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  <title>Held Together: Healing Childhood Trauma – The Roles We Learned to Survive</title>
  <description>Held Together: Healing Childhood Trauma Episode 2: The Roles We Learned to Survive Why do certain patterns in relationships feel automatic—even when we want to change them? In Episode 2 of the series Held Together: Healing Childhood Trauma, we explore how children often develop survival roles in response to stressful or unpredictable environments. These roles help the nervous system maintain safety and connection during childhood, but they can continue shaping identity, relationships, and emotional patterns in adulthood. Many adults carry adaptations such as hyper-independence, people-pleasing, perfectionism, or emotional shutdown without realizing these patterns were originally survival strategies shaped by early experiences. In this episode, Dr. Malorie explains how survival roles form in childhood, how family system roles develop in homes affected by trauma or dysfunction, and how Internal Family Systems (IFS) helps us understand these patterns with compassion rather than shame. Understanding these roles can be a powerful step toward healing from childhood trauma and developing healthier relationships.  In This Episode In this episode we discuss: • How childhood trauma shapes the nervous system • Why children develop survival roles to cope with stress or emotional instability • Common family roles in dysfunctional families, including the hero, scapegoat, lost child, and mascot • How survival roles influence adult relationships and identity • The connection between trauma responses and Internal Family Systems (IFS) • Why healing begins with curiosity and compassion toward protective parts  Survival Roles Discussed Children often adapt to difficult environments by stepping into roles that stabilize the family system. In this episode we explore roles such as: • The Hero – high-achieving and responsible • The Scapegoat – carries conflict and expresses family pain • The Lost Child – quiet, withdrawn, and unnoticed • The Mascot – uses humor to diffuse tension • The Chief Enabler – manages and stabilizes others • The Hyper-Independent Survivor While these roles may help a child survive early environments, they can later influence boundaries, intimacy, identity, and emotional regulation in adulthood.  Reflection for This Week When you notice yourself slipping into a familiar role—over-functioning, people-pleasing, withdrawing, or carrying everything alone—pause and ask: “What is this role trying to protect right now?” Then gently thank that role for how it once helped you survive. Curiosity widens the window. Compassion calms the system.  Resources Mentioned If you'd like to explore these ideas further: No Bad Parts – Richard Schwartz (Internal Family Systems and protective parts) The Body Keeps the Score – Bessel van der Kolk (How trauma lives in the nervous system and body) Attached – Amir Levine &amp;amp;amp; Rachel Heller (Understanding attachment styles in relationships) The Complex PTSD Workbook – Arielle Schwartz (Practical exercises for trauma recovery)  Coming Next Next week in Held Together: Healing Childhood Trauma, we explore trauma and shame and how survival roles can shape what psychologists sometimes call the false self. If you've ever felt known for what you do but not fully known for who you are, that conversation will meet you there.  Podcast Restored: Where Psychology Meets Grace Exploring the intersection of psychology, neuroscience, trauma healing, and faith.  Share This Episode If this episode resonated with you, consider sharing it with someone who may be healing from childhood trauma. Understanding the patterns we developed to survive is often where healing begins. &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Restored: Where Psychology Meets Grace</author_name>
  <author_url>https://www.greater-things.com</author_url>
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