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Parentified child psychology explained — discover what happens to your brain when childhood ends too early, and why the patterns follow you into adulthood. If you were the "responsible one" who held your family together, this video reveals the hidden cost of that role — and why letting go feels impossible. Some children never get to be children. Psychologist Salvador Minuchin identified parentification as the process where a child is pulled into a parental role, either through managing household responsibilities or becoming a parent's emotional support system. This video explores both forms of parentification, the neurological impact on the developing prefrontal cortex, and a pattern most parentified adults never recognize: the competence trap, where your ability to handle pressure ensures more pressure keeps coming. Whether you were cooking meals at ten or mediating your parents' arguments at seven, the adverse childhood experiences research shows how that early responsibility shaped your nervous system, your guilt patterns, and your inability to rest without anxiety. This is for anyone who was called an old soul and never questioned why. #ParentifiedChild #childhoodtrauma #developmentalpsychology #growinguptoofast #emotionalneglect ⚠️ This video is for educational and informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional therapy or clinical diagnosis. If any of this content resonates deeply, please consider speaking with a licensed therapist who can support your healing in ways a video cannot. 💬 What do you think? Drop your thoughts in the comments! 🔔 Subscribe for more: / @wythinkthat