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“It’s kind of overwhelming to think that every little thing I do could change something for someone else.”

— Joan Girardi/ Joan of Arcadia

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Charmed (1998) – TV Series

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On the Thai Authorities’ Arrest of Paul Chambers

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Old Volvos

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LIVE | ‘Countries Willing to Kiss My ‘Ass’ for Talks’: Trump Trade Secret BOMBSHELL | CLRCUT

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BULLET TRAIN – Official Trailer (HD)

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Childhood Trauma Influence

Childhood experiences, especially traumatic ones, can shape how people see the world, how they relate to others, and how they view themselves. It doesn’t necessarily define them forever, but it often becomes the foundation they either build on or try to rebuild from.

Let’s break it down a bit more—how childhood trauma shapes a person’s identity, behaviors, and emotional life:

1. Emotional Blueprint

  • Childhood trauma can teach a child that the world is unsafe, unpredictable, or that they must suppress emotions to survive.
  • As adults, this often shows up as anxiety, depression, difficulty trusting others, or emotional numbness.

2. Sense of Self

  • Kids internalize what happens around them. If they were neglected, abused, or constantly criticized, they may grow up with a damaged self-image, always feeling “not good enough” or unsure of their worth.
  • This can lead to perfectionism, people-pleasing, self-sabotage, or a fear of failure.

3. Attachment Styles

  • The way caregivers interact with children creates an internal “template” for future relationships.
  • Secure attachment = trust, openness, balance.
  • Avoidant or anxious attachment (often trauma-related) = fear of intimacy, clinginess, or emotional withdrawal.

4. Survival Mechanisms

  • Children develop coping mechanisms—like dissociation, hyper-independence, or overachievement—to deal with trauma. These often become long-term patterns that are hard to recognize or break as adults.

5. Core Beliefs and Identity

  • Trauma can implant deep-rooted beliefs: “I am unlovable,” “I have to earn love,” “I can’t trust anyone,” or “I’m always in danger.”
  • These beliefs shape personality traits, career choices, friendships, romantic relationships—even how someone talks to themselves internally.

6. Repetition Compulsion

  • Some people unknowingly repeat traumatic dynamics in adult life—choosing partners or environments that mirror their childhood pain—as a subconscious way to “redo” or resolve it.

7. Creative Expression or Empathy

  • On the other hand, trauma survivors often develop heightened sensitivity, creativity, empathy, and depth. Many artists, healers, and deep thinkers come from painful early life experiences.

If you’re thinking of this in terms of healing, transformation is very possible. Therapy, self-awareness, and safe relationships can slowly rewrite those scripts.

How does it shape the way we make decisions or express ourselves creatively as adults?

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ทนายแจม-ภาคประชาชน แถลงข่าวหลังสภาฯ เลื่อนถกกฎหมายนิรโทษกรรม

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ทำไมคนไทยยังต้องวัดดวงกับความปลอดภัยอาหาร | พูดมาก Podcast EP.123

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“If you let other people’s vision get between the world and your own, you will achieve that extremely common and worthless thing, a pictorial photograph.”

Paul Strand
Wall Street, New York
1915
printed 1976–1977
10 1/8 × 12 11/16in.

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“The market is not going to do exactly what you want when you want it … I wouldn’t worry too much about what happens over six months or twelve months. I don’t think you’re really all that welcome in this room if the short-term orientation is what turns you on.” — Charlie Munger

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Bob Dylan – Like A Rolling Stone (Live at Newport 1965)

Genius Lyrics

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“Ultimately, you are learning how to let go. This can be a painful process until you understand its necessity – and that 9 CANNOT let go until it fully understands and resolves the matter in question.”