Emotional Neglect
Emotional Neglect
Emotional Neglect
Emotional Neglect
Dr. Jonice Webb succinctly defines it this way: “Emotional neglect is a parent’s failure to act. It’s a failure to
notice, attend to, or respond appropriately to a child’s feelings”. Emotional neglect is not something that happens,
but something that fails to happen. This makes it a difficult concept to understand and discuss because emotional
neglect is intangible. It is easy to identify the harmful actions of a parent who yells, smacks or criticises, but much
harder to pinpoint the wrong actions of a parent who fails to provide for certain needs.
Emotional neglect also occurs in adult relationships between intimate partners. How often have you heard people
saying, “He/she is emotionally unavailable (/insights-healthy-relationships/understanding-the-emotionally-
unavailable) or absent”? Emotional neglect is the opposite of emotional attunement. When a couple is emotionally
attuned to each other, they experience emotional connection and emotional intimacy. In a relationship or marriage
emotional neglect is when a partner consistently fails to notice, attend to, and respond in a timely manner to a
partner or spouse’s feelings. In both instances, it has far-reaching negative consequences for the relationship.
As humans, we are relational beings. While you cannot point to the specific behaviours of your parents or partner
that makes you feel unloved and affect your self-esteem; not being noticed, attended to, or responded to
appropriately and in a timely manner affects both children and adults. Inadvertently, the lack of attentiveness and
responsiveness, speaks volumes – your feelings and emotional needs don’t matter. In children, this translates into
‘you don’t matter’ and in adults ‘your needs/you don’t matter.
Emotional neglect is common. It happens in the majority of families in today’s busy lifestyle and society. Most
parents love their children. Most adults love their partners. This is not about love or the lack of love. It is about
bringing into awareness something that we may not be aware of, and about acting it.
As Psychologists and relationship Counsellors, we see many individuals, couples and families who suffer the
consequences of emotional neglect. Good people of all ages with a void in their lives, longing for this invisible
emotional attention.
Certain types of parenting styles are more likely to result in emotional neglect. Authoritarian parents are more
interested in whether their children obey instructions than in how children feel or what they need. Perfectionist
parents set extremely high expectations of grades and other performance, with little empathy for the intangible
details of children’s emotional status. Parents who are permissive or ‘laissez-faire’ tend to be hands-off to the point
of being disconnected from their children’s emotional lives. Narcissistic (/insights-healthy-relationships/narcissistic-
relationships) parents, whose focus revolves around their own needs, prevent children from learning to identify
their own feelings.
Other parents may be forced by circumstance to be emotionally absent from their child’s life due to marital conflict
(/insights-healthy-relationships/pursuer-withdrawer-relationship-conflict), divorce (/couples-counselling-
melbourne/counselling-for-divorce), depression or anxiety (/psychotherapy-melbourne/anxiety-treatment), illness,
overwork, or other life challenges. Sometimes this can lead to emotional parentification- when a child feels the
need to meet the emotional needs of the parents and siblings. In most cases, parents who were emotionally
neglected as children do not realise they are being emotionally neglectful to their children. How would they? For
example, parents cannot provide comfort or soothing when they have not experienced being comforted or sooth in
times of feeling upset.
Emotional neglect can have a surprising physiological effect on our developing brains in childhood. When children
are regularly neglected or exposed to other hardships they are prone to a ‘toxic stress response’ that impairs
normal development in the brain and other organs. Specifically, important executive brain functions such as self-
control, memory, and the ability to shift attention appropriately are learned skills that must be supported by a
child’s growing environment. ‘Toxic stress’ is disruptive to the development of these skills and also makes it
difficult for children to acquire the ability to self-manage in challenging circumstances. This lack of development
will continue to impair a child well into adulthood. Emotional neglect in childhood is frequently the cause of many
undiagnosed learning disorders in adults. Sadly, these adults grow up believing they are not good enough or at an
extreme there is something wrong with them, they have something to be ashamed of.
Suppressing emotions or being disconnected from emotions has physical consequences that many do not know
about. It increases stress on our bodies and increases chances of heart disease and diabetes. It affects our
immune system exposing us more to illness, stiff joints and bone weakness. Recent research also shows a strong
connection between avoiding emotions or being shut off from emotions and poor memory. People who regularly