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Childhood
Trauma
By Alice Miller, Ph.D.
Note
from K. Stringer: Spanking can cause harm
Since adolescence I have
wondered why so many people take pleasure in humiliating others.
Clearly the fact that some are sensitive to the suffering of others
proves that the destructive urge to hurt is not a universal aspect of
human nature. So why do some tend to solve their problems by violence
while others don’t?
Philosophy failed to answer
my question and the Freudian theory of the death instinct has never
convinced me. Nor could I make sense of genetic explanations of the
evil, of the naive idea that a human being can be “born bad.”
Nobody could answer the crucial question: How is it that so many
turn-of-the-century German children were born with such malignant
genes that they’d later become Hitler’s willing executioners? It
has always been inconceivable to me that a child who comes into the
world among attentive, loving and protective caregivers could become a
monster. Then, by closely
examining the childhood histories of murderers, especially mass
murderers and dictators, I began to comprehend the roots of good and
evil: not in the genes, as commonly believed, but in the earliest days
of life. Today, neurobiological research seems to fully corroborate
what I discovered almost twenty years ago.
At that time I quoted in
For Your Own Good at length the pedagogical advice given to parents in
Germany a century ago, and detailed what I believed to be a connection
between the systematic cruelty of these methods and the systematic
cruelty of Hitler’s executioners forty years later. The numerous and
widely-read tracts by Dr. Daniel Gottlieb Schreber, the inventor of
the Schrebergärten (the German word for “small allotments”), are
of major interest here. Some of his books ran to as many as forty
editions around the year 1860, and their central concern was to
instruct parents in the systematic upbringing of infants from the very
first day of life. Many people - motivated by what they thought to be
the best of intentions complied with the advice given them by Schreber
and other authors about how best to raise their children. Today we
would call it a systematic instruction in child persecution and
maltreatment. One of Schreber’s convictions was that when babies cry
they should be made to desist by the use of spanking, assuring his
readers that “such a procedure is only necessary once, or at the
most twice, and then one is master of the child for all time. From
then on, one look, one single gesture will suffice”. Above all,
these books counseled that the newborn child should be forced from the
very first day to obey and to refrain from crying.
We all know - or, today, we
should all know - that physical punishment only produces obedient
children but cannot prevent them from becoming violent or sick adults
precisely because of this treatment. This knowledge is now
scientifically proven and was finally officially accepted by the
American Academy of Pediatrics in 1998. Contrary to common opinion
prevalent as recently as fifteen years ago, the human brain at birth
is far from being fully developed. It is use-dependent, needing loving
stimulation for the child from her first day on. The abilities a
person’s brain can develop depend on experiences in the first three
years of life.
Studies on abandoned and
severely maltreated Romanian children, as an example, revealed
striking lesions in certain areas of the brain. The repeated
traumatization has led to an increased release of stress hormones
which have attacked the sensitive tissue of the brain and destroyed
the new, already built-up neurons. The areas of their brains
responsible for the “management” of their emotions are twenty to
thirty percent smaller than in other children of the same age.
Obviously, all children (not only Romanian) who suffer such
abandonment and maltreatment will be damaged in this way.
The neurobiological
research makes it easier for us to understand the way Nazis like
Eichmann, Himmler, Hess and others functioned. The rigorous obedience
training they underwent in earliest infancy stunted the development of
such human capacities as compassion and pity for the sufferings of
others. Their total emotional atrophy enabled the perpetrators of the
most heinous crimes imaginable to function “normally” and to
continue without the slightest remorse to impress their environment
with their efficiency in the years after the war. Dr. Mengele could
make the most cruel experiments with Jewish children in Auschwitz and
then live for thirty years like a “normal,” well adjusted man.
Those turn-of-the-century
children who were “subjugated by looks” and systematically
subjected to obedience drilling were not only exposed to corporal
correction but also to severe emotional deprivation. The upbringing
manuals of the day described physical demonstrations of affection such
as stroking, cuddling and kissing as indications of a doting,
mollycoddling attitude. Parents were warned of the disastrous effects
of spoiling their children, a form of indulgence entirely incompatible
with the prevalent ideal of rigor and severity. As a result, infants
suffered from the absence of direct loving contact with the parents,
which also caused certain areas of the brain to remain underdeveloped.
I found it logical that a
child beaten often and deprived of loving physical contact would
quickly pick up the language of violence. For him this language became
the only effective means of communication available.
However, when I began to illustrate my thesis by drawing on the
examples of Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Ceaucescu, when I tried to expose the
social consequences of child maltreatment, I first encountered strong
resistance. Repeatedly I was told, “I, too, was a battered child, but
that didn’t make me a criminal.” When I asked these people for
details about their childhood, I was always told of a person who made
the difference, a sibling, a teacher, a neighbor, just somebody who
liked or even loved them but, at least in most cases, was unable to
protect them. Yet through his presence this person gave the child a
notion of trust and love.
I call these persons
“helping witnesses.” Dostoyevsky, for instance, had a brutal
father, but a loving mother. She wasn’t strong enough to protect him
from his father, but she gave him a powerful conception of love,
without which his novels would have been unthinkable. Many have also
been lucky enough to find “enlightened” and courageous witnesses,
people who helped them to recognize the injustices they suffered, the
significance the hurtful treatment had for them, and its influences on
their whole life. They may even suffer much in their life, may become
drug addicted, and have relationship problems, but thanks to the few
good experiences in their childhood usually do not become criminals.
The criminal outcome seems to be connected with a childhood that
didn’t provide any helping witness, that was a place of constant
threat and fear.
In my book The Untouched
Key I mention the severe trauma that the child Pablo Picasso underwent
at the age of three: the earthquake in Malaga in 1884, the flight from
the family’s apartment into a cave that seemed to be more safe, and
eventually witnessing the birth of his sister in the same cave under
these very scary circumstances. However, Picasso survived these
traumas without later becoming psychotic or criminal because he was
protected by his very loving parents. They were able to give him what
he most needed in this chaotic situation: empathy, compassion,
protection and the feeling of being safe in their arms.
Thanks to the presence of
his parents, the two enlightened witnesses of his fear and pain, not
only during the earthquake but also throughout his whole childhood, he
was later able to express his early, frightening experiences in a
creative way. In Picasso’s famous painting “Guernica” we can see
what might have happened in the mind of the three-year-old child while
he was watching the dying people and horses and listening to the
children screaming for help on the long walk to the shelter. Small
children can go unscared even through bomb-raids if they feel safe in
the arms of their parents.
It is much more difficult
for a child to overcome early traumatization if they are caused by
their own parents. In my book Thou Shalt Not Be Aware, which has now
come out in a new edition, I analyze the childhood of the writer Franz
Kafka. I try to show that the nightmares he describes in his stories
recount exactly what might have happened to the small, severely
neglected infant Kafka. He was born into a family in which he must
have felt like the hero of “The Castle” (ordered about but not
needed and constantly misled) or like K. in “The Trial” (charged
with incomprehensible guilt) or like “The Hunger Artist” who never
found the food he was so strongly longing for. Thanks to the love and
the deep comprehension of his sister Otla in his puberty, his late
“helping witness,” Kafka could eventually give expression to his
suffering in writing. Does it mean that he therefore overcame his
traumatic childhood? He
could indeed write his work, full of knowledge and wisdom, but why did
he die so early - in his thirties - of tuberculosis? It happened in a
time when he knew many people who loved and admired him. However,
these good experiences could not erase the unconscious emotions and
memories stored in his body.
Kafka was hardly aware of
the fact that the main sources of his imagination were deeply hidden
in his early childhood. Most writers aren’t. But the amnesia of an
artist or writer, though sometimes a burden for their body, doesn’t
have any negative consequences for society. The readers simply admire
the work and are rarely interested in the writers’ infancy .
However, the amnesia of politicians or leaders of sects does afflict
countless people, and will continue to do so, as long as society
remains blind to the important connections between the denial of
traumatic experiences in early childhood and the destructive, criminal
actions of individuals.
Anyone addressing the
problem of child abuse is likely to be faced with a very strange
finding: it has been observed again and again that parents who tend to
maltreat and neglect their children do it in ways which resemble the
treatment they endured in their own childhood, without any conscious
memory of their early experiences. Fathers who sexually abuse their
children are usually unaware of the fact that they had themselves
suffered the same abuse. It is rather in therapy, even if ordered by
the courts, that they can discover, sometimes stupefied, their own
history. And realize
thereby that for years they have attempted to act out their own
scenario, just to get rid of it.
The explanation of this
fact is that information about the cruelty suffered during childhood
remains stored in the brain in the form of unconscious memories. For a
child, conscious experience of such treatment is impossible. If
children are not to break down completely under the pain and the fear,
they must repress that knowledge. But the unconscious memories of the
child who has been neglected and maltreated, even before he has
learned to speak, drive the adult to reproduce those repressed scenes
over and over again in the attempt to liberate himself from the fears
that cruelty has left with him. Former victims create situations in
which they can assume the active role. In this way the emotion of fear
can indeed be avoided momentarily - but not in the long term, because
the repressed emotions of the past don’t change as long as they
remain unnoticed. They can only be transformed into hatred directed
towards oneself and/or scapegoats, such as one’s own children or
alleged enemies. I see
this hatred as a possible consequence of the old rage and despair,
never consciously felt, but stored up in the body, in the limbic
brain.
The German reformer Martin
Luther, for example, was an intelligent and educated man, but he hated
all Jews and he encouraged parents to beat their children. He was no
perverted sadist like Hitler’s executioners. But 400 years before
Hitler he was disseminating this kind of destructive counsel.
According to Eric Ericson’s biography, Luther’s mother beat him
severely even before he was treated this way by his father and his
teacher. He believed this punishment had “done him good” and was
therefore justified. The conviction stored in his body that if parents
do it then it must be right to torment someone weaker than yourself
left a much more lasting impression on him than the divine
commandments and the Christian exhortations to love your neighbor and
be compassionate toward the weak.
Similar cases are discussed
by Philip Greven in his highly informative book Spare the Child. He
quotes various American men and women of the church recommending cruel
beatings for babies and infants in the first few months of life as a
way of ensuring that the lesson thus learnt remains impressed on them
for the rest of their life. Unfortunately they were only too right.
These terrible, destructive texts which have misled so many parents
are the conclusive proof of the long-lasting effect of beating.
They could only have been written by people who were exposed to
merciless beatings as children and later glorified what they had been
through. Their cruel beliefs could only grow up in the darkness of
their own cruel and repressed infancy. Fortunately, these books were
not published in forty editions in the USA.
As the example of Luther
shows, nothing that a child learns later about morality at home, in
school or in church will ever have the same strong and long lasting
effect as the treatment inflicted on his or her body in the first few
days, weeks and months. The lesson learned in the first three years
cannot be expunged. If the body of a child learns from birth that
tormenting and punishing an innocent creature is the right thing to
do, and that the child’s suffering must not be acknowledged, that
message will always be stronger than intellectual knowledge acquired
at a later stage. Greven’s examples eloquently demonstrate that
people subjected to maltreatment in childhood may go on insisting all
their lives that beatings are harmless although there is overwhelming
evidence to the contrary. Can a person who still supports corporal
punishment of children be considered as somebody who has overcome his
or her abuse? He may still remain a blind victim who refuses to face
his history and to work on it. Instead
he will give destructive advice until his death and continue to ignore
the child’s pain, because his view of reality is severely distorted
by early unconscious experience. On the other hand, a child protected,
loved and cherished from the outset will thrive on that experience for
a lifetime and develop empathy for others.
It is interesting that
almost all rescuers of Jews during the Holocaust who were interviewed
reported that their parents had attempted to discipline them with
arguments and support rather than punishment. They were not beaten.
People given early affection and support are quick to emulate the
sympathetic and autonomous natures of their parents. Common to all the
rescuers were self-confidence, the ability to make immediate decisions
and the capacity for empathy and compassion with others. Seventy per
cent of them said that it only took them a matter of minutes to decide
they wanted to intervene. Eighty percent said they did not consult
anyone else.
This attitude, prized in
all cultures as “noble,” is not something instilled in children
with fine words. If the behavior actually displayed by caretakers is
such as to contradict their own words, if children are spanked in the
name of lofty ideals, as is still the custom in some parochial
schools, then those elevated sentiments are doomed to go unheard or
even to provoke rage and violence. The children may end up aping those
high-minded phrases and mouthing them in later life, but they will
never put them into practice because they have no example to emulate.
In my most recent book,
Paths of Life, I try to illustrate this dynamic by describing
Hitler’s childhood, a childhood that offers us many still untouched
keys. Hitler’s specific problems with Jews can in fact be traced
back to the period before his birth. In her youth, Hitler’s paternal
grandmother had been employed in a Jewish merchant’s household in
Graz. After her return
home to the Austrian village of Braunau, she gave birth to a son -
Alois, later to become Hitler’s father - and received child-support
payments from the family in Graz for fourteen years. This story, which
is recounted in many biographies of Hitler, represented a dilemma for
the Hitler family. They had of course an interest in denying that the
young woman had been left with a child either by the Jewish merchant
or his son. On the other hand it was impossible to assert that a Jew
would pay child-support for so long without good reason. Such
generosity on the part of a Jew would have been inconceivable for the
inhabitants of an Austrian village. Thus the Hitler family was faced
with the insoluble dilemma of devising a version that would serve to
nullify their “disgrace.”
For Alois Hitler the
suspicion that he might be of Jewish descent was insufferable in the
context of the anti-Jewish environment in which he was raised. All the
plaudits he earned himself as a customs officer were insufficient to
liberate him from the latent rage at the disgrace and humiliation
visited on him through no fault of his own. The only thing he could do
with impunity was to take out this rage on his son Adolf.
According to the reports of his daughter of a former marriage,
Angela, Alois beat his son mercilessly every day. In an attempt to
exorcise his childhood fears, his son nurtured the manic delusion that
it was up to him to free not only himself of Jewish blood but also all
Germany and later the whole world. Right up to his death in the
bunker, Hitler remained a victim of this delusion because all his life
his fear of his half-Jewish father had remained locked in his
unconscious mind.
I have set out these ideas
in greater detail in my book For Your Own Good.
One can find them highly unsettling and in no way sufficient to
explain Hitler’s actions. Not all his actions, I agree, but
certainly his delusions. And those delusions were at the very least
the foundation of his actions, as all our unconscious emotions can
become. I can certainly picture the boy Hitler swearing vengeance on
“the Jews,” those monstrous fantasy-figures of an already diseased
imagination. Consciously, he probably thought he could have led a
happy life if “the Jew” had not plunged his grandmother into the
disgrace that he and his family had to live with. And it was this that
in his eyes served to excuse the beatings he received from his father,
who, after all, was himself “a victim of the evil and omnipotent
Jew.” In the mind of an angry, seriously confused child, it is only
a short step from there to the idea that all Jews should be
exterminated.
Not only Jews. In the
household of Hitler’s family lived for years the very unpredictable
schizophrenic aunt Johanna whose behavior is reported to have been
very scary for the child. As an adult Hitler ordered to be killed
every handicapped and psychotic person to free the German society from
this burden. Germany seemed for him to symbolize the innocent child
who had to be saved. Consequently, Hitler wanted to protect his nation
from the dangers he himself had faced. Absurd? Not at all. For an
unconscious mind this kind of symbolization might sound very normal
and logical.
Besides those fears
connected to father and aunt there was his early relationship with his
very intimidated mother, who herself lived in constant fear of her
husband’s violent outbursts and beatings. She called him “uncle
Alois” and endured patiently his humiliating treatment without any
protest. Adolf’s mother had lost her first three children to illness
and Adolf was her first child to survive infancy. We can easily
imagine that the milk he drank from his mother was in a way
“poisoned” by her own fear. He drank her milk together with her
fears but was of course unable to understand or integrate them. These
irrational fears - that an outsider, watching his speeches on videos,
can easily recognize - stayed unrecognized and unconscious to Hitler
until the end of his life. Stored up in his body, they drove him
constantly to new destructive actions in his endless attempt to find
an outcome. To his dying day, Hitler was convinced that only the death
of every single Jew could shield him from the fearful and daily memory
of his brutal father.
In the absence of positive
factors, affection and helping witnesses, the only course open to the
mistreated individual seems to be the denial of personal suffering and
the idealization of cruelty with all its devastating after-effects.
Undergoing an exceedingly humiliating and cruel upbringing at the
pre-verbal stage without helping witnesses may instill into the victim
admiration of this cruelty if there is no one in the immediate
vicinity of the child to query those methods and stand up for humane
values.
Therefore it didn’t
surprise me that in the childhood of people who later became
dictators, I have always found a nightmarish horror, a record of
continued lies and humiliations, which, upon the attainment of
adulthood, impelled them to acts of merciless revenge on society.
These vengeful acts were always garbed in hypocritical ideologies,
purporting that the dictator’s exclusive and overriding wish was the
happiness of his people. In
this way, he unconsciously emulated his own parents who, in earlier
days, had also insisted that their blows were inflicted on the child
for his own good.
In the lives of all the
tyrants I analyzed, I also found without exception paranoid trains of
thought bound up with their biographies in early childhood and the
repression of the experiences they had been through. Mao had been
regularly whipped by his father and later sent 30 million people to
their deaths but he hardly ever admitted the full extent of the rage
he must have felt for his own father, a very severe teacher who had
tried through beatings to “make a man” out of his son. Stalin
caused millions to suffer and die because even at the height of his
power his actions were determined by unconscious, infantile fear of
powerlessness. Apparently his father, a poor cobbler from Georgia,
attempted to drown his frustration with liquor and whipped his son
almost every day. His mother displayed psychotic traits, was
completely incapable of defending her son and was usually away from
home either praying in church or running the priest’s household.
Stalin idealized his parents right up to the end of his life and was
constantly haunted by the fear of dangers, dangers that had long since
ceased to exist but were still present in his deranged mind. His fear
didn’t even stop after he had been loved and admired by millions.
The same might be true of
many other tyrants. They often drew on ideologies to disguise the
truth and their own paranoia. And the masses chimed in
enthusiastically because they were unaware of the real motives,
including those in their own biographies. The infantile revenge
fantasies of individuals would be of no account if society did not
regularly show such naive eagerness in helping to make them come true.
Mad tyrants would not have any power if society understood that it is
their damaged brains which are constantly driving them to avoid
dangers that no longer exist.
Naturally, my references to
Schreber and his methods are not sufficient to explain the history of
the Holocaust but they do explain a lot. However, in no way should
this explanation lead to an exoneration of the perpetrators, relieving
them of their responsibility by declaring them “sick.” No
upbringing, however cruel, is a license for murder. But blaming the
whole thing on a defective genetic blueprint doesn’t make much sense
either. As I asked before: Why should there have been so many people
born in Germany thirty or forty years before the Holocaust with such a
fateful genetic disposition? I do not know of any gene researcher who
would try to answer this question. It is quite absurd to assume that
some people are born with the genetic program to later become
anti-Semites, racists, lynchers or rapists. The almost total neglect
or trivialization of the infancy factor in the context of violence
sometimes leads to explanations that are not only unconvincing and
abortive but which actively deflect attention away from the genuine
roots of violence.
Also, the existence of
exceptions showed again and again that propaganda and manipulation at
school alone were not sufficient to transform people into mass
murderers. Only men and women who had experienced mental and physical
cruelty in the first weeks and months of life and had been shown no
love at all could possibly have let themselves be made into Hitler’s
willing executioners. As Goldhagen’s archive material shows, they
needed almost no ideological indoctrination because their bodies knew
exactly what they wanted to do as soon as they were allowed to follow
their inclinations. And as the Jews, young or old, had been declared
non-persons, there was nothing to stop them indulging those
inclinations. But no
amount of indoctrination alone, at school or wherever, will unleash
hatred in a person who has no preconditions in that direction. It is
well known that there were also Germans, like Karl Jaspers, Hermann
Hesse and Thomas Mann, who immediately recognized the declaration that
Jews were non-persons as an alarm signal and the rallying cry of
untrammeled barbarism.
Doubtless there are people
who grew up with loving and protecting parents who could later find a
kind, sympathetic partner, could organize their life and become good
parents, even if they had to go through the horror of a concentration
camp during their adolescence. On the other hand, the lives of many
were broken, even without catastrophic experiences in their later
life. They just couldn’t find the way to liberate themselves from
their old fears, never identified as such. From many cases of
survivors I learned that it was the quality of their infancy that
determined the way they overcame later threats, including the
Holocaust.
Adults who grew up without
helping witnesses need the support and assistance of enlightened
witnesses, of people who are well aware of the dynamics of child
abuse, people who can help them to take their feelings seriously,
understand them and integrate them, as part of their own story.
In an informed society, adolescents will have the luck to talk
to others about their early experiences. They will be able to
verbalize their truth and to discover themselves in their own story,
their own tragedy, without avenging themselves violently for their
wounds, or to poison their systems with drugs.
I have wrongly been
attributed to the thesis according to which every victim inevitably
becomes a persecutor, a thesis that I find totally false, indeed
absurd. To say that every cow is an animal doesn’t include the
statement that every animal is a cow. It has been proved that many
adults have had the good fortune to break the cycle of abuse. Yet I
can certainly aver that I have never come across persecutors who
weren’t themselves victims in their childhood, though most of them
don’t know it because their feelings are repressed. The less these
criminals know about themselves, the more dangerous they are to
society. So I think it is crucial to grasp the difference between the
statement, “every victim becomes a persecutor,” which is wrong,
and the statement, “every persecutor was a victim in his
childhood,” which I consider true. The problem is that, feeling
nothing, he remembers nothing, realizes nothing, and this is why
surveys don’t always reveal the truth. Yet the presence of a warm,
enlightened witness ... therapist, social worker, lawyer, judge ...
can help the criminal unlock his repressed feelings and restore the
unrestricted flow of consciousness. This can initiate the process of
escape from the vicious circle of amnesia and violence.
Working toward a better
future cannot be done without legislation that clearly forbids
corporal punishment toward children and makes society aware of the
fact that children are people too. The whole society and its legal
system can then play the role of a reliable, enlightened and
protecting witness for children at risk, children of adolescent, drug
addicted criminals who may themselves become predators without such
assistance. The only reason why a parent might smack his children is
the parent’s own history. All other so-called reasons, such as
poverty and unemployment, are pure mystification. There are unemployed
parents who don’t spank their children and there are many wealthy
parents who maltreat their children in the most cruel way and teach
them to minimize the terror by calling it the right education. With a
law prohibiting corporal punishment towards children, people of the
next generation will not have recorded the highly misleading
information in their brain, an almost irreversible damage. They will
be able to have empathy with a child and understand what has been done
to children over millennia. It is a realistic hope to think that then
(and only then) the human mind and behavior will change. With a law
that forbids spanking every citizen becomes an enlightened witness.
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