@scout86 - family dynamics:blackeye:
My older sister & brother shut down communication with me when I got sick 7 years ago, long before the trauma stuff came out. But I'm like Michael Jackson, I'm a lover not a fighter (!), so even though she chooses not to speak to me, I still care about her and her kids.
One of the difficulties is that the human brain goes through puberty just like the rest of your body. When it hits puberty, it's developed dnough that you can start to understand complexities like "just because they're treating me bad, it could be some issue going on with them, not with me". Before then, a child's brain is more simple with interpersonal stuff: when I cry mummy holds me, when I throw my food at dad he gets mad etc.
During that stage of development, if a bad thing is happening to a child, their brain is only sufficiently developed to interpret that as "I must be bad", or "I must have done something bad". It's not just what our parents teach us - when your brain is still pre-puberty, you actually don't have the developed capacity to interpret it as "this person is bad", particularly if the person is in a caregiving role.
It's complex, & I'll be honest I'm not quite across the whole brain physiology & development thing. But my understanding, from what I've learnt so far, is that a child's brain is the enemy when it comes to abuse from caregivers and "safe" people. Little kids think it's their fault & they've been bad because their brain isn't physiologically developed enough to see it any other way...
Tough nut to crack:confused: