
This paper offers a fundamental reframing of trauma, moving beyond metaphors of "wounds" or "weakness" to describe what it is: a natural outcome of a complex adaptive system being initialized under specific conditions. Drawing on systems theory, it demonstrates that the persistence of trauma is not a psychological flaw but a matter of physics—an unbroken chain of causality linking our earliest experiences to our present reality. The argument is simple yet profound: we are not broken by our past; we are initialized by it. This work provides a framework that dissolves shame and offers a new lens for understanding human development, resilience, and healing. It is for researchers, clinicians, and anyone seeking to understand the deep and lasting impact of our beginnings.
Child Psychiatry, Developmental psychology, FOS: Clinical medicine, Cognitive Neuroscience, Neurosciences, Psychology, Developmental, Cognitive neuroscience, Psychological Trauma/therapy, Psychological Trauma, Psychological Trauma/rehabilitation, Child Development, Child Rearing, Computational neuroscience, Child Abuse, Therapy, Child Care
Child Psychiatry, Developmental psychology, FOS: Clinical medicine, Cognitive Neuroscience, Neurosciences, Psychology, Developmental, Cognitive neuroscience, Psychological Trauma/therapy, Psychological Trauma, Psychological Trauma/rehabilitation, Child Development, Child Rearing, Computational neuroscience, Child Abuse, Therapy, Child Care
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