Many highly independent adults may be masking this serious form of trauma, and their children could be paying the price.
While “cereal for breakfast” and “latchkey” kids are often celebrated for their self-reliance, as these kids age into adulthood, particularly parenthood, serious issues can surface.
When parents are emotionally unavailable, a child’s independence is not so much a strength as a survival strategy.
When these independent children transition into adulthood and begin having children of their own, this survival strategy can manifest as emotional distance, difficulty accepting help from others, and the ingrained, stunting belief that they must handle everything alone.
The effects of childhood emotional neglect on adult development have been documented in a study from PubMed Central.
Unlike overt abuse, emotional neglect is a more invisible form of relational trauma, marked by what didn’t happen, rather than what did.
Whether because of parental work stress, mental illness, addiction, or unresolved trauma, emotional neglect reinforces in children the internalized belief that their needs and emotions are a burden and/or irrelevant.
As a result, and in adulthood, these seemingly self-reliant individuals often harbor feelings of deep loneliness, imposter syndrome, and the fear of being “too much” or “not enough,” beliefs born from having their emotional expressions dismissed or punished.
The adult consequences of emotional neglect and invalidation include self-doubt, shame around feelings, emotional suppression, relationship confusion, and difficulty trusting one’s perceptions.
In many cases, emotional neglect not only creates the dynamic of a child taking care of themselves, but also of everyone else. Known as “parentification,” this is a role reversal between parent and child, in which the child assumes responsibilities that are not “developmentally appropriate” for their age, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
This can take form in many ways, such as a child having to take care of their younger siblings, playing mediator for their parents’ arguments, acting as a parent’s therapist, or even being in the know about their parents’ issues, such as a single parent’s dating life or financial struggles.
In some cases, a child may be fully running the household due to a physically or emotionally absent parent.
According to experts, independent children are likely to develop avoidant strategies that effectively deactivate their attachment system, allowing them to function autonomously at the expense of emotional closeness.
Efficient, yes, connected, never.
In adulthood, avoidant attachment styles are triggered by intimacy; relationships can feel risky, vulnerability downright dangerous, and conflict is typically met with signature avoidance or emotional shutdown.
Emotionally neglected children often evolve into adults with alexithymia, the clinical term for the inability to recognize and name one’s own emotional states.
Unable to feel, understand, or regulate their feelings, they tend to underreact or overreact to emotional situations.
“In practical terms, emotionally self-sufficient adults might numb out or become overwhelmed in emotionally charged situations, never having learned how to process feelings healthily,” pediatric neuropsychologist Sam Goldstein, Ph.D., writes in Psychology Today.
Unfortunately, but understandably, these same neglected children who learned never to ask for help pass down their emotional survival strategies to their own kids.
If you are a parent with these patterns, getting honest about your upbringing and emotional conditioning can help you show up differently with your own children. Were you taught that emotions should be minimized or silenced completely?
To ensure you do not condition your own children the same way, experts recommend staying emotionally present, even and especially during times of discomfort, listening without judgment, and validating your child’s emotions.
Indeed, emotional validation is described by psychologists as a key way to protect a child’s mental health.
“Emotional availability isn’t about being perfect — it’s about being open, responsive, and willing to grow alongside your child,” writes Goldstein.
Still, healing from being a cereal kid is nuanced, as self-reliance is a skill worth keeping; the key is to support that self-reliance with interdependence.
Experts say integrating interdependence can start with small steps and low stakes, such as accepting a friend’s favor or saying yes when someone offers to help.
Practice receiving, and receiving will feel less risky.
Therapy is also recommended for people who were emotionally neglected as children; this practice supports grieving the childhood they may never have had, validates their experience, and bolsters their emotional selves enough to recognize and regulate feelings, safely connect, build secure attachments, and deepen their relationships.
