While mothers are often seen as eternal stewards of consummate guidance and unwavering support, a mother’s identity is always much more complex than that. As women, mothers live in a deeply misogynistic world, and if those toxic messages haven’t been worked out of their belief system, they may inadvertently pass down these burdens to their children. This matrilineal pain is sometimes called the mother wound.  “The cultural atmosphere of female oppression by the Western patriarchy conditions women to think of themselves as ’less-than, not deserving, and not-worthy,’” psychologist Nadine Macaluso, LMFT, Ph.D., tells mbg. By existing in such a society, women often grow up internalizing and then acting out disempowering messages that aim to socialize them into being a “good girl,” one that plays small, accommodates, tolerates, and is ultimately spiritually disconnected as they neglect and devalue themselves to take care of others first. These pressures can result in them suppressing their full capabilities and natural ways of being to serve the family system. If not resolved, this trauma then gets passed down to the next generation. Girls raised by mothers who’ve internalized these negative messages also grow up obediently taking on those learned, oppressive standards to connect to their mother and interact with their surroundings.  “The mother wound includes the dysfunctional coping mechanisms of women: sacrificing their needs, denying their power and potential, and abandoning their authenticity,” Macaluso explains. “These strategies hammer home dysfunctional patterns [like] self-sacrifice, self-denial, and self-abandonment, which become highly dysfunctional traits in adulthood.” The mother wound isn’t an actual mental health diagnosis, according to clinical psychologist Jennifer Wolkin, Ph.D., but she describes it as a form of intergenerational complex trauma. “You are highly impacted by your mother’s own trauma response. In a way, you bond with your mother’s trauma, including her limiting beliefs and coping mechanisms,” she explains. That said, King believes the mother wound doesn’t discriminate and can affect individuals across the gender spectrum. Men can also internalize patriarchal thinking and go on to perpetuate them in their lives and romantic relationships later on. “Our caregivers’ jobs are to create and foster a safe place for us to learn how to connect with others, to make mistakes, and essentially learn what it means to be human and imperfect and for that to be accepted and OK,” King explains. “When this does not happen, emotional difficulties may arise.” As children grow up, they may harbor guilt since they feel conflicted between wanting to live out their authentic truth yet fearing they could lose their mother’s love if it’s perceived as a rejection of her teachings. They may unconsciously respond by developing adaptive survival mechanisms to secure their mother’s love and hopefully receive in return care from her and others. However, contorting yourself to please someone else doesn’t address the underlying social programming and instead seeks to only reinforce the pattern of the mother wound. Macaluso points out that by disconnecting from your true self, it creates a fundamental distrust of your own needs, feelings, desires, gut instincts, and perception of reality. The distortion manifests in behaviors such as codependency and people-pleasing.  King adds that impacts of the mother wound can “make you more susceptible to insecure attachment styles, low self-esteem, depression, anxiety, substance abuse, difficulty in romantic and platonic relationships, lack of emotional awareness, and difficulties self-soothing.”  While repetitive conditioning from society formed the core wound in our mothers and grandmothers, Wolkin says the inheritance of this wound can theoretically start as early as the womb. “According to epigenetics, the trauma endured by our ancestors affects DNA in a way that it’s passed down from generation to generation. One might conceptualize them as molecular wounds,” she explains. “So in theory, in our life, if we notice something alarming or unsettling us but [we] can’t really pinpoint it to our own lived experience, they can be experiences embodied from previous generations.” “Healing the mother wound consists of re-mothering yourself, which is the act of meeting your adult emotional, physical, and practical needs in ways that an imperfect yet ‘good enough mother’ might have done for you when you were younger,” Macaluso says. “This means addressing the places within you that feel hurt or stuck, and giving yourself the love that you did not receive.” She recommends working with a therapist and potentially finding community with other women to connect to your divine feminine in a positive context.  After validating your needs, take it one step further and engage your inner child to grieve the pain together. Through that, Wolkin says you can regulate your present-day adult nervous system and build the capacity to meet all of your feelings without shame. But take it slow: It won’t be a linear process nurturing those neglected parts. “When you are triggered or reactive, what’s really happening is that your younger self is searching for a felt sense of safety. What is most needed in that moment is to soothe the little you. See if you can first and foremost practice holding compassion for the part of you that [needed] to be showered with unconditional love, presence, and safety by your primary attachment figure,” she says. She recommends communicating to your inner child through visualization exercises, mindfulness, letter writing, or affirmations.  You may find yourself wanting to blame your mother, but Wolkin recommends trying to witness those complicated feelings with empathy when you can. Instead, she points out, it’s more useful to parse through the origins of the wound—which are almost always systemic and societal in nature—to recognize patterns to break the cycle. You can’t change your mother’s marginalized identity, but you can choose your reaction to it and hold space for her. Offering your family and yourself forgiveness will help with the healing and release the rage.  “A crucial element in healing is separating yourself from your mother by reminding yourself that they are not you,” Wolkin explains. If needed, set boundaries around the relationship and take space from her while you’re healing.  That line aptly sums up the unique pain of this societal wound. Mothers are expected to be perfect, and they did the best they could, even if it wasn’t exactly all you needed. By taking away the archetype of the selfless mother who can do it all, it will humanize her and help you see the impossible conditioning she had to endure. King offers a gentle reminder to go through the process with kid gloves and a healthy dose of compassion as you work through the trauma.  Healing your mother wound is an opportunity to alchemize your past traumas and recreate a safe relationship with yourself that no longer holds you back. While it can be painful to acknowledge the generational impact of the mother wound, know it’s not your fault.  “You did nothing wrong, and [now] you can choose better for yourself and for the generations to come in your family,” King says. “Trauma can be intergenerational, but so can healing.”

The Mother Wound  What It Is  15 Signs   How To Heal - 45The Mother Wound  What It Is  15 Signs   How To Heal - 20The Mother Wound  What It Is  15 Signs   How To Heal - 81The Mother Wound  What It Is  15 Signs   How To Heal - 23