The 18 Emotional Wounds Blocking Your Happiness
You find yourself repeating the same relational patterns: choosing unavailable partners, fleeing intimacy, giving everything until exhaustion. Behind these repetitions lie what Jeffrey Young calls early maladaptive schemas: deep-rooted beliefs formed in childhood that continue to direct your emotional life as an adult.
What is an Early Maladaptive Schema?
An early maladaptive schema is a pervasive emotional and cognitive pattern that develops during childhood or adolescence and repeats throughout life. It emerges when a child's fundamental needs go unmet: safety, unconditional love, autonomy, realistic boundaries, and free expression.
Jeffrey Young (1990) developed schema therapy after recognizing that standard CBT wasn't sufficient for certain patients with deeply entrenched problems. His therapy integrates CBT, attachment theory, Gestalt, and experiential approaches.
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The 5 Schema Domains
Domain 1: Disconnection and Rejection
The child didn't receive a secure foundation. This results in the conviction that their needs for love and security will never be met.
- 1. Abandonment/Instability: "People I love will leave me or disappear."
- 2. Mistrust/Abuse: "Others will manipulate, lie to, or take advantage of me."
- 3. Émotional Deprivation: "No one will truly understand my emotional needs."
- 4. Defectiveness/Shame: "I am fundamentally flawed, bad, unlovable."
- 5. Social Isolation: "I'm different from others, I don't belong to any group."
Domain 2: Impaired Autonomy
The child wasn't encouraged to develop competence and independence.
- 6. Dependence/Incompetence: "I'm incapable of managing my life alone."
- 7. Vulnerability to Harm: "A catastrophe can happen at any moment."
- 8. Enmeshment/Underdeveloped Self: "I don't exist outside of my relationship."
- 9. Failure: "I'm fundamentally incompetent, I will always fail."
Domain 3: Impaired Limits
The child didn't learn boundaries, reciprocity, and self-discipline.
- 10. Entitlement/Grandiosity: "I deserve special treatment, rules don't apply to me."
- 11. Insufficient Self-Control: "I can't tolerate frustration, I must get what I want immediately."
Domain 4: Other-Directedness
The child learned to place others' needs before their own.
- 12. Subjugation: "I must submit to others' desires to avoid conflict."
- 13. Self-Sacrifice/Abnegation: "I must give everything to others, even at my own expense."
- 14. Approval-Seeking: "My worth depends on others' views of me."
Domain 5: Overvigilance and Inhibition
The child grew up in a demanding environment where spontaneity was suppressed.
- 15. Negativity/Pessimism: "Things will inevitably go wrong."
- 16. Émotional Inhibition: "I must not show my emotions."
- 17. Unrelenting Standards/Hypercriticalness: "Nothing is ever good enough."
- 18. Punitiveness: "Mistakes must be sévèrely punished."
How Schemas Manifest in Adult Life
Schemas express themselves through three mechanisms (Young et al., 2003):
- Perpetuation: you behave in ways that confirm the schema (e.g., someone with a failure schema sabotages their projects)
- Avoidance: you flee situations that activate the schema (e.g., avoiding intimacy to not trigger abandonment fears)
- Overcompensation: you adopt the opposite behavior (e.g., someone with a subjugation schema becomes authoritarian)
Schema Therapy: How to Heal
Schema therapy combines several approaches:
- Identification: identify your dominant schemas through questionnaires and emotional exploration
- Understanding: connect schemas to childhood experiences that created them
- Limited reparenting: the therapist offers a safe space to partially fulfill unmet needs
- Experiential work: dialogue with parts of yourself (vulnerable child, critical parent)
- Cognitive restructuring: challenge core beliefs
- Behavioral change: break perpetuation patterns
This test based on Jeffrey Young's model assesses the presence and intensity of your early maladaptive schemas and helps you understand your relational patterns.
Where to Start on Your Own?
- Identify your 2-3 dominant schemas (the test above can help)
- Notice which situations trigger them
- Observe your automatic reactions (perpetuation, avoidance, overcompensation)
- Connect them to meaningful childhood memories, such as the impact of toxic parents
- Begin speaking to yourself with the compassion you would offer a hurt child
Conclusion
Young's 18 schemas offer a valuable map for understanding why we repeat the same painful patterns. Naming a schema is already the first step to detaching from it. Schema therapy shows that it's possible to transform these deep wounds into strengths of understanding and empathy — toward yourself first.
Gildas Garrec, CBT Psychotherapist🧪 Online Test
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