Your Brain on WTF?

The most crucial developmental task of the first three years of life is the creation of a safe, secure attachment bond between a baby and its primary caregiver, generally the mother. This bond is built through constant, intricate give-and-take emotional communications between the caregiver and child. This very innate, sophisticated process is absolutely necessary for proper brain development.

Children who grow up feeling secure in their primary relationships will develop normally, able to handle most traumas that may occur at any time during the course of their lives.

But children who are subjected to severe trauma, including traumatic separation from their primary caregivers lack this ability, and this lack can last a lifetime without aggressive treatment. They will suffer from emotional dysregulation, have less impulse control, overreact to stimuli, and have less ability to tolerate stress and frustration. They are more at risk for anxiety, depression, sleep problems, violent behavior, suicide, substance abuse, and other cognitive, emotional, behavioral and physiological damage.

Imagine being a baby or toddler with a fully developed amygdala, which is the brain structure that processes fear and is fully developed at birth, but not having the concomitant ability to understand or respond in a productive way nor having their primary caretaker to soothe and protect them.

That baby will experience pure, unadulterated, uncut terror, panic and ultimately, despair. My heart is aching to know of the bottomless pain these poor little children are experiencing every minute of every day because our nation has been highjacked by a dangerous sociopathic narcissist and his cronies.

Anyone out there who believes that what is happening is justified for ANY reason whatsoever needs to search their soul to see if they have one.

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Author: kvetchinwithgretchen

I am a licensed clinical social worker who has had the honor of working with many wonderful clients over the past 27 years and their stories inspire me, haunt me, intrigue me and sometimes infuriate me. I have learned from them and I want to share what I have learned with you.

13 thoughts on “Your Brain on WTF?”

  1. Thanks .I get it .The world can be devastating if ONE is  not properly nurtured and bonded to a solid foundation .I’m 65 and have survived .My mother was wonderful my father not so much .But You Know this secret .Great info GRETCH TO KVETCH .Sent via the Samsung Galaxy S6 edge+, an AT&T 4G LTE smartphone

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  2. Thanks for sharing Gretchen. So well written, but so painful to read and take in. Let’s hope all of those poor children get some good therapy later in life. Sigh.

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  3. Great article. I think my family was the same. Mom was ok (with issues) and Dad really useless..probably best he left.

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  4. Exceedidngly well stated. We are going to be living with the disastrous results of this short-sighted and cdruel policy for generations. I have read that such trauma in wartime leaves shildren with altered brains and that can be passed on to subsequent generations, as happened in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.

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