The very first relationship we have is with our mothers or main caregivers, which creates a deep emotional pattern that shapes how we connect with others, view ourselves, and handle feelings throughout adulthood. When these early patterns remain unhealed, they quietly guide our adult lives in ways we rarely talk about openly.
These early bonds teach us what trust, safety, and love mean. Our early experiences with mothers literally shape how our brains develop, especially the parts that control emotions. Many people don’t see how these early patterns affect everything from our love lives to how we act at work.
Dr Chandni Tugnait, MD (A.M) Psychotherapist, Life Alchemist, Coach & Healer, Founder & Director, Gateway of Healing shares are a few insights on dynamics that shape our adult lives and how to overcome them-
● Unconscious reenactments: Adults with unresolved mother-related wounds often repeat old patterns without realizing it. For example, someone who felt emotionally distant from their mother might constantly seek approval from friends, romantic partners, or bosses, creating a neediness that mirrors their original unfulfilled longing. Others go the opposite way, becoming fiercely independent and pushing people away, silently vowing “I’ll never need anyone again” through their actions rather than words.
● Professional implications: The workplace often becomes a stage where these unhealed patterns play out. Having trouble with female bosses? This might connect to maternal relationship patterns. Always staying late at work seeking praise? This might stem from trying to earn approval that was hard to get in childhood. Many office conflicts and career choices have hidden roots in our earliest relationships.
● Recognizing the patterns: Healing starts with noticing these patterns. When you feel much stronger emotions than a situation calls for, this often points to unresolved childhood material. If small criticism makes you feel deeply ashamed or brief separations trigger fear of abandonment, these moments give clues about unhealed wounds. Your body often signals what your mind has forgotten. Tight chest, constricted throat during emotional talks, and stomach problems during stress are physical reactions often connected to early emotional experiences that haven’t been processed. The body holds memories that conscious thinking might miss.
● The integration process: Moving forward involves several steps: spotting recurring emotional patterns, connecting today’s triggers with past experiences, and developing compassion for yourself. These protective responses once helped you survive difficult situations; they served a purpose, even if they now limit you. This work usually goes better with help from someone trained in this area, as these patterns can be hard to see on your own. Friends might notice what you can’t, but a professional can guide you through processing without judgment.
● Healing without reconciliation: Modern approaches to emotional healing recognize that you don’t need your mother’s participation to heal these patterns. While making peace when possible can help, inner healing can happen on your own by acknowledging your experience, grieving what you didn’t receive, and building inner strength. This doesn’t mean blaming mothers, who were shaped by their own upbringings. Rather, it means taking responsibility for your healing as an adult, regardless of what caused your wounds.