Types of Core Wounds
and Core Beliefs
Core wounds are the emotional injuries we carry from early experiences—often tied to feelings of abandonment, rejection, or shame. Over time, these wounds can shape core beliefs about ourselves, such as “I’m not good enough” or “I don’t matter.” While the language or intensity of these beliefs may vary, many tend to echo similar themes.
These core beliefs can influence how we approach relationships, self-worth, success, and emotional safety. Even if we “know better” on a logical level, these emotional imprints often continue to shape our reactions and choices—until we take time to explore and heal them. Sometimes we call this “inner child work”.
Here are some examples of core wounds that can quietly give rise to limiting beliefs about who we are and what we deserve:
Core Wounds & Beliefs:
Abandonment Core Wounds
These stem from the fear or experience of being left—physically or emotionally—by someone important, especially during formative years.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- People I love always leave
- I am not worth staying for
- I will be alone forever
- If I get close, I’ll be abandoned
- I must cling to others or they’ll disappear
- I have to be perfect to keep people in my life
- If I need someone, they’ll let me down
- Love is unreliable
- I can’t trust that anyone will be there for me
- I’m too much, and that’s why people leave
Roots: May include a parent walking out, emotional unavailability, divorce, loss (through death or separation), or inconsistency in caregiving (e.g., being left to “cry it out” repeatedly).
Rejection Core Wounds
These relate to not being accepted, loved, or validated for who you are—feeling unwanted or not good enough.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I’m not lovable
- I’m too flawed to be accepted
- Who I am isn’t enough
- If people really knew me, they’d reject me
- I have to change myself to be accepted
- Love is conditional
- My true self is not welcome
- I will always be left out
- I must hide my needs to be accepted
- I don’t belong anywhere
Roots: May stem from being bullied, shamed, criticized, or emotionally invalidated. Can also arise when caregivers are emotionally rejecting, critical, or push conditional love (e.g., “I only love you when you behave”).
Shame Core Wounds
Shame wounds arise from the internalized belief that there is something inherently wrong, bad, or unlovable about oneself.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I am broken
- I am bad at my core
- If people knew the real me, they’d be disgusted
- I’m disgusting / unclean
- I should feel ashamed of who I am
- I don’t deserve good things
- I must hide parts of myself to be accepted
- My feelings are wrong or too much
- I’m a burden to others
- I am fundamentally flawed
Roots: Often stem from childhood criticism, humiliation, religious or cultural moralism, sexual trauma, being blamed for others’ emotions, or emotional enmeshment with a parent.
Self-Worth Core Wounds
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I’m not enough
- I don’t matter
- Other people are better than me
- I have to earn love
- I only have value if I’m useful
- I need to prove myself to be worthy
- I’m replaceable
- I’m not allowed to take up space
- My worth depends on others’ opinions
- I’m only lovable when I perform or succeed
Roots: Often develop in achievement-focused families, emotionally unavailable environments, or where love was conditional on appearance, grades, obedience, or caregiving roles.
Key Differences and Overlap
Shame & Self-Worth
| Aspect | Shame | Self-Worth |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Who I am is bad | What I offer isn’t good enough |
| Trigger | Exposure, failure, being seen authentically | Comparison, criticism, failure to perform |
| Root Emotion | Toxic shame | Inadequacy, inferiority |
| Survival Strategy | Hiding, self-sabotage, people-pleasing, masking | Overachieving, perfectionism, self-neglect |
| Common Overlap | “I am not worthy because I’m inherently flawed.” | “I am flawed, and that’s why I’m not worthy.” |
Invisibility Core Wounds
These arise from the experience of being emotionally overlooked, dismissed, or unseen—feeling like your presence, thoughts, or feelings don’t register.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I don’t matter
- I’m not important
- No one sees the real me
- My feelings don’t count
- I have to disappear to be safe
- If I speak up, I’ll be ignored or dismissed
- I have to achieve or perform to be noticed
- Being myself is not enough to be valued
- Love and attention must be earned
- My presence is a burden
Roots: May stem from emotionally unavailable or distracted caregivers, being overshadowed by a sibling or family dynamic, or being raised in environments that discouraged emotional expression.
Neglect Core Wounds
These develop from the lack of consistent care, presence, or emotional/physical responsiveness—feeling like your basic needs don’t matter.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- My needs are too much
- I have to take care of myself
- No one will come for me
- I’m not worth caring for
- I don’t deserve love or attention
- I should be grateful for any scrap of care
- Asking for help is wrong or shameful
- People always let me down
- I am too needy
- I’m invisible unless I’m in crisis
Roots: Can result from childhood emotional neglect, parental mental illness or addiction, chaotic or unsafe environments, or being parentified at a young age.
Trust Core Wounds
These arise from the experience of betrayal, deception, or unreliability by people who were supposed to protect or support you. The core fear is “People will hurt me if I let them in.”
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I can’t trust anyone
- People always let me down
- If I open up, I’ll get hurt
- Others are not who they seem
- I have to stay in control to be safe
- Vulnerability leads to pain
- Everyone has an agenda
- Love equals betrayal
- I need to test people to see if they’re real
- Trust makes me weak
Roots: Often develop from betrayal by caregivers, broken promises, emotional manipulation, gaslighting, abandonment, or having secrets kept from you as a child (e.g., family lies, infidelity).
Safety Core Wounds
These stem from living in environments—emotional, physical, or relational—that felt unpredictable, unstable, or threatening. The core fear is “I’m not safe in the world or in my body.”
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- The world is dangerous
- I can’t let my guard down
- No one can keep me safe but me
- If I relax, something bad will happen
- My emotions are not safe to feel
- I have to protect myself at all times
- I’m unsafe in relationships
- I must anticipate danger to survive
- My body isn’t a safe place to be
Roots: Can result from physical or emotional abuse, neglect, sudden trauma (e.g., car accident, violence), or growing up in households with high conflict, substance use, or mental illness.
Key Differences and Overlap
Trust & Safety
| Aspect | Trust | Safety |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Fear of being harmed by others’ betrayal | Fear of being harmed by external/internal threats |
| Trigger | Dependency, intimacy, letting others in | Vulnerability, chaos, losing control |
| Root Emotion | Suspicion, fear of betrayal | Fear, hypervigilance, dread |
| Survival Strategy | Emotional walls, controlling behavior | Hypervigilance, withdrawal, dissociation |
| Common Overlap | “If I can’t trust others, I’m never truly safe.” | “If I’m not safe, how can I trust anyone to help me?” |
Responsibility Core Wounds
These arise from the belief that you are responsible for other people’s emotions, actions, or outcomes, often formed when you were expected to parent others, keep the peace, or suppress your own needs to care for others.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- It’s my job to fix things
- I have to take care of everyone
- If something goes wrong, it’s my fault
- I am responsible for other people’s feelings
- I can’t rest until everyone else is okay
- If I don’t do it, no one will
- My worth is tied to how much I give
- Saying no makes me selfish
- I must hold it all together
- I can’t have needs—it’s my job to meet others’
Roots: Often develop from parentification, emotionally immature or dependent caregivers, chronic family illness or dysfunction, or being praised only when self-sacrificing or helpful.
Control Core Wounds
These come from the fear of losing control over your environment, others, or yourself—usually a response to chaos, betrayal, or powerlessness in early life. The core fear is “If I’m not in control, I’ll get hurt.”
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I must stay in control to stay safe
- Letting go is dangerous
- I can’t rely on others
- If I relax, everything will fall apart
- I have to control how others see me
- I can’t trust life to unfold on its own
- I need to control emotions or they’ll consume me
- Asking for help means losing control
- I feel safest when I’m in charge
- People will hurt or abandon me if I don’t manage everything
Roots: Often arise from unpredictable or chaotic households, trauma, betrayal, bullying, sudden loss, or caretaking roles in childhood where control became a coping mechanism for survival.
Key Differences and Overlap
Responsibility & Control
| Aspect | Responsibility | Control |
|---|---|---|
| Focus | Feeling accountable for others | Need to manage self, others, or outcomes |
| Trigger | Others’ distress, chaos, unmet needs | Uncertainty, disorder, lack of agency |
| Root Emotion | Guilt, self-blame | Fear, anxiety, urgency |
| Survival Strategy | Over-functioning, people-pleasing, self-sacrifice | Micromanaging, perfectionism, emotional suppression |
| Common Overlap | “If I don’t take responsibility, I’ll lose control.” | “If I don’t control everything, I’ll be blamed.” |
Guilt Core Wounds
These arise from the internalized belief that you’ve done something wrong or caused harm—even when you haven’t, often due to distorted responsibility placed on you as a child.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I am responsible for other people’s pain
- It’s my fault if others are upset
- I shouldn’t put my needs first
- I always feel like I’ve done something wrong
- I must make up for who I am
- I owe everyone something
- I’m selfish for taking care of myself
- I need to apologize even when I didn’t cause harm
- I can’t say no without feeling guilty
- I don’t deserve joy when others are struggling
Roots: Often stem from growing up with emotionally immature or manipulative caregivers, being scapegoated, surviving trauma when others didn’t, or being shamed for asserting needs.
Burden Core Wounds
These come from the belief that your presence, needs, or existence is too much for others to handle. The core feeling is “I take up too much space.”
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I’m a burden to others
- My needs inconvenience people
- If I ask for help, I’ll push people away
- Others are better off without me
- I should handle things alone
- I feel guilty for existing
- I ruin things for people
- I’m too intense, too needy, too emotional
- I always have to tone myself down
- People only tolerate me—they don’t really want me
Roots: Can develop from being raised by overwhelmed or unavailable caregivers, being shamed for emotional needs, experiencing chronic invalidation, or being treated as “too much” for others to handle.
Perfectionism Core Wounds
These are rooted in the belief that you must be flawless to be accepted, safe, or worthy of love. Mistakes are equated with rejection or failure of character.
Can lead to core beliefs such as:
- I must be perfect to be loved
- If I make a mistake, I’ll be rejected
- I am only valuable when I succeed
- I can’t relax or I’ll fall behind
- I always need to be improving
- My best is never enough
- I am what I achieve
- Rest is laziness
- If I let go of control, everything will fall apart
- I’m only safe when everything is done exactly right
Roots: Common in achievement-focused or critical environments, where praise was performance-based. Also seen in children who used perfectionism to gain approval, avoid punishment, or cope with chaos.
Key Differences and Overlap
Guilty, Burden & Perfectionist
| Aspect | Guilt | Burden | Perfectionist |
|---|---|---|---|
| Focus | Belief that you’ve done wrong | Belief that you are too much | Belief that you must do everything right |
| Trigger | Others’ distress, saying no, having needs | Asking for help, emotional expression | Making mistakes, imperfection, not achieving enough |
| Root Emotion | Guilt, shame | Shame, fear of rejection | Anxiety, self-criticism |
| Survival Strategy | Over-apologizing, people-pleasing, self-erasure | Withdrawal, self-reliance, masking needs | Overachieving, control, avoidance of vulnerability |
| Common Overlap | “If I’m not perfect, I’m a burden.” | “If I ask for anything, I’m doing harm.” | “I must do it all right to avoid guilt or rejection.” |

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