead-studio6 жыл бұрын
That’s hilarious
@thelightinthedarkness15596 жыл бұрын
That made me laugh
@fiikahlo6 жыл бұрын
😂😂 this is why I will never have kids..
@92Kels6 жыл бұрын
Inner child work is one of the hardest, weirdest and best things I've had to do in therapy!
@freshness42145 жыл бұрын
Too broke for therapy , what did you do
@mryan44524 жыл бұрын
@@freshness4214 theres a good book by felix economakis called nlp take charge of your life. V good explanation of inner child work. I've been doing years of CBT which I found a load of bolox. Made me feel awful. Inner child work is good.
@mischiefmakerstudios99004 жыл бұрын
92Kels I can relate. I mean, I thought everybody had the same life that I did growing up, but when we got our first lab top then I saw how other people lived in you tube, I was amazed as to how different my youth was. Not bad, it was scary sometimes, but sometimes very adventurous & other times even magical, but I realize now the entire my Aunt Joan was there to protect me. She really was.
@trustmi73653 жыл бұрын
How long does it take?
@PTEC3 жыл бұрын
What were some steps to take?
@goofyguber7871911 ай бұрын
My words to younger me is you will never be alone again. I'm here. I'm sobbing
@quietstorm64888 ай бұрын
That was POWERFUL. My heart immediately responded after reading your comment. Thank you for sharing that.❤
@ivanabratos28936 ай бұрын
Same.
@KatieBodo5 ай бұрын
I am crying with you . Same here
@SileneKitty6 жыл бұрын
"I see you" and "I hear you" made me cry. I guess that was something I needed to hear. My whole life I've had family and friends always minimizing my feelings, even after traumatic events. Then they wonder why at 32 years old I'm unemployed and struggling with MDD, SAD and GAD.
@carolynmcmillan70836 жыл бұрын
SileneKitty - totally agree xx
@lornocford64826 жыл бұрын
Sorry you've been through that with people. Know that you are a strong, courageous person to cope with that and still be true to yourself. Hugs.
@hockeymom497215 жыл бұрын
Do some therapy if you've not already. It'll work wonders, I promise.
@SileneKitty5 жыл бұрын
@@hockeymom49721 Man I was in such a bad place 2 months ago. I've had about 7 years of therapy and medication with mixed results. I keep relapsing into a major depression but on the bright side I'm currently in the recovery phase from this last one :D
@hockeymom497215 жыл бұрын
@@SileneKitty I'm glad you're taking care of you, that's important. I'm currently wanting to dive pretty deeply into this whole inner child thing because at 45 years old, I'm tired of feeling like my life has been amounting to nothing but a loveless pile of crap. I'll make it, this I know.
@sophiadavenport39596 жыл бұрын
It took me four years and eight months to complete my inner child healing, be patient with yourself. I love doing activities I enjoyed as a child like playing jenga.
@JS-iy4zb6 жыл бұрын
Patricia the booke thank you 😊
@brandonasif40745 жыл бұрын
Hey. What did you do. "4 years and 8 months", thats pretty accurate. Sounds like you had a calender or kept track of what you were doing and had a routine. Its hard for me to experience the strong emotions from the past. The mind naturally suppresses it. Ive tried meditating. Maybe i havent stuck with it long enough but i still have trouble getting over the pain someone has caused me in the past.
@hnkgg5845 жыл бұрын
Brandon Asif Brandon Asif Brandon Asif try to ask yourself why you feel pain now and work yourself up from there, what are the bad emotions you feel right now and what are they provoked by specifically, which behaviours, where they your parents or somebody else? Where they narcissistic or had some kind of personal disorder, it personally helped me a lot understanding the feelings I have right now, I fell like it’s fundamental for you to understand specifically what went wrong along the road to improve, before you take any action try to understand what went wrong. most importantly get out of any relationship that makes you feel bad(I haven’t done that myself, work in progress), and truly love yourself, that would be my suggestion, last part sounds stupid but couldn’t be further from the truth...last thing, one thing that helped me a lot is watching interactions of truly loving parents on KZbin and staff like this it might sound weird but it really makes you understand the depth of how wrong you might have been raised by your parents and how it should have been like on a regular basis, it will even help you remember more about your childhood and about how badly you might have been treated on an average day without having done nothing bad to deserve it...watch the KZbin channel gilstrap tv, at the end of the pranks he alway has vlogs with his daughter. This is very recent for me. Hopes this helps✌🏾
@reenasingh-id9zh4 жыл бұрын
How did u do it ?
@TheLily972324 жыл бұрын
And I love collage and decoupage ! It makes me peaceful. My dad pointed out that it is a child school activity. True haha
@alvaro-sounds2 жыл бұрын
To whoever is watching this video, I wish you peace, love, and happiness for you journey. You are every bit deserving of all those things. Blessings.
@alariaesculenta8177 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, I need that encouragement
@robertbogat34805 жыл бұрын
I think of inner child work as self parenting. Knowing how to care for yourself is huge. I had to basically learn how to parent a small child. By doing that I was able to heal pass trauma. It really does work. Huge life changer.
@leeleemac15 жыл бұрын
When I am in a situation that requires it, I visualize my terrified child self, then current day me comforting (child) while saying ‘I got you’. it signals ‘I got US’ so we are both comforted. It’s amazing how well it’s worked.
@imapeppr27126 жыл бұрын
Her white and gold shirt is so pretty😍
@angelarudd79406 жыл бұрын
Thats blue
@angelarudd79406 жыл бұрын
Blue and black
@imapeppr27126 жыл бұрын
angela rudd ???its white and gold???
@patrickbateman73536 жыл бұрын
Laurel
@_just_TK6 жыл бұрын
Yanny
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
Closed Captions are in English, Spanish and Portuguese!! :)
@urla_1806 жыл бұрын
Kati Morton hello
@bryannguyen84406 жыл бұрын
Kati Morton thank you for this video. I really appreciate it
@xdronxdronx6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for including captions!!!
@priusa81136 жыл бұрын
Kati Morton Muito obrigada:) I am Brazilian and I loveeee your channel! Thanks dear:)
@ekrima12344 жыл бұрын
What about Arabic language ?❤😍 From: Qatar 😌
@OoMiraoo5 жыл бұрын
I helped my inner child by start listening to myself. To be my own guardian, my own inner childs parent.
6 жыл бұрын
I did this with my psychiatrist a few weeks ago, it was very intense and I cried a lot, but it was also so liberating to be able to listen to this scared and sad child inside me and finally give her the reassurance she needed
@key2confidencewithpatsyhol6313 жыл бұрын
I listened to an inner child healing meditation recently. I sobbed and sobbed! It was really quite painful, but having reflected on it, I’m now doing an ICT diploma, so I can re-parent myself.
@ashole_933 жыл бұрын
@@key2confidencewithpatsyhol631 do you happen to have a link to the podcast you listened to?
@Legacychaser_777 Жыл бұрын
Cried just reading this! I need this so bad. It's seeping out of every adult being I have in my body, so child like! 😢
@bethjenkins70105 жыл бұрын
It’s okay to be afraid. Or really sad. I’m here. Your feelings matter. I love you forever. You’re safe. I like you. It’s going to be okay.
@Centerbender9 ай бұрын
Love these, thanks
@BethJehovah11 ай бұрын
I've done my inner child healing for 20 years. I enjoyed the journey of doing and redoing/ re-experiencing things that I needed to do, always wanted to do. Revisiting places, foods, candy, games, toys, books, TV shows. My last piece of work was last Christmas when I put up my own 7 foot tree for the first time. I kept re-decorating all winter it until it was perfect. Played my playlist of songs all winter. I also sent loads of gifts to my nieces because I needed that experience of giving and seeing children happy. Seeing myself in them too.
@paigegrinstead55686 жыл бұрын
One therapist to another these videos are so amazing and so important. THANK YOU!!
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
Awe thank you for taking the time to leave a nice comment :) xxo
@heatherfranklin19676 жыл бұрын
I 100% percent agree I'm getting my masters in social work next year and these videos are extremely helpful
@paigegrinstead55686 жыл бұрын
Kati Morton you’re doing amazing work! I suggested your videos to one of my old professors because they are so well done and informative! 😁
@pikuego6 жыл бұрын
I have issues with binge eating, and your video made me feel I should first try to look at my child trauma instead of trying to fix my eating issue alone.
@JaysNest6 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this! Last year I started doing this but I always had a hard time explaining to other people what I was doing. This healing process came to me intuitively. When I'm in my healing space I see myself as 4 different people: my child self, my teenage self, my present self, my wise future self. I started this as an act of self love. My current self helps my child self heal past traumas. i am the super hero I wish I had. I am the adult I needed for love. I fill the void of the loneliest I had. My current self looks to my child self for grounding. My child self has a pure happiness and love towards life. She forgives with her heart. She reminds me where my roots are. My future self is who I lean on for wisdom. She's gone through what I have but came out with a presence of thankfulness and love. She's empathetic to the upmost degree because she's been through what I have been through. My teenage self leans on my current self for hope for a better future. I still have a lot of stuff to heal from back then. As someone who has struggled with self worth, body image issues, depression, anxiety, low confidence, and sexual abuse I am thankful for this type of healing technique. Last year I made a video to my child self as a way to express myself. It has like 100 views lol. If anyone is interested, maybe it can inspire someone to help their child self heal, too: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jZquY2qleZWdfpY
@francescomenichella67506 жыл бұрын
before i went into therapy i was doing this and retraumatized myself. don't attempt to do it if you're not ready and if you don't have any support/validation. just a tip. (just like kati said)
@MsDeeskie6 жыл бұрын
This therapist is on the notification squad. 🙌🏽 trauma work is so important. Great topic as always ❤️
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
Yay!!! Woot woot!! xoxo
@carolynmcmillan70836 жыл бұрын
MsDeeskie I so need to ask what is the notification squad?
@MsDeeskie6 жыл бұрын
Carolyn McMillan Emily-Kate Ice Skating it means I have notifications on so I can be here to see the video when posted :)
@carolynmcmillan70836 жыл бұрын
MsDeeskie ahhh sorry I’m being dumb xx
@carolynmcmillan70836 жыл бұрын
MsDeeskie also on notifications:)
@OMGitsKristinaxD3 жыл бұрын
Those affirmations you mentioned made me cry immediately. I needed to hear those as a child. So badly.
@8149124 жыл бұрын
I agree with this so much. I got kind of bullied at high school - it wasn't as severe as what some people go through, just teasing, name-calling, people not letting me sit with them ect, but it was incredibly upsetting at the time. The thing is, it was the entire school, and I was basically seen as the weirdo of my year-group. Because of that, I had very few friends, and those I did have I pushed away eventually because of lack of self-esteem. It didn't feel like a big thing at the time, but I'm realising now how traumatising it was, and I missed out on a lot of teenage experiences because of it all - I never got invited to parties, never had anyone to hang out with at school, never had my first kiss ect. I'm 21 now, and I'm still trying to unlearn a lot of the negative lessons my brain taught me - like that I'm not worthy of having friends, and that I'd be inflicting myself on people. I still feel a lot younger than I am - I still haven't had a lot of those teenage experiences, and I'm honestly not that interested in a lot of the typical 20s lifestyle. I'm just happy learning to make friends and to trust people again, and gradually catching up, and I get a massive sense of achievement just from small things, like finding people I can really talk to, or going to the cinema with friends. I still feel like a 14-year-old in a lot of ways, and that's fine - I'll catch up in the end, but right now working on myself is much more important and I'm really proud of how I'm doing :)
@inawinchester6 жыл бұрын
Wow, ok. I started crying watching this 😮 especially at the part with telling your younger self that you're here and love them. Maybe I should dig more into that 😰
@laured.8216 жыл бұрын
I do therapy with psychiatrist and we work a lot with the inner child. We try to secure it and be like a healthy parent. It's quite effective :)
@donedennison92376 жыл бұрын
I do have childhood trauma but the biggest thing I like inner child work for.. and heck just being around kids of the same age.. is guidance and perspective. Like my parents were super flaky and couldn't teach me some of those calm and secure self soothing things. I can do that for my inner children. I babysat for a little 7 year old girl and that helped me see that she didn't have control over herself. Not her arms and legs, not her thinking.. nothing. I was judging myself based on being an adult. She taught me that my 7 year old couldn't have stopped anything from happening. She helped me let go of a lot of guilt.
@1Eilatan6 жыл бұрын
You talk about having patients getting in touch with their child self before any trauma, but what if they have no memories of life before trauma? (i.e. trauma is their earliest memory?)
@sararaeh6 жыл бұрын
1Eilatan I was also wondering this same thing.
@CPTSDfoundation6 жыл бұрын
1Eilatan, check out Peter Levine’s work: Somatic Experiencing as well as Bessel vanDerkolk’s work. Pete Walker is also a great resource. Please don’t give up. Thinking of you.🙏🏻
@kombuh85726 жыл бұрын
that's exactly how i felt/wondered when i heard "getting in touch with the child self before trauma" ... :(
@HandWarmingRobot135 жыл бұрын
@Gary Pfeifer Any specific recs?
@hockeymom497215 жыл бұрын
Try meditation, inner child meditations will help. Look up Dr Friedemann Schaub. He has an EXCELLENT meditation that helped me start the work. Just stick with it and don't sabotage yourself like I did because I stopped but I'm working on it again which is why I'm here.
@sarahardelean08086 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for posting this! I have terrible childhood trauma. Your videos help me a lot! I’m a broke college student that can’t afford therapy so your videos really are appreciated
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
Awe I am so glad that I can be a helpful resource when you need it!!! xoxo
@thespaminater6 жыл бұрын
Some colleges offer therapy at a free or reduced rate based on your income. It's definitely worth looking into. When I was a very broke student, I could still get free and low cost therapy. Good luck!
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
I'm going to therapy for free through my health insurance. You should look into different options that you can possibly do.
@hazzaplayz808 Жыл бұрын
I cried so hard when you said 'I see you',in regards to child work. The 3 words would have changed SO MUCH
@sofiavelez3436 жыл бұрын
Am I the only teenager that enjoys her videos? Btw, can you do a video on how divorce affects children/teenagers?
@_just_TK6 жыл бұрын
Sofía Vélez there are people from every age group in this community but I’d say that mid to late teens is the biggest one. Also, check out this video Kati did on divorce! kzbin.info/www/bejne/eKixeKOcaMiZmcU
@buksiblingsfun89066 жыл бұрын
Sofía Vélez 13
@sofiavelez3436 жыл бұрын
TK thanks!
@alicew55896 жыл бұрын
I’m here
@stacib19926 жыл бұрын
I love her videos and I think they've given me more awareness and helped my recovery a lot!
@lc2376 жыл бұрын
I have done decades of work with my inner child parts. The safer I help them feel, the better they feel about working with me. I noticed many years ago that my hands seemed to want to talk (they act like they are speaking sign language). I believe they simply don't feel safe enough yet to work with me, although I do talk to them and try to help them understand that we are grown up now and it is safe for them to say what they want to say. I also talk what I call gibberish from time to time. I believe it is the same as with my hands and that language will come one day. Recently I discovered that the hands felt bad because of things they were made to touch when we were very little. I think the hands and the gibberish may have developed because we were preverbal when the abuse began. When trauma occurs during infancy, before we learn language, it can sometimes take a long time to piece together symptoms and flashbacks, etc. and to make sense of it all because memories are very different when you don't have words to express them, but we (my parts and I) are doing well and we will keep on working together.
@kayleighdittemore83526 жыл бұрын
You explained this so well! I was breaking down about my first semester of college finals this week...but more stressed than usual. Finding the root of the root led me back to my younger self & I’m working to heal it through exploration...can’t wait to be home to really solve the problem :) so empowering & hopeful 💕 AND I GET YOUR BOOK THIS WEEK...can’t wait!
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
I am so glad it made sense and was helpful!!! Yay!! and I hope you love my book!! xoxo
@celestialcucumber4684 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your work, Kati. I’m being my own therapist right now because my intense people pleasing is making me start to deeply resent myself but I have no experience with therapy at 28 and am at this point feeling like it’ll be impossible to find a therapist I honestly connect with. Part of my extreme guard that I really want to work on, but so many people’s visions of the world feel so far from my own that I don’t know if I am physically and spiritually capable of letting them poke around in the deep recesses of my mind. Getting started has been so freaking hard. Anyway, it’s so nice to have things come up and get to search through your amazing collection of videos to find guidance. And your podcasts. And to even just be able to leave this comment and feel connected to others who may understand. Just truly, thank you! 💛
@unavoidablycanadian3979 ай бұрын
I've become more comfortable with the recesses of my mind. When shared, people do not respond well, but it's not our job to protect them. It's our job to be open with who we are, and when that happens, the world becomes a more interesting place.
@janine_wwfroggles32196 жыл бұрын
I can't remember a time before my trauma started, but I found I was able to connect with my child self through doing talking to her at the time I was afraid and felt alone. I started letting myself enjoy the things he took away from me -- friends, making art, singing, writing in a journal. Things that were expressive or that took an iota of confidence to do or that might let somebody know what was going on. I haven't had anyone do this with me continually as I moved around a lot. Hoping my new trama therapist can do this with me some more on top of DBT work. I still feel a void, and try to make things better or happier for others, and I think our culture nurtures guilt in wanting to do anything for ourselves.
@92RKID6 жыл бұрын
I agree with you about how American culture kind of makes one feel guilt for doing things for ourselves. How can someone take care of someone else if we don't take care of ourselves?
@charliedavidarnott15373 жыл бұрын
I don't see counselors talking about this kind of work anywhere near enough. Thank you so much, Kati!
@ShellShock7945 жыл бұрын
I had a very striking revelation earlier today while I was stuck in traffic on my way home. I'm a middle child, my sister is 6 years younger than me and my brother is 5 years older and also he has a different dad. My brother loves to try to reminisce about our childhood (and my mom to, to an extent) but I *never* remember the things that he talks about. There was even a time that my mom was talking about a weekend vacation we took one time and I had absolutely no recollection of this vacation whatsoever. And then it hit me today that I have huge, massive gaps in my memory because of all the shit I forced myself to block out and forget from my childhood but my siblings don't because my sister was too young and my brother was away at his dad's house. I have absolutely no idea what all I've blocked out and even the thought of trying to figure it out is terrifying.
@followingbreadcrumbs6 жыл бұрын
inner child work is some of the hardest work i've ever done but worth it
@johnjohn38495 жыл бұрын
Hi Can you tell me your experience and which method or methods you used please? Thanks
@freshness42145 жыл бұрын
@Ken can you tell us how you did it?
@Renae122344 жыл бұрын
How did that help
@markahearne3280 Жыл бұрын
Been through a lot of trauma. Looking back I blocked it all out thinking I was strong. I need love and attention. Peace and love always and everywhere
@angiejones9683 жыл бұрын
I have a baby journal/little girl journal I use it totally helps. I'm not only healing, but learning: why I act the way I do, connecting my dots, at times it's painful when i make a connection or find a hidden memory. It also leads to angry. My therapist thought this was a great idea. My go to it "I got you", I see you.
@anthonymicele88976 жыл бұрын
I'm 43 going on 78 and have struggled with depression / anxiety my entire life. It wasn't until I turned 40 that I had my first panic attack. Watching this video brings up memories and feelings that I've spent my life suppressing. I have so much guilt and shame that I know have come from childhood, but it's terrifying to confront my inner child. Trust is a big issue for me, so that will need to be addressed with my therapist. Thank you Kati for all you do for us.
@CheleBadoo6 жыл бұрын
Your example of loosing your blanket reminded me of something that happened to me. When I was in first grade, I got lice and my mom bagged up all of my stuffed "friends" / blankets and put them in the shed. After a month they got moldy and she threw them all out. I forgot how devastating that was to 6 year-old me.
@im19ice35 жыл бұрын
honestly that sounds awful even at an adult level, it's a vastly unfortunate series of events :( i'm sorry you had to go through that
@captainciz3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I remember I had lots of teddies as a kid and they had so much dust on them I got a chest infection. The doctor told us to freeze the teddies for a few days to kiss the bacteria. That's interesting and I never thought about it too much!
@softly1286 жыл бұрын
I clearly remember me as a child and one of my family said "you embarrassed me". Now I get anxiety about any kind of socializing and what to wear and what to say. I don't want to embarrass anyone 😭 I was a happy class clown before
@reinamontalbo82126 жыл бұрын
Kati this is absolutely incredible. I am really struggling with my anxiety and depression right now, I'm in a bit of a dark place, and needing to start therapy back up again. I loved the work I did with my therapist regarding my inner child. It was the most precious thing to be able to change the story, and just for a moment protect myself from that trauma. This is really wonderful, thank you. 💕
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
I am so sorry you are struggling right now.. and I hope getting back into therapy pulls you back out of that dark place. xoxo I am glad this video was helpful!! xoxo
@reinamontalbo82126 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!!! I appreciate you taking time out of your day to reply to us, you're so wonderful!!!
@killtheego7106 жыл бұрын
I seriously have so much love for you Kati, you really kill it at your job . I'm so glad there are people like you to understand humans on a very connected level
@jessn.26656 жыл бұрын
An interesting case study That kind of vouches for the value of inner child work: My grandfather has always been a very grumpy, mean person. He’s also very anxious and restrictive. He doesn’t like change, and he was generally abusive to my mom when she was younger. We knew his father was an abusive alcoholic, so we figured that’s why he turned out the way he did. He’s become nicer now that he’s 88. He almost died last year from a heart attack, and in a separate incident had to have half of his foot amputated. My mom has been his biggest caregiver. A few weeks ago he let it slip to my mom that when he was a kid, around 5 or 6, he witnessed a murder. He was with his cousin and (I think his older cousin?) when someone they knew came in and shot his older cousin in the head. He bled out and died right in front of my grandpa. Nothing was done justice wise because the murderer was related to the judge, and they played off of the fact that the only witnesses were two little kids. He’d never told my mom or any of her siblings about this. Obviously he never had gotten help.
@Prisoner40113 жыл бұрын
I used to listen to the song All I Ask of You from Phantom of the Opera when I was a teenager whenever I felt alone or fearful or abandoned. It was my little substitute for unconditional love. Music and art have been what I find to be the most healing and inspiring things in the world to this day.
@lonefaolan6042 Жыл бұрын
I did the same ❤ it is a very comforting and beautiful song. I used to imagine they were singing to me.
@Maggiemae336 жыл бұрын
I have done inner child work with a therapist and I didn't even know that is what it was called until this video. I was in toxic relationships and in going back to a time with my mom and dad I realized as my adult self that I wanted my mom to leave. It was profound. Thank you for another amazing topic and for helping so many of us stay working towards a healthy mind.
@cyndibennett72056 жыл бұрын
This was very well explained. I wish I knew what to expect when my inner child emerged, because it kind of freaked me out. However, it was one of the most powerfully healing experiences and afterwards I felt like a whole person and not in pieces any more. Thank you.
@mantis406 жыл бұрын
cute. pink blanket honestly, persons seeking answers have had worse trauma. the comment made it immediately ridiculous.
@jenniegirl22954 жыл бұрын
I’m a psychology student and also someone who is exploring recovery and wellness after years of being very unwell. I’m beginning inner child therapy and it’s very powerful. This has been a beautiful and painful journey, but I definitely feel like myself again. Thank you for making videos like this. As a psychology student and a patient, I’m so grateful for mental health advocates like you ❤️
@LuciliaNeaGal6 жыл бұрын
I'm in a psychdrama therapy group and it helped me to face my aggressive father as an adult on stage and protect my inner child against him. Now I know I don't have to be afraid of him anymore, even if my inner child is still afraid of rejection in relationships. So the work goes on...
@kaia81676 жыл бұрын
Quick topic suggestion before I dive into this video, I'd love for you to do a video on attachment and shame that can come from feeling attached, even in a healthy way, and how we can overcome that when it interferes in therapy. It's like a catch 22, you want to overcome your fear of attachment so you go to therapy, but you're ashamed of feeling attached to your therapist so you can't open up. Would really appreciate hearing your perspective. It's, uh *cough* for a friend. 🤣
@scoobyloobylou6 жыл бұрын
This! It’s so head screwy.. Feeling a secure nurturing attachment is all I want in the world, but my mind throws a ton of defences in the road so can’t get anywhere close... 🤬❤️
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
@@scoobyloobylou YESSS I don't have this with a therapist, but I'm trying to find the lines between that with friends.
@QueenCloveroftheice6 жыл бұрын
This is one of the advantages of being a writer. I can write stories that help me heal my pain.
@missgoddess43925 жыл бұрын
You remind me of my therapist she is amazing! She’s not covered by my insurance anymore so I’ve been dealing with it on my own. You are a wonderful soul thank you for helping people!
@debbaker4270 Жыл бұрын
I am recovering from Alcohol addiction and 7 yrs in its difficult to learn to live without artificial stabilizers .. I love God and I want to be committed but my subconscious which I presume is from my childhood and it seems to make sense keeps flailing up with self sabatoge when. Fear and … who knows enters my sphere and I don’t drink but I definitely digress (tears ). I guess I need to do this work .. I am 62 and life is short and I am willing I guess but my goodness is it worth it , it seems unless I do there is no hope to find a different outcome I believe it is necessary but I also believe I am ticked because I have to… Thank you for your channel Let’s work !’
@carleymills3226 жыл бұрын
I always stop what I’m doing to watch Kati’s videos! I am actually just about to graduate with my undergrad degree and start the Clinical Mental Health master’s program in May with a focus in children. People always ask me how I do it and I can’t really explain it other than I feel like it’s my calling and children need me. I look back at my childhood and thank a few special people who were there through my life’s traumas and hope to be that in a child’s life in the future. Thank you Kati for all the knowledge and good vibes you share with us you are so appreciated! Cannot wait to read your book I just ordered it! ❤️
@kzody54726 жыл бұрын
Carley, I can identify with your post! Thank you for sharing! It sounds like your heart is on the right path and that you will surely make difference on this world! I love her videos too and I'm currently half way through my masters for Clinical Counseling for behavioral mental health! I also felt/feel like it's my calling and want to work with children :)! I say this to encourage you on pursing your career journey! I'm sure you will love the program! Congratulations on finding your passion!!!
@JonatanAllgulin3 жыл бұрын
Hi Katie. You talk about the importance and necessity of a good safe relationship with a therapist to do inner child work and healing trauma. And you aslo recommend talking with our inner child by ourselves at a safe place. As i understand it there are different aspects of this work, f.ex, 1; getting an understanding and different perspectives of what it is and how it can be done, how it works, how to aproach and deal with what comes up etc.. 2; Doing it, which involves being fully present with ourselves. If we're potentially able to be fully present with ourselves at home or another "safe space", and only WE can meet ourselves fully, no one else can do that for us. It seems that a the therapist could be needed for both of these, but also none of these. Whats the therapists role in this? What exactly do we need it for, why is it required? And what can or even should be done by ourselves? Whats the difference of a therapist supporting us doing the work, and doing the work for us? If we actually need a therapist or a recipient being present and accepting of our stories, emotions and experiences, isn't that doing what we should do for ourselves?
@AMOEDEN8886 жыл бұрын
In the 90's or so , inner child work was overused as a buzz word and many health care providers did not recognize it as crucial for healing . Here in Canada , you would be hard pressed to find anyone promoting it's value . I even had a NLP practioner tell me that inner child work was not helpful . How else can we find our core wounds to heal and Integrate our inner child with our adult self especially when dealing with CPTSD and Dissosiative disorder ( I become 6 year old version of me when emotionally overwhelmed , even when happy ) I was accused of ' acting ' childish for attention . Arrested development is a real manifestation of adverse childhood traumas and abuse. Thank you for sharing this important message . Angel hugs n Blessings to you and yours 😇 P.S. 😊 I've been doing inner child work since early 2000 . It has helped me to see and forgive myself and realize I was NOT to blame , I didn't deserve or ask for abuse . And through my lens of Personal Perception, I was aware I was female at age 5 and displayed dysphoria . Now ! What does a 5 year old in 1971 know about social constructs or gender diversity in an age where there was no understanding or acceptance of intersexed or transgender people. Turns out , I am intersexed and was born with ovaries as well as testicles . And personally , off the record I mean no harm or disrespect when I say I don't buy into the diagnosis of ' rapid onset dysphoria ' . Being made fun of in public can asserbate existing dysphoria but ridicule due to not passing is not dysphoria in itself . I fear for youth making snap judgements about thier gender or lack of , and the consequential uprise in detransitioning . If that upsets other transgender people they should ask themselves why they are so fearful of inner child work since it helps us to embrace our authentic self .
@RTYWLive.Forever5 жыл бұрын
Azarah Eden this!!
@carolynmcmillan70836 жыл бұрын
I’ve just started this it’s very slow work because I’ve burried it so bloody deep. I used to think therapy didn’t work. We started marriage counselling and our therapist is like soooo good. It’s like she knows me better than I know myself. I now have individual therapy with her because I have sooo much stuff to deal with. She has totally changed my opinion on thearpy
@Lucia-yc9zj6 жыл бұрын
This has nothing to do with anything, but I absolutely LOVE how you always say Welcome! So cheerful and happy! I LOVE it!!
@TheBinski6 жыл бұрын
As my favorite television psychiatrist Andrea (Unbreakable Kimmy Schimdt) says, “Daytime me is like, ‘This is a process, this takes time.’ But actually, it’s always the parents. Always. They fug you up.” I adore my parents and I'm also grateful I have a second family where we just took the horses and ran amok! Plenty of traumas have been part of my life but also enough pink baby blankets have covered me. Love you Kati! xoxoxoxoxox
@EonsOfReflection5 жыл бұрын
I found a good starting place is to acknowledge our tendency towards the utilitarian approach. Once I started noticing the agendas that spurred to mind where my inner child was concerned, no wonder the child 'didn't come out to play', when I'd only call upon it to check things off my list, like 'healing this or that trauma', 'squeezing out some creativity' and so on. It came to me that I should perhaps consider it as a wild creature and make sure I leave bait for it to come and nourish on, to draw it out in the open. But then I connected to how I'd feel if everytime someone called upon me, it's 'because they need something' and I saw that it felt crumby. This is how I knew it's yet another agenda to leave the food as bait as if I were setting a trap. So I decided to befriend it. Truly befriend it, like create space and make time for 'us' to spend time together. I started leaving things around my room, for me to get creative with and chose moments of the evening to allow myself to be playful for the sake of it, not to draw out something that would give me some edge in an ego-based perception of competition. So yeah, for those like me who may be seeking to nurture a relationship with the inner child, this is a welcome contemplation. thank you for all your hard work I really appreciate all the consideration you put into your videos ^_^ much love x
@thehighpriestess84316 жыл бұрын
This is more important as people can fathom. Please make series on inner child work. I do a program that focuses incredibly on Inner Child work. Thank you for this video. 🌹🌹🌹🌹❤️❤️❤️
@liveyerrlifex266 жыл бұрын
I LOVE this. I think a lot of people discount psychoanalysis just because of the weird side of it. But it really is SO important to get in touch with our past to help us make connections with who we are and why we are the way they are.
@elliekerstiens1916 Жыл бұрын
Inner child work is truly some of the most moving and motivating thing I’ve done. Crying bc I finally tell that little girl I was back then that I love her. That she was enough. And that I did an AMAZING job raising her in a sense.
@elsewherehouse3 жыл бұрын
Book: Recovery of Your Inner Child: The Highly Acclaimed Method for Liberating Your Inner Self
@robintisabird15666 жыл бұрын
My therapist had me recall memories from my childhood in vlog form, Only I watch these videos of me just recalling memories, but I would talk to him about them later. It unearthed all the stuff I had purposely buried because I couldn’t handle the emotions of the traumas, but it helped me forgive my younger self and fully understand why I act the way I do today
@richardfeit74865 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the explanation. I was not aware of "inner child work" until my child showed up while meditating. Spoke soothing words to the hurt kiddo and very strange things occured. My memories became reframed and I saw my parents in a much more compassionate light. That feels good btw :). Your explanation of the modality is excellent in other words.
@emeraldeknapp51205 жыл бұрын
please please please make more videos like these I desperately need them
@gretagilardi42096 жыл бұрын
Hi Katie, love your video as usual! I’ve had emotional abusive parents and still live at home with them (I’m 22) and I’m currently in therapy. I think sometimes I need to talk to my younger self and journal to get in touch with her but outside of therapy I’m afraid to do it. Like i feel anxious about journaling or thinking about my childhood because I don’ t want to deal with those emotions and so it’s just really hard. Anyway thank you for covering this subject
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
Hey Greta! I'm 20 and dealing with the same thing! I know it's scary to deal with your emotions like that out of a therapy room. Maybe you can find a nice park or somewhere quiet where you can feel safe, or explore your inner child with someone else you feel safe with that isn't your therapist.
@lbraine23136 жыл бұрын
I’m so grateful to have found this channel. You’re so helpful and informative. Thanks for continuing to provide us with wonderful content
@im19ice34 жыл бұрын
i like to tell myself that my feelings matter, that its ok to cry
@heatherfranklin19676 жыл бұрын
I think this is best done with EMDR because then I was able to use the concepts of containment and safe place or safe object safe person to be able to tap into resources to help that younger child when I was feeling so vulnerable so that I felt more empowered afterwards.
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing!! This is so helpful :) xoxo
@abbysheremeta78376 жыл бұрын
That’s a good point! I will be starting this with my psychologist next week :-)
@davidmilan31453 жыл бұрын
A woman of great intelligence. Thanks for helping others. You are a blessing to humanity.
@nwn23775 жыл бұрын
This is what my trauma therapist just picked for me
@scoobyloobylou6 жыл бұрын
My inner child seems to run the show at least 70% of the time, the grown up is nowhere to be seen... Thank you for being on the money kati, your fab! 🌟
@Andrian.Nilsen4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Kati! In all my relationships I've been wanting to help all of my partners with their struggles, when it actually was myself I tried to help all the time. I haven't felt this "light", or the burdens off my shoulders... like all of my life. Just going back in time, and standing up for myself made me really cry and feel whole again. This is amazing, thank you!
@mary-kaylinlinch66486 жыл бұрын
I’m still working on not dissociating when even vaguely mentioning traumatic memories. I can’t wait until I can do work like this with my therapist!
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
OMG I'm doing EXACTLY this for the past few months, getting out of a codependent relationship and struggling to deal with my inner child and not thrusting it onto other people. Thank you Katie!
@kismetnazco47786 жыл бұрын
I can't even remember anything before the age of 12 and i'm only 21
@TokeTiger6 жыл бұрын
Me too
@fiikahlo6 жыл бұрын
Hey, me too! I start remembering from around my 13th year and I know I've been like this already when I was around 18-19, now I'm 25 and still can't remember... I have few memories from before that, but way less than my friends. It's weird when people tell me big things about my childhood and I seriously have no memory of any of it.
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
I remember lots of stuff but not it all. I realized this when my therapist asked me who was home when I got home from school, my parents schedule, did we have dinner together, did they ask about my day etc, and I'm like... "I actually have NO idea".
@fiikahlo6 жыл бұрын
@@JewishGirlRox you're supposed to remember stuff like that? Shit, I have no chance 😂
@JewishGirlRox6 жыл бұрын
@@fiikahlo Most people do apparently. I have friends who remember less. I had a really good friend with a stable home from the age of 4-14, so I think that is a reason I do have as many many memories as I do. Having that one 100 percent stable thing in my life..
@ramieoileus1544 Жыл бұрын
"If you ever meet your inner child ..don't cry..tell them everything is gonna be alright " "Bob sinclar'
@sobersherpa5 жыл бұрын
I had a difficult time forgiving my parents. However when I thought about my parents upbringing I realize that their mom and dad we're not very effective at grooming and preparing them for adulthood. It was then I was able to accept my parents shortcomings and forgive them unconditionally. Forgiving my parents unconditionally healed my emotional wounds and shed the emotional burden and pretty much eliminated my emotional vulnerability. Great topic and great video
@christiwhitlock47395 жыл бұрын
Dr. John Bradshaw introduced the “inner child” to me years ago. I then unraveled for various reasons and have now been going back to the young me again with even more advice and guidance. Everyone should try it.
@skylerneathawk95555 жыл бұрын
Hey Kati, I started watching your videos not too long ago and I just want to say thank you. ❤️ Life has been difficult and I don’t have a therapist at the moment so just watching you and practicing the coping skills you put out there has really helped to keep me grounded. 😌
@TheMsLyRa6 жыл бұрын
Do you need to know what trauma you are looking for or is it possible to find a traumatizing situation you couldn't remember before?
@RunOs36 жыл бұрын
I had a therapist once tell me that they was sending me on a counseling vacation. Simply because I told them I wanted to see someone different for therapy. It was nothing personal, I just wanted someone who I felt could better understand my views and lifestyle. Is this ethical in your opinion? You vids are awesome, you're awesome.
@Katimorton6 жыл бұрын
They really should have given you some referrals of other therapists they thought might be a better fit.. sounds like they might have taken it personally when they shouldn't have. xoxo
@Reldas4 жыл бұрын
I did weekly EMDR with my therapist for almost a year to process sexual abuse as a child. Adult me saved 11 year old me and burned my house down. That sounds crazy but EMDR saved my life.
@cassidygiven6 жыл бұрын
I recently did emdr with my therapist using a childhood little t and was surprised to remember how anxious I felt at the time. Before, I had never even considered it as anything important. But delving back into it opened a floodgate and since then I’ve been feeeeling so much more. I’d gotten used to just being numb and it feels good to finally cry some things out.
@coppersense9995 жыл бұрын
4:00 what is sad is when we don't just invalidate our younger self but all children's experiences and feelings obviously because that's how we perceive the childhood experience in a calloused way
@twiztidmomma226 жыл бұрын
i need a lot of this. many of my behaviors now are a reflection if what i went through as a child. i had a pretty supportive family for the most part, besides the fact that they never believed in mental disorders and that i was just being a kid with a phase. it was my school peers that were the biggest problem. and now i have so many things that haunt me every day because of it. thank you for this channel. its been very enlightening and educational. its helping me take the steps to get into therapy. 💜from pennsylvania
@Parkitloveit2 жыл бұрын
That helps me a lot, thank you. I’ve just found out that I don’t want to have any things because my step dad had taken my toys out of my room when he was still a stranger and I was 6 and didn’t understand anymore. It was the beginning of a 12 year long struggle to leave my mother’s and step father’s apartment to go away and back to my dad.
@adamhall53326 жыл бұрын
I love the "welcome!" At the beginning of your videos. It's so sweet and makes me feel happy for a second 😊
@leannedoolan54636 жыл бұрын
So good Kati. Working through childhood trauma myself and DID. Love your videos!
@gabbiefulton86046 жыл бұрын
Thank you Kati for creating this wonderful video. Thank you for explaining what inner child work is. Thank you for giving me some tools to use.
@Krolina162964 ай бұрын
oooof , glad you mentioned the need of feeling safe with the therapist, I got told on my first appointment we were doing that on the next few sessions, ended up finding a new therapist
@Noname-xn5tl3 жыл бұрын
I’m a single mom doing everything on my own, so when my mom tells me she doesn’t want to help me in anyway I’m reminded of when I was a child and she didn’t nurture me or help me in anyway. I have a lot of trauma I’m dealing with and I really need help coping with it.
@eadwiella3 жыл бұрын
You made me realize that I've been replaying all of the videogames my younger self played because I never had someone help me with something I had trouble solving. I'm showing up for myself by helping my inner child solve their hard problems.
@TheDaniela3112 Жыл бұрын
This is actually really beautiful, powerful, inspiring and healing. I'd love to have a therapist that could guide me through this technique.
@samkeller5995 жыл бұрын
I needed to hear this today. I've been reflecting on many of my traumas, whether through a trigger or nightmare, and I feel intense anger and grief out of nowhere, and I think and do things that are harmful to me. Today for example, I got angry at a friend because she is acting flakey/distant. I was thrown into a rage instantly, followed by feelings of loneliness and worthlessness. Before watching this video, I was tempted to just run away. Shut my phone off and walk somewhere, get away. I felt like everybody was persecuting me, or plotting something against me. After watching this video though, it provided me with extraordinary insight. Now I know that my anger and despair was a product of abandonment and emotional abuse I endured in childhood and adolescence. Knowing that it's my inner child, the child in me responding to those traumas, makes me feel a little less ashamed of my emotions, and I feel way better now. Thank you Kati for posting this. This is why we all need to be more open about mental health... so people like me can feel a sense of belonging and support.
@nicole-ww7lj6 жыл бұрын
I just want take a sexond to thank you Kati for making all of your videos. I find them very informative and helpful. Also I don’t know why but I find your voice soo smoothing and it never fails to calm me down. Thank you from the bottom of my heart
@anabelhadad97152 жыл бұрын
What if you don’t remember? I’ve been trying in therapy for years to remember so that I can know where to start working. I can’t ask my family, and I don’t really know what it is that I’m looking for. I feel whipped clean of a lot of trauma but I know it’s there
@sarilynyoung21056 жыл бұрын
Just got your book in the mail, literally opened it and gave it to my sister before she went home and ordered my second copy!!! Amazing prime isn’t fast enough!!!
@_just_TK6 жыл бұрын
Sarilyn Young Don’t forget to leave positive reviews online! (Written reviews are the best 😉) Checkout Goodreads.com Amazon.com & give a 👍 on Google!!!
@Crimson.banshee5 жыл бұрын
Kati, I'm a counseling student and I love your videos. You use wonderful, easy-to-follow examples of the concepts that you're talking about. Somehow you manage to make videos that speak both to the client and the therapist at the same time. It makes me think through how I would explain the therapeutic process to clients. Thank you for the videos.