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8 exercises to heal your inner child

Explore how to heal your inner child through simple exercises and practical steps to improve emotional health and build healthier, more secure relationships.

July 10, 2026

By Kat BoogaardClinically reviewed by Jolene Clatterbuck, LPC, MNT

7 min read

By Kat BoogaardClinically reviewed by Jolene Clatterbuck, LPC, MNT

Maybe your manager gave you a small piece of constructive feedback, and you spent the rest of the day convinced you’re about to get fired. Or perhaps a friend said something that hurt your feelings and, instead of addressing it, you just let it go — and let resentment continue to build. Or maybe you found yourself having a big emotional reaction when it wasn’t really justified.

In any of those situations, it’s tempting to think there’s something wrong with you. But it’s more likely that you might need to heal your inner child.

You’re an adult. So, the concept of inner child work can seem a little irrelevant or abstract. However, it’s an increasingly popular focus area. While it’s not a clinical intervention on its own, it draws from popular psychology and overlaps with several evidence-based therapeutic approaches.

If you’ve been trying to figure out how to work through childhood trauma so you can have better emotional stability, a stronger sense of self, and healthier relationships, this guide covers what you need to know: what your inner child is, why it matters, and how inner child work might help.

Understanding inner child healing

Your “inner child” is essentially shorthand for the emotional experiences, memories, and unmet needs from your earlier years that you still carry around with you today.

As a kid, you didn’t always have the tools or the support to fully process the things you went through. Maybe your feelings were dismissed, your needs weren’t consistently met, or you experienced something painful without anyone to help you make sense of it. Even the most involved, well-intentioned parents can’t catch everything in a child’s inner world. Parents are only human, after all.

But when you grow up, those experiences and unmet needs still matter. They can shape a lot of who you are — including how you respond to stress, how you show up in relationships, and how you talk to yourself when things go wrong.

Inner child healing is the process of going back to those experiences with a new set of eyes. Rather than reliving them, you acknowledge them with the compassion and understanding you might not have gotten at the time. From there, you can recognize the current patterns those experiences created and slowly learn to respond differently.

Inner child work looks different for everyone. For some people, it happens through inner child healing exercises like journaling or meditation. For others, it unfolds through therapy. In many cases, it’s a combination of both.

Why reconnecting with your inner child matters

When something happens that triggers a strong emotional reaction, the kid version of you probably isn’t your first thought. But your early experiences have more influence over your adult life than you might think.

Unresolved childhood wounds can show up in a lot of different ways, such as:

  • Difficulty regulating your emotions
  • Low self-esteem
  • Trouble trusting other people
  • Falling into the same relationship patterns over and over again

They can also affect how you deal when things get tough — like whether you tend to shut down, lash out, or abandon your own needs just to keep the peace.

Inner child work helps you trace those patterns back to their roots. And when you understand where they come from, you’re in a better spot to address them.

Change doesn’t happen overnight. But, over time, reconnecting with your inner child can help you achieve better control over your emotions, stronger relationships, and an improved sense of self-worth. 

Signs your inner child may need attention

Not every emotional response points back to your childhood, but there are quite a few patterns worth paying attention to. Here are a few signs that inner child work could be worth exploring:

  • You find yourself having over-the-top emotional reactions: You feel a wave of shame, panic, or anger that often feels bigger than the situation calls for — and you’re not sure where it comes from.
  • You have a fear of abandonment or rejection: Whether a friend takes a while to respond or a partner seems distracted and distant, your mind immediately jumps to worst-case scenarios.
  • You experience low self-worth or constant self-criticism: You struggle to feel “good enough,” even when things are going well on paper.
  • You show people-pleasing tendencies: You have a hard time saying no and you often put other people’s needs ahead of your own (sometimes without even noticing).
  • You have a hard time setting boundaries: You know what your limits are, but enforcing them feels uncomfortable or even selfish to you.
  • You avoid conflict: When tension bubbles up, your instinct is to ignore it, go quiet, or smooth it over rather than addressing what’s actually bothering you.
  • You struggle to trust other people: Opening up feels risky, especially because you’re convinced people will let you down. 
  • You keep repeating unhealthy patterns in your relationships: You keep getting stuck in the same dynamics, even though you can see them clearly. 

If any of these hit close to home for you, don’t be discouraged. That recognition is actually a good thing, as awareness is the first step in figuring out how to heal from childhood trauma

8 practices to heal your inner child

It’s tempting to think you should just be able to get over and move on from your childhood experiences — especially because they happened years ago. But those moments, interactions, and circumstances all played a big role in making you who you are.  Changing the way they impact you now takes real, intentional work. 

Here are eight inner child healing exercises to help you build a more compassionate relationship with yourself (and more grounded relationships with the people around you). 

1. Acknowledge and validate your past experiences

This one can feel counterintuitive, especially if you’ve spent years minimizing or rushing past the things that happened to you when you were a kid. But recognizing your childhood experiences as real is one of the most powerful things you can do.

You can have wounds worth acknowledging, even if you didn’t have a textbook “difficult” childhood. Sometimes the most significant ones don’t come from big, defining moments — they can be needs that went unmet, feelings that were brushed aside, or moments when you just didn’t feel seen. 

When a feeling or memory comes up, allow yourself to say something like, “That happened, it was hard, and it makes sense that it affected me.” It’s simple, but powerful.

2. Identify your emotional triggers and patterns

Start paying attention to the moments when your reaction feels bigger (or just different) than the situation seems to justify. 

What happened right before that? What did it remind you of? Over time, keeping track of these moments can help you connect the dots between your present-day responses and your older experiences. That’s the first step in changing them.

3. Practice self-compassion and self-soothing

When your inner child gets activated, your gut instinct might be to push that feeling down or criticize yourself for having it in the first place.

Try the opposite: Speak to yourself the way you’d speak to a friend going through something hard. Grounding techniques (things like deep breathing, taking a walk outside, or even just holding something warm) can also help settle your nervous system in the moment.

4. Reparent yourself with supportive behaviors

Reparenting” means finding a way to give your current self whatever you didn’t get back then, such as consistency, encouragement, comfort, or care. 

Of course, you can’t go back in time. But you can start to heal your old wounds by keeping promises to yourself, celebrating small wins, or developing routines that make you feel safe and supported. It’s more about showing up for yourself in everyday moments than grand gestures.

5. Set healthy boundaries (and stick to them)

For many people doing inner child work, boundaries are where things get tricky. If people-pleasing and conflict avoidance is a pattern for you, practicing setting boundaries (even small ones) can help you start to flip that script.

For example, turn down a social commitment when you need to rest. Or let someone know when a conversational topic is off limits for you. This might feel tough at first. But, much like anything else, setting and enforcing boundaries gets easier with practice.

6. Make space for joy and play

Healing doesn’t have to be heavy work all the time. A neglected inner child often also missed out on the freedom to be silly, curious, or creative without a goal attached.

So, give yourself the time and permission to do something purely because it’s fun. Paint, bake, play a game, or go somewhere you’ve never been — no productivity or achievement required.

7. Journal about your childhood experiences

Writing can help you access feelings and memories that are harder for you to tap into in your everyday life.

Not sure where to start? Try writing a letter from your younger self. Let them say whatever they need to say, without any editing or judgment. Then, write a letter back from where you are now, with plenty of compassion. You might be surprised by what comes up.

8. Try meditation or visualization

It might sound a little unconventional, but guided meditation can be a great way to connect with your inner child. You picture your younger self in a safe, calm place and offer them comfort, reassurance, or just some company. If visualizing feels overwhelming, it's OK to pause and try this with a therapist.

Techniques like this are used in evidence-based therapies, including internal family systems (IFS) and schema therapy, as a way to build a connection between who you were and where you are now. If you’ve never tried meditation before, a guided app or a session with a therapist are good starting points.

How therapy can help you in your healing process

The practices above are a solid starting point, but inner child work can bring up some heavy stuff for you. Old memories, uncomfortable emotions, and deeply ingrained patterns don’t always respond to self-guided exercises alone. That’s totally normal.

If you find yourself feeling overwhelmed, stuck, or like certain triggers or painful memories are too difficult to deal with on your own, it’s worth considering working with a therapist

While inner child therapy isn’t a formal clinical modality, many evidence-based approaches directly address the kinds of wounds and patterns that inner child work focuses on. For example, a therapist trained in internal family systems (IFS), schema therapy, trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) can help you work through your childhood trauma in a structured, supported way.

Whether you decide to work with a therapist or not, keep in mind that healing isn’t linear. You’ll experience setbacks, uncomfortable realizations, and days when the work feels harder than others. Those are all part of the process, so stick with it. Showing up for yourself — and your inner child — matters.

Moving toward emotional balance and self-understanding

The patterns you’ve spent years living with didn’t develop overnight — and you won’t undo them overnight either. But understanding where they come from is an important start.

Over time, focusing on healing your inner child can help you respond to difficult emotions with more awareness and intention, build relationships that feel healthier and more secure, and develop a stronger, more compassionate relationship with yourself.

If you’re ready to explore inner child work, a therapist can help. Headway makes it easier to find a therapist who accepts your insurance. Search by specialty, see upfront pricing, and book an appointment online — with no phone tag or hoops to jump through.

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.

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