Hoarding and Inner Child Work: Healing Early Wounds

How inner child work addresses the childhood roots of Hoarding — what it is and how it helps.

Inner child work addresses the child-self who developed hoarding-related patterns in response to early experiences — and who still needs healing.

What Inner Child Work Means for Hoarding

The 'inner child' isn't metaphysical — it refers to the internalized representations of childhood experiences that drive adult hoarding patterns.

When hoarding arises in adult situations that echo childhood experiences, the inner child's unmet needs or fears are often activated.

Inner Child Work Techniques for Hoarding

  • Compassionate self-dialogue: Speaking to the part of yourself that developed hoarding patterns with the kindness you'd offer a child
  • Journaling to your younger self: What would you tell the child experiencing hoarding for the first time?
  • Imagery work: Guided visualization to 'reparent' the child who developed hoarding responses

Finding a Therapist for Inner Child Work and Hoarding

Schema therapy, Internal Family Systems (IFS), and psychodynamic therapy all incorporate inner child work as part of hoarding treatment.

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