My client “Maria” is a 48-year-old CEO managing 450 people. She’s built a million-dollar business from scratch. But when she visits her parents, she becomes that powerless eight-year-old girl again.
Because your childhood home isn’t just a place. It’s a time machine that activates old survival patterns before you even realize what’s happening.
When you were young, your developing brain had one job—keep you safe. If dad’s raised voice meant danger, you learned to freeze. If mom’s disappointment felt like rejection, you learned to people-please. If conflict meant chaos, you learned to disappear.
These weren’t character flaws. They were brilliant adaptations that helped a small person survive in a world where they had no control.
But your nervous system doesn’t know you’re not eight anymore.
Here are four typical responses that children have to protect themselves, and default to as adults when conditions trigger this response:
Fawning: You become the perfect child again. Agreeing with everything, avoiding topics that might upset them. You abandon yourself to keep the peace.
Withdrawing: You shut down emotionally. One-word answers. Shallow conversations. Your body is there, but you’re not.
Freezing: You feel paralyzed. Can’t think of what to say. Your mind goes blank when they question your life choices.
Fighting: You turn into that rebellious teenager again. Arguing back, getting defensive, needing to prove you’re right.
These patterns leak into your adult relationships. How you learned to handle power, conflict, and criticism with your parents becomes your default with everyone else.
Step 1: Name Your Pattern. Get curious. What happens to your body? Your voice? Your confidence?
Step 2: Ground in Your Truth. Before walking into that house, remind yourself who you are now. Place your hand on your chest. Feel your heartbeat. You’re not eight anymore.
Step 3: Practice Tiny Boundaries. Start small: “I’d rather not discuss that today.” “That doesn’t work for me.” “I see it differently.”
Step 4: Expect Pushback (And Stay Centered). When you stop playing your old role, your family will try to pull you back. This doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong—it means it’s working.
The patterns that helped you survive childhood don’t have to define your adult relationships. You get to choose who you are in every interaction—even with the people who knew you first.
Dr. Gloria Lee is a psychologist with over 25 years of experience, relationship coach, bestselling author, and speaker, based in Vancouver, British Columbia, helping couples worldwide.
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I'm Dr. Gloria Lee, a psychologist, relationship coach, bestselling author, and speaker focused on turning your marriage from conflicted and stuck to close and connected.