You had a fine childhood. So why do you feel so empty?
There was food on the table, a roof overhead, birthday parties in the photographs. Nothing you could call abuse. And yet you have spent your adult life with a low-grade sense that something is missing - a flatness where other people seem to have a self, a fierce self-reliance that never quite warms into contentment, a quiet suspicion that you were never issued some basic piece of equipment everyone else got at birth.
That absence has a name. It is called childhood emotional neglect, and it is the most common, least recognized wound in the developed world. It is not about what your parents did. It is about what they failed to do - notice what you felt, ask about it, help you make sense of it. A child cannot grow a self without that, and you cannot remember what did not happen. That is exactly why it stayed invisible for so long.
Emotional Neglect is a clear-eyed field guide to the absence you cannot remember and the adult it shaped. In three parts - recognition, the cost, and the repair - it explains why the wound is invisible, how loving and well-meaning parents cause it without cruelty, and how to install, as an adult, the emotional equipment you were never shown how to use.
Inside you will learn:
Fifteen chapters, fifteen concrete practices. Not affirmations - instructions, for the slow and deliberate work of filling in what was missing.
You are not broken, and you are not imagining it. You are carrying the shape of something that was never given. This is how you fill it in.
---