
What is the one thing you must be willing to do in order to heal your trauma?
Why So Many Adults Don’t Know Who They Are is an eye-opening exploration narrated by Dr. Gabor Maté that delves into the profound and often misunderstood conflict between attachment and authenticity. This video examines how early childhood experiences shape our sense of self and identity, often leaving adults disconnected from their true feelings and desires. Dr. Maté explains how the basic human need for attachment—the drive to form close relationships—can sometimes clash with the equally essential need for authenticity, leading to lifelong patterns of suppression and emotional disconnection.
In this thought-provoking narrative, Dr. Maté reveals how children often suppress their authentic selves to preserve attachment with caregivers who may be stressed, traumatized, or unable to handle the child’s emotions. Over time, this compromise can disconnect us from our gut instincts and true identity, manifesting as confusion, addiction, or mental and physical health challenges in adulthood. The video highlights the importance of understanding this early conflict to begin reclaiming authenticity and fostering self-awareness.
This video is a must-watch for anyone seeking to understand why so many adults feel lost, out of touch with their feelings, or struggle with their sense of identity. Whether you’re exploring personal growth, parenting insights, or societal influences on mental health, Dr. Maté offers a compassionate and enlightening perspective. Through his wisdom, viewers are invited to reflect on their own lives and consider how reconnecting with their authentic selves can lead to greater emotional and physical well-being.
Perfect for individuals searching for answers about themselves or parents striving to break generational cycles, Why So Many Adults Don’t Know Who They Are provides an empathetic and actionable guide to self-discovery and healing. Don’t miss this chance to uncover the hidden dynamics that shape your life and identity.
When a child is born, a child has two needs. The first need is for attachment. And attachment is contact, connection, love. Without that, the human child does not survive. Even an avian child doesn’t survive. The baby bird has to be attached to the parent. The parents have to be attached to the baby. Otherwise the infant simply does not survive. Mammalians even more so and most so the human because we are the least developed, the least mature, with the least developed brains, and the most dependent for the longest period of time of any creature.
So our attachment needs are enormous. And they remain important through our lifetime because we have to have attachments to form societies, social groups, without which we don’t survive. So attachment is a huge need – to be able to connect, belong, be loved by and loved. That’s just a basic human need.
But we have another need as well which is for authenticity. Authenticity is the capacity to know what you feel, to be in touch with our bodies, and to be able to express who we are and manifest who we are in our activities and in our relationships. Now why is that? Well, think of a human being in evolutionary period who is not in touch with their body and gut feelings. How long do they survive out there in the wild? So authenticity is another huge survival need.
But what happens to a child where the attachment need is not compatible with the need for authenticity? In other words, if I am authentic, my parents will reject me. If I feel what I feel and express what I feel and insist on my own truth, my parents can’t handle it.
And parents convey those messages unconsciously all the time. Not because they mean to, not because they don’t love the child, but because they themselves are suppressed, or traumatized, or hurt, or stressed.
Now what does a child do with that? Well, if I give up my attachment for the sake of authenticity, I lose my relationships upon which my life depends. Therefore, there is no question. What becomes suppressed is our authenticity, our emotions.
And then, we become 35, 40, and we don’t know who we are. Somebody asks us, “what do you feel?” And you say, “I have no idea.” And how many times have we all had the experience of an inkling of a strong gut feeling, and ignoring it. We ignore it and get into trouble.
Well that tells us what happened. What happened was that at some point we found out that it was too costly for our attachment relationships to be in touch with our gut feelings. So then it becomes not our first nature but our second nature to lose touch with ourselves and to suppress our gut feelings. And then we pay the cost later on in the form of addiction, mental illness, or any range of physical illnesses. But it all began with this tragic conflict that children should never be confronted with but are all the time between authenticity on the one hand and attachment on the other.
Gabor Maté is a Hungarian-Canadian physician. He has a background in family practice and a special interest in childhood development and trauma, and in their potential lifelong impacts on physical and mental health, including on autoimmune disease, cancer, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), addictions, and a wide range of other conditions. Maté’s approach to addiction focuses on the trauma his patients have suffered and looks to address this in their recovery. In his book In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction, Maté discusses the types of trauma suffered by addicts and how this affects their decision making in later life. He believes in the connection between mind and body health. He has authored four books exploring topics including ADHD, stress, developmental psychology, and addiction.
“It’s not just parents. It’s society at large. It’s the system. It’s the dominant ideology working against Humanity. Parents reproduce what they themselves learned as kids and reproduce those patterns as adults due to the demands and pressure that the all-system puts on them. We’re looking at the possibility of a near-term future in which majority of people – at least in the West, being chronically neurotic and dissociated to cope with being forced to endure lives that are not worth living. The irony is that it will be the only realistic option they’ll have to survive. Conditioned from childhood by state and corporate institutions to conform and obey. To not ask questions. To do as they’re told. To refrain from thinking. To ignore their instinct and feelings. To see their own internal thoughts and feelings as deleterious and harmful. To believe that they can trust neither themselves nor their fellow human brethen. To accept being herded like cattle, used and abused and to be wholly incapable of even imagining any other way to live. All while the ruling financial elite live blissful wholesome lives while the rest rot because “they are the worthy few”, as if it were the natural order of things. It’s horrific what is being done to us.”
Why So Many Adults Don’t Know Who They Are is an eye-opening exploration narrated by Dr. Gabor Maté that delves into the profound and often misunderstood conflict between attachment and authenticity. This video examines how early childhood experiences shape our sense of self and identity, often leaving adults disconnected from their true feelings and desires. Dr. Maté explains how the basic human need for attachment—the drive to form close relationships—can sometimes clash with the equally essential need for authenticity, leading to lifelong patterns of suppression and emotional disconnection.
In this thought-provoking narrative, Dr. Maté reveals how children often suppress their authentic selves to preserve attachment with caregivers who may be stressed, traumatized, or unable to handle the child’s emotions. Over time, this compromise can disconnect us from our gut instincts and true identity, manifesting as confusion, addiction, or mental and physical health challenges in adulthood. The video highlights the importance of understanding this early conflict to begin reclaiming authenticity and fostering self-awareness.
This video is a must-watch for anyone seeking to understand why so many adults feel lost, out of touch with their feelings, or struggle with their sense of identity. Whether you’re exploring personal growth, parenting insights, or societal influences on mental health, Dr. Maté offers a compassionate and enlightening perspective. Through his wisdom, viewers are invited to reflect on their own lives and consider how reconnecting with their authentic selves can lead to greater emotional and physical well-being.
Perfect for individuals searching for answers about themselves or parents striving to break generational cycles, Why So Many Adults Don’t Know Who They Are provides an empathetic and actionable guide to self-discovery and healing. Don’t miss this chance to uncover the hidden dynamics that shape your life and identity.
When a child is born, a child has two needs. The first need is for attachment. And attachment is contact, connection, love. Without that, the human child does not survive. Even an avian child doesn’t survive. The baby bird has to be attached to the parent. The parents have to be attached to the baby. Otherwise the infant simply does not survive. Mammalians even more so and most so the human because we are the least developed, the least mature, with the least developed brains, and the most dependent for the longest period of time of any creature.
So our attachment needs are enormous. And they remain important through our lifetime because we have to have attachments to form societies, social groups, without which we don’t survive. So attachment is a huge need – to be able to connect, belong, be loved by and loved. That’s just a basic human need.
But we have another need as well which is for authenticity. Authenticity is the capacity to know what you feel, to be in touch with our bodies, and to be able to express who we are and manifest who we are in our activities and in our relationships. Now why is that? Well, think of a human being in evolutionary period who is not in touch with their body and gut feelings. How long do they survive out there in the wild? So authenticity is another huge survival need.
But what happens to a child where the attachment need is not compatible with the need for authenticity? In other words, if I am authentic, my parents will reject me. If I feel what I feel and express what I feel and insist on my own truth, my parents can’t handle it.
And parents convey those messages unconsciously all the time. Not because they mean to, not because they don’t love the child, but because they themselves are suppressed, or traumatized, or hurt, or stressed.
Now what does a child do with that? Well, if I give up my attachment for the sake of authenticity, I lose my relationships upon which my life depends. Therefore, there is no question. What becomes suppressed is our authenticity, our emotions.
And then, we become 35, 40, and we don’t know who we are. Somebody asks us, “what do you feel?” And you say, “I have no idea.” And how many times have we all had the experience of an inkling of a strong gut feeling, and ignoring it. We ignore it and get into trouble.
Well that tells us what happened. What happened was that at some point we found out that it was too costly for our attachment relationships to be in touch with our gut feelings. So then it becomes not our first nature but our second nature to lose touch with ourselves and to suppress our gut feelings. And then we pay the cost later on in the form of addiction, mental illness, or any range of physical illnesses. But it all began with this tragic conflict that children should never be confronted with but are all the time between authenticity on the one hand and attachment on the other.
Gabor Maté is a Hungarian-Canadian physician. He has a background in family practice and a special interest in childhood development and trauma, and in their potential lifelong impacts on physical and mental health, including on autoimmune disease, cancer, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), addictions, and a wide range of other conditions. Maté’s approach to addiction focuses on the trauma his patients have suffered and looks to address this in their recovery. In his book In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction, Maté discusses the types of trauma suffered by addicts and how this affects their decision making in later life. He believes in the connection between mind and body health. He has authored four books exploring topics including ADHD, stress, developmental psychology, and addiction.
“It’s not just parents. It’s society at large. It’s the system. It’s the dominant ideology working against Humanity. Parents reproduce what they themselves learned as kids and reproduce those patterns as adults due to the demands and pressure that the all-system puts on them. We’re looking at the possibility of a near-term future in which majority of people – at least in the West, being chronically neurotic and dissociated to cope with being forced to endure lives that are not worth living. The irony is that it will be the only realistic option they’ll have to survive. Conditioned from childhood by state and corporate institutions to conform and obey. To not ask questions. To do as they’re told. To refrain from thinking. To ignore their instinct and feelings. To see their own internal thoughts and feelings as deleterious and harmful. To believe that they can trust neither themselves nor their fellow human brethen. To accept being herded like cattle, used and abused and to be wholly incapable of even imagining any other way to live. All while the ruling financial elite live blissful wholesome lives while the rest rot because “they are the worthy few”, as if it were the natural order of things. It’s horrific what is being done to us.”
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