Narrative Therapy for Adverse Childhood Experiences: Rewriting Your Story

How narrative therapy reframes Adverse Childhood Experiences — separating your identity from the problem and reauthoring your story.

Narrative therapy offers a distinctive and powerful perspective: adverse childhood experiences is a story that has taken hold, not a fixed truth — and stories can be changed.

The Narrative Approach to Adverse Childhood Experiences

Narrative therapy, developed by Michael White and David Epston, proposes that:

  • Adverse Childhood Experiences is externalized: it's something you're experiencing, not who you are
  • Dominant stories about yourself can be unhelpful and incomplete
  • Alternative stories — containing evidence of strength, agency, and values — already exist
  • Re-authoring: deliberately constructing a new narrative that doesn't center adverse childhood experiences

Key Narrative Therapy Techniques for Adverse Childhood Experiences

Externalizing conversations: 'The adverse childhood experiences tells me...' rather than 'I believe...'

Unique outcomes: Finding exceptions — times when you resisted or overcame adverse childhood experiences

Re-membering: Who in your life, past or present, would not be surprised by your capacity to address adverse childhood experiences?

Finding a Narrative Therapist for Adverse Childhood Experiences

Narrative therapists are found through the International Journal of Narrative Therapy network and therapist directories. Training varies significantly — ask about specific narrative training.

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