My inner child was wounded by the age of 4. Took me until where I'm at now (27 years old) to finally be healing from those traumas and wounds. Thanks Dawn Elise ❤
Thank you for sharing your journey. Healing from childhood wounds is a significant and courageous process, and it's inspiring to hear that you're making progress. It takes a lot of strength to confront and heal from past traumas. Keep nurturing your inner child and seeking the support you need. You're doing an amazing job, and your resilience is truly commendable. Also please share any insights or useful points you gathered from the video. Additionally, if you're keen to dive deeper into healing the inner child, explore more resources, or search for videos in the video library, you can use my AI first free. Here’s the link: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
Good for you! Letting go of your wounds will prevent it from spilling over onto others and the fact that you’re dealing with it while young will only bring you continued benefits in your relationships. Best of luck.
Love this as a mental health counselor in training, and also as a parent about how to be better and what not to do, and also healing my own inner child.
I am grateful to be of service. You might also like these two videos ruclips.net/video/k6hD8fEf_rM/видео.html ruclips.net/video/kuP4JFu08LU/видео.html Have a blessed day!
I am sorry about that, Babs. I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Also, you're looking to learn more about healing the inner child or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
My dad has beaten up my mom when she was pregnant with me. When I was 5 he hit me in the face and broke my nose. He also locked us all in the house without a key. I also had to witness his violence towards my mom and my sister without possibility to do anything. He died on my 16th birthday, yet I was left with CPTSD for the rest of my life. Low self-esteem, difficulty to build relationships, trust issues, generalized anxiety, depressions, eating disorders - the list goes on I hope to heal one day….
I'm really sorry to hear about the traumatic experiences you endured. It's incredibly difficult to process and live with such deep-seated pain. It's important to acknowledge your strength in sharing your story. Have you considered seeking professional support, such as therapy or counseling, to help manage and heal from your CPTSD? There are resources and communities that can offer support and understanding as you navigate this journey. Please feel free to share what you found most helpful in the video! Also, you're looking to learn more about cPTSD or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
Wow! That's pretty crazy. I will pray for you that you Heal. I am 63 yrs Young woman and my Mom died when I was 4 and I am just NOW healing my childhood wounds, and not by choice. My anxiety has been building for 2 yrs and is now unbearable. But have been watching TONS of Healing your Inner Child youtube videos and am crying a river of tears from the depths of my soul and it is SOOOO healing! I will pray that you start your healing journey and can find self-love, happiness and peace. God bless you! :)
I’m so grateful that my videos have resonated with you. Realizing the impact of childhood experiences can be a powerful, sometimes emotional, journey. Acknowledging that trauma is a significant first step toward healing and self-compassion. I’m honored to be a part of your journey, and I’m here to support you every step of the way. What’s been the most impactful thing you’ve learned so far?
@@DocSnipes learning to separate the inner child from my adult self has changed a lot of perspectives on situations and most importantly understanding my past has been very liberating...am enjoying the healing process as well...I now feel am worth more than I thought
❤seeing lists helps me, while yiu are giving examples ❤helping to be compassionate and seeing bigger picturesfrom other perspectives Very Freeing ❤loads of nurturing sensible Easy-looking care Full realisations of what i Can Do ❤how to see from my heart ❤grounded petspective lists ❤the way you sound when you talk because you seem happy thoughtful gentle and strong with reassurance and clear boundaries ❤the way you are not demonising anyone
You’re most welcome. I am grateful to be of service and I appreciate you watching the video. Please share what you found most helpful from the video. Also, for more information on healing the inner child or to explore my video library, visit: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
We lost that one battle, but we are not a loser. We failed at that one attempt, but we are not a failure. We are a “tryer.” If we choose not to try, we limit our opportunities to learn from our mistakes - and therefore limit our ability to achieve future successes. We were doing the best we could with the tools that we had at the time. We’re learning how to use better tools, and we’re making better choices as we learn how to use them. It’s taking time, but we’ll be better motivated to continue improving if we are encouraging and kind to ourselves.
Your perspective is truly inspiring. Recognizing that a single setback doesn't define us is so important. Embracing the identity of a "tryer" means we are committed to growth and learning from our experiences. It's about giving ourselves grace and understanding that we're always evolving and improving. Every effort we make, even if it doesn't succeed immediately, is a step toward greater wisdom and future success. Keep believing in your journey and the progress you're making. You’ll get there, one step at a time.
@@DocSnipes Thank you “Doc!” I began watching your continuing education videos during COVID, and eventually watched over 200 of them. Your videos have been instrumental in my continuing recovery and my educational advancement as I serve as a regional coordinator and group facilitator for SMART Recovery. One of my groups is in a federal prison re-entry center, and your videos have been extremely helpful in this regard. Thank you so very much for your inspirational and very educational videos.
Thank you for your kind words! I am grateful to be of service and I appreciate you watching the video. Please don’t hesitate to share the videos you find useful to help those in need.
Indeed, children often learn by observing and imitating the behaviors and attitudes of those around them. It highlights the importance of setting a positive example and creating a nurturing environment for them to grow up in. Also, Babs, I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Another thing, I don’t know if you know about my AI, but please feel free to use it to learn more about all things mental health of to search for videos in the video library: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
I'm really sorry to hear that you experienced this. Being traumatized by a teacher, someone who is supposed to support and nurture you, can be incredibly damaging. It's important to acknowledge your feelings and know that what you went through was not your fault. If you haven't already, consider talking to a therapist or counselor who can help you process this trauma and begin to heal. Remember, you deserve to feel safe and respected. Also, I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Additionally, if you're looking to learn more about healing the inner child or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
@@DocSnipes< yes- I did go for counseling. But my nervous system gets triggered when I can shouted at by people. And I get very nervous and go into flight or freeze mode.
In ex-communist country where I live, in early 1980s - teachers were actively screaming and physically punishing students - slapping their faces, pulling their ears, hitting them with objects - this was generally accepted as norm in society. I experienced this and it was major factor in forming fawning and people pleasing tendencies as social option to use as oppose to showing anger or defending myself. In the kindergarten I was repeatedly slapped in face as small kid - if I peed or pooped I would get punished, sometimes I got slapped in face when we had break and were suppose to sleep - the nanny came to my bed and hit me for no reason at all. Amazingly enough - this did not break me. It was bullying later on from other kids that triggered me into social anxiety issues, almost 10 years later.
@@muhyadindahir3188 Amazingly enough when this horror happened - I did not see it as trauma. I saw it as painful, hurtful but not as harmful to my psyche. It came to me as trauma when I started to see that this abusive behavior is wrong and not allowed in normal countries. I guess the same things would say children who brought up in alcoholic environments - when they start to be aware that not all families around out there are dysfunctional. I studied social anxiety since 1996 - so I have knowledge about it. CBT is placing a lot of stigma and incorrect information about social anxiety in the public. Social anxiety is being presented as a plague, as a sickness, as something to be ashamed of and something to cure and fix. In reality - social anxiety is a reflex to abnormal people and abnormal events caused by psychopaths and Dark triad predators of all kinds. IT means - asking if and how social anxiety is gone would be the same as if we can stop the pain when we cut ourselves or when we burn our hand on stove. The pain is normal reaction to abnormal event - the pain itself is not problem , and social anxiety should occur as normal reaction to unfair and unjust criticism and scrutiny. I see the problem in toxic people and shame culture mentality - where people are being intrusive. So dealing with social anxiety actually would need to be transformed into - dealing with toxic people, how we handle dealing with sociopaths of all kinds and narcissists. I see the "cure" for social anxiety as allowing ourselves to feel the anger - suppressed and pushed down anger is causing social anxiety psychological issue. HOWEVER - people being toxic - this is outside of our control. Allowing our anger to feel it won't cure toxic people - and we need to be aware of this - that social anxiety does not mean as CBT present it: as superiority complex of being super confident.
I had trauma from neglect and witnessing abuse of my immediate family from my dad. I then had a family and became the terror that was my dad. Unable to form relationships, I'm here trying to heal my pain.
Thank you for sharing your story. It takes a lot of courage to confront and acknowledge the cycle of trauma and its impact on your life. Recognizing these patterns is a significant first step toward healing and breaking the cycle. Seeking support and working through your pain can help you build healthier relationships and find peace. Remember, it's never too late to make positive changes and heal from the past. Your willingness to face these challenges shows incredible strength. Please feel free to share what tips from the video you’d consider using first to heal your inner child. Also, if you're interested in learning more about healing the inner child or if you want to explore my video library, you can use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes
@DocSnipes I've done a lot of affirmations and kind words to my inner child. I was in therapy, but my therapist wasn't trauma certified and it's too expensive. I also am a big believer in christ, and so my Christianity helps. I also meditate a lot to calm that inner child. It helps my awareness and prevents emotional dysregulation
Hey that’s great that you’re working to heal from that trauma, even after starting your own family! I have toxic parents and I’ve always wished for them to at least take responsibility for hurting me. So, coming from me, thank you for doing what most parents won’t. Trust me, your family will be grateful.
I would suggest to keep watching these powerful Healing your Inner Child youtubes cuz they have helped me immensely in only about 2 weeks! I have cried a river of old, deep down to the depths of my soul tears and I am just starting my healing journey. I pray that you heal cuz YOU did NOT deserve any of this. God bless you. ❤
Thank you for sharing. Accepting emotional or physical abuse can be an incredibly difficult process, and it’s normal to feel grief as you work through those painful experiences. Grieving is an important part of healing, as it allows you to process the losses-whether it’s the loss of trust, safety, or even parts of yourself that were affected by the abuse. Remember, healing doesn’t mean accepting what happened as okay, but rather coming to terms with it so you can reclaim your power and move forward. Be gentle with yourself through this process, and know that healing takes time. What has helped you in your journey to process these emotions and begin healing?
Really struggling on this, accepting what happened to me and also what I later in life inflicted on others. Its hard to accept the wrong that happened to me when I also wronged loved ones in different ways. Regret and guilt are running rampant and I don't know how to get a hold of it.
My inner child was wounded by the age of 4. Took me until where I'm at now (27 years old) to finally be healing from those traumas and wounds.
Thanks Dawn Elise ❤
Thank you for sharing your journey. Healing from childhood wounds is a significant and courageous process, and it's inspiring to hear that you're making progress. It takes a lot of strength to confront and heal from past traumas. Keep nurturing your inner child and seeking the support you need. You're doing an amazing job, and your resilience is truly commendable. Also please share any insights or useful points you gathered from the video. Additionally, if you're keen to dive deeper into healing the inner child, explore more resources, or search for videos in the video library, you can use my AI first free. Here’s the link: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
Many never even realise they have a problem,youre lucky you have awareness
Good for you! Letting go of your wounds will prevent it from spilling over onto others and the fact that you’re dealing with it while young will only bring you continued benefits in your relationships. Best of luck.
Love this as a mental health counselor in training, and also as a parent about how to be better and what not to do, and also healing my own inner child.
I am grateful to be of service. You might also like these two videos ruclips.net/video/k6hD8fEf_rM/видео.html ruclips.net/video/kuP4JFu08LU/видео.html Have a blessed day!
Too much trauma in my childhood 😔 a life time of recovery.
Here you are❤I am glad😊me too😢I am thankful that God has provided me with this wonderful human resource ❤Love over the waves
I am sorry about that, Babs. I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Also, you're looking to learn more about healing the inner child or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
@@DocSnipes thanks Doc.
My dad has beaten up my mom when she was pregnant with me. When I was 5 he hit me in the face and broke my nose. He also locked us all in the house without a key.
I also had to witness his violence towards my mom and my sister without possibility to do anything.
He died on my 16th birthday, yet I was left with CPTSD for the rest of my life.
Low self-esteem, difficulty to build relationships, trust issues, generalized anxiety, depressions, eating disorders - the list goes on
I hope to heal one day….
I'm really sorry to hear about the traumatic experiences you endured. It's incredibly difficult to process and live with such deep-seated pain. It's important to acknowledge your strength in sharing your story. Have you considered seeking professional support, such as therapy or counseling, to help manage and heal from your CPTSD? There are resources and communities that can offer support and understanding as you navigate this journey. Please feel free to share what you found most helpful in the video! Also, you're looking to learn more about cPTSD or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
So sorry to hear this ... Hope you heal
Wow! That's pretty crazy. I will pray for you that you Heal. I am 63 yrs Young woman and my Mom died when I was 4 and I am just NOW healing my childhood wounds, and not by choice. My anxiety has been building for 2 yrs and is now unbearable. But have been watching TONS of Healing your Inner Child youtube videos and am crying a river of tears from the depths of my soul and it is SOOOO healing! I will pray that you start your healing journey and can find self-love, happiness and peace. God bless you! :)
Have you tried primal therapy ? do read about it ...
I didn't realise how traumatized I was as a child until I listened to your videos...thank you very much for your empowering messages
I’m so grateful that my videos have resonated with you. Realizing the impact of childhood experiences can be a powerful, sometimes emotional, journey. Acknowledging that trauma is a significant first step toward healing and self-compassion. I’m honored to be a part of your journey, and I’m here to support you every step of the way. What’s been the most impactful thing you’ve learned so far?
@@DocSnipes learning to separate the inner child from my adult self has changed a lot of perspectives on situations and most importantly understanding my past has been very liberating...am enjoying the healing process as well...I now feel am worth more than I thought
❤seeing lists helps me, while yiu are giving examples
❤helping to be compassionate and seeing bigger picturesfrom other perspectives Very Freeing
❤loads of nurturing sensible Easy-looking care Full realisations of what i Can Do
❤how to see from my heart
❤grounded petspective lists
❤the way you sound when you talk because you seem happy thoughtful gentle and strong with reassurance and clear boundaries
❤the way you are not demonising anyone
Thank you for sharing
Thank you so much, for your videos Dr Snipes
You’re most welcome. I am grateful to be of service and I appreciate you watching the video. Please share what you found most helpful from the video. Also, for more information on healing the inner child or to explore my video library, visit: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
We lost that one battle, but we are not a loser. We failed at that one attempt, but we are not a failure. We are a “tryer.” If we choose not to try, we limit our opportunities to learn from our mistakes - and therefore limit our ability to achieve future successes.
We were doing the best we could with the tools that we had at the time. We’re learning how to use better tools, and we’re making better choices as we learn how to use them. It’s taking time, but we’ll be better motivated to continue improving if we are encouraging and kind to ourselves.
Your perspective is truly inspiring. Recognizing that a single setback doesn't define us is so important. Embracing the identity of a "tryer" means we are committed to growth and learning from our experiences. It's about giving ourselves grace and understanding that we're always evolving and improving. Every effort we make, even if it doesn't succeed immediately, is a step toward greater wisdom and future success. Keep believing in your journey and the progress you're making. You’ll get there, one step at a time.
@@DocSnipes Thank you “Doc!” I began watching your continuing education videos during COVID, and eventually watched over 200 of them. Your videos have been instrumental in my continuing recovery and my educational advancement as I serve as a regional coordinator and group facilitator for SMART Recovery. One of my groups is in a federal prison re-entry center, and your videos have been extremely helpful in this regard. Thank you so very much for your inspirational and very educational videos.
Fascinating and brilliant work.
Thank you for your kind words! I am grateful to be of service and I appreciate you watching the video. Please don’t hesitate to share the videos you find useful to help those in need.
Woah seriously multiply magnificent intel❤Thankyou❤🎉
You’re most welcome. I am grateful to be of service and I appreciate you watching the video
Children learn what they live. ❤
Indeed, children often learn by observing and imitating the behaviors and attitudes of those around them. It highlights the importance of setting a positive example and creating a nurturing environment for them to grow up in. Also, Babs, I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Another thing, I don’t know if you know about my AI, but please feel free to use it to learn more about all things mental health of to search for videos in the video library: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
A teacher traumatised me . She shouted and attacked me everyday.
I'm really sorry to hear that you experienced this. Being traumatized by a teacher, someone who is supposed to support and nurture you, can be incredibly damaging. It's important to acknowledge your feelings and know that what you went through was not your fault. If you haven't already, consider talking to a therapist or counselor who can help you process this trauma and begin to heal. Remember, you deserve to feel safe and respected. Also, I'd love to hear what you found most helpful in the video! Additionally, if you're looking to learn more about healing the inner child or want to browse through my video library, don’t hesitate to use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes.
@@DocSnipes< yes- I did go for counseling. But my nervous system gets triggered when I can shouted at by people. And I get very nervous and go into flight or freeze mode.
In ex-communist country where I live, in early 1980s - teachers were actively screaming and physically punishing students - slapping their faces, pulling their ears, hitting them with objects - this was generally accepted as norm in society. I experienced this and it was major factor in forming fawning and people pleasing tendencies as social option to use as oppose to showing anger or defending myself.
In the kindergarten I was repeatedly slapped in face as small kid - if I peed or pooped I would get punished, sometimes I got slapped in face when we had break and were suppose to sleep - the nanny came to my bed and hit me for no reason at all. Amazingly enough - this did not break me. It was bullying later on from other kids that triggered me into social anxiety issues, almost 10 years later.
@@ranc1977sorry all of that happen to you, i have similar story. do you have social anxiety now and how do you deal with it?
@@muhyadindahir3188 Amazingly enough when this horror happened - I did not see it as trauma. I saw it as painful, hurtful but not as harmful to my psyche. It came to me as trauma when I started to see that this abusive behavior is wrong and not allowed in normal countries. I guess the same things would say children who brought up in alcoholic environments - when they start to be aware that not all families around out there are dysfunctional.
I studied social anxiety since 1996 - so I have knowledge about it.
CBT is placing a lot of stigma and incorrect information about social anxiety in the public.
Social anxiety is being presented as a plague, as a sickness, as something to be ashamed of and something to cure and fix.
In reality - social anxiety is a reflex to abnormal people and abnormal events caused by psychopaths and Dark triad predators of all kinds.
IT means - asking if and how social anxiety is gone would be the same as if we can stop the pain when we cut ourselves or when we burn our hand on stove. The pain is normal reaction to abnormal event - the pain itself is not problem , and social anxiety should occur as normal reaction to unfair and unjust criticism and scrutiny.
I see the problem in toxic people and shame culture mentality - where people are being intrusive.
So dealing with social anxiety actually would need to be transformed into - dealing with toxic people, how we handle dealing with sociopaths of all kinds and narcissists.
I see the "cure" for social anxiety as allowing ourselves to feel the anger - suppressed and pushed down anger is causing social anxiety psychological issue.
HOWEVER - people being toxic - this is outside of our control. Allowing our anger to feel it won't cure toxic people - and we need to be aware of this - that social anxiety does not mean as CBT present it: as superiority complex of being super confident.
I had trauma from neglect and witnessing abuse of my immediate family from my dad. I then had a family and became the terror that was my dad. Unable to form relationships, I'm here trying to heal my pain.
Thank you for sharing your story. It takes a lot of courage to confront and acknowledge the cycle of trauma and its impact on your life. Recognizing these patterns is a significant first step toward healing and breaking the cycle. Seeking support and working through your pain can help you build healthier relationships and find peace. Remember, it's never too late to make positive changes and heal from the past. Your willingness to face these challenges shows incredible strength. Please feel free to share what tips from the video you’d consider using first to heal your inner child. Also, if you're interested in learning more about healing the inner child or if you want to explore my video library, you can use my AI: allceus.com/AskDocSnipes
@DocSnipes I've done a lot of affirmations and kind words to my inner child. I was in therapy, but my therapist wasn't trauma certified and it's too expensive. I also am a big believer in christ, and so my Christianity helps. I also meditate a lot to calm that inner child. It helps my awareness and prevents emotional dysregulation
Hey that’s great that you’re working to heal from that trauma, even after starting your own family! I have toxic parents and I’ve always wished for them to at least take responsibility for hurting me. So, coming from me, thank you for doing what most parents won’t. Trust me, your family will be grateful.
I would suggest to keep watching these powerful Healing your Inner Child youtubes cuz they have helped me immensely in only about 2 weeks! I have cried a river of old, deep down to the depths of my soul tears and I am just starting my healing journey. I pray that you heal cuz YOU did NOT deserve any of this. God bless you. ❤
And when you accept
Emotional abuse or phy and the. Grieve about it 😢
Thank you for sharing. Accepting emotional or physical abuse can be an incredibly difficult process, and it’s normal to feel grief as you work through those painful experiences. Grieving is an important part of healing, as it allows you to process the losses-whether it’s the loss of trust, safety, or even parts of yourself that were affected by the abuse. Remember, healing doesn’t mean accepting what happened as okay, but rather coming to terms with it so you can reclaim your power and move forward. Be gentle with yourself through this process, and know that healing takes time. What has helped you in your journey to process these emotions and begin healing?
Really struggling on this, accepting what happened to me and also what I later in life inflicted on others. Its hard to accept the wrong that happened to me when I also wronged loved ones in different ways. Regret and guilt are running rampant and I don't know how to get a hold of it.