The Echo of an Insult: Why Words Stick
“You’re so stupid. Why can’t you get anything right?”

At just eight years old, Emily* heard this often. It came from her father, occasionally from teachers, and even her older sister. Fast forward to her thirties, and Emily finds herself in a bit of a pickle. A colleague raises their voice, and suddenly she’s flooded with anxiety. She second-guesses every email, hovering over the ‘send’ button like it’s a detonator. She simply cannot silence that harsh inner critic.
In therapy, she explains it perfectly:
“It’s like I carry my dad’s voice inside me. Even now, when something goes wrong, I hear him, telling me I’m not good enough.”
What Emily experienced wasn’t “tough love” or “character building.” It was verbal abuse. And today, neuroscience confirms what clinicians and survivors have long suspected: harsh words in childhood do more than hurt feelings. They actually rewire the brain’s blueprint.
What’s the Score? Defining Verbal Abuse
We aren’t talking about a one-off “oops” when you’ve stubbed your toe or the kettle’s boiled over after a long day. Verbal abuse is a persistent pattern. It’s the repeated use of words to blame, ridicule, or humiliate.
It leaves children feeling belittled and unsafe. Unlike a scraped knee, these wounds are invisible, but they certainly stick around. A 2023 UK study of over 20,500 adults found that 1 in 5 reported experiencing verbal abuse as children (McCrory, 2023). That’s a staggering number of people carrying “invisible bruises” into adulthood.
The Neuroscience: Words That Reshape the Mind

Professor Eamon McCrory at University College London has spent decades studying how early trauma affects the “grey matter.” His findings are a bit of a wake-up call:
- The Threat System Goes into Overdrive: The brain’s danger-detector—the amygdala—becomes hyper-reactive. Suddenly, a neutral facial expression or a bit of office banter feels like a genuine threat.
- The Reward System Dims: Warm words can fall flat. McCrory describes a “blunting” of reward circuits, making it harder to feel genuine joy or connection.
- Safety Circuits Are Scrambled: Instead of a secure identity, the brain internalises a script of shame and expects betrayal.
The Resource Therapy View: Who’s at the Wheel?

In Resource Therapy, we look at this through the lens of our “Inner Ship.” We all have various Resource States (parts of our personality) that take the wheel depending on the occasion.
In Emily’s case, an eight-year-old state became Vaded in Rejection. This part of her is “stuck” in that old moment of shame, huddled below deck. When she’s at work and feels judged, this wounded state suddenly grabs the steering wheel. This is what we call a Dissonant state—a young, terrified part trying to navigate an adult’s professional life.
She might also feel Conflicted, with one part wanting to shine and the “Vaded” part pulling the handbrake.
The Empowerment Protocol
In our sessions, we didn’t just “talk about” the past. We used Actions 4–7. What we playfully call the Empowerment Protocol.
We spoke directly to that eight-year-old state. Emily’s nurturing part could offer the younger part the compassion it never had:
“I am here for you now. You are loved seen, heard, special and valued.”
The shift was palpable. Her breathing softened. The Vaded state returned to Normal. The healthy, able to be a child, was able to take back the wheel for times of play.
Healing is Possible (And it’s a Team Effort)
Words shape the mind, but they don’t have to have the final say. Whether you’re a parent, a teacher, or a therapist, we all have a role:
- Parents: Regulate your own “crew” before you relate to your child’s.
- Teachers: Your words are the bricks that build a child’s identity.
- For the victim/survivors: You are not the names you were called. You deserve an inner voice that cheers you on, not one that trips you up.
Healing Musings
Verbal abuse isn’t an inevitable part of growing up; it’s preventable. At the Australia Resource Therapy Institute, we help folks recognise these old “Vaded” scripts. We work compassionately with the parts that hold them for true freedom.
When we speak to our internal world with clarity and empathy, we don’t just feel better. We actually help our “Inner Ship” sail toward a much brighter horizon.
*Not a real client.
Ready to meet your crew?
Are you a clinician looking to sharpen your tools? Or are you someone ready to reclaim the captain’s chair? Come and explore the power of parts work with us!
👉 Discover Resource Therapy Training Here
Reference
McCrory, E. (2023). Verbal abuse changes how children’s brains develop. The Conversation. Retrieved from The Conversation

