Yes. Emotional abuse does not always look dramatic, yet it can still lead to complex trauma. It can include patterns such as:
- ongoing invalidation
- intimidation
- humiliation
- manipulation
- reality distortion
- chronic criticism
Emotional and psychological abuse target a child’s sense of safety and self. When this kind of abuse occurs within a caregiving relationship, the child’s nervous system may remain in a constant state of threat.
Over time, the child may develop survival responses such as hypervigilance, emotional shutdown, or dissociation.
This page is part of the What Counts as Trauma? section of the CommuniDID site, which explains how trauma can occur without obvious violence and why survivors often doubt or normalize what happened to them.
Explore more:
- Questions about What Counts as Trauma?
- The guide What Counts as Abuse? helps readers evaluate past experiences and understand why confusion about abuse is common.
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