Before, During, After Map

Rejection language like “I hate you”

Pushing you away with words, “I don’t care,” “You’re not my real parent,” “I never wanted to live here.”

Before the moment
Rejection language often protects a child from feeling needy. The closer they feel, the scarier it can get.
What might be happening underneath?
  • Fear of attachment, “If I care, you could leave, so I’ll reject you first.”
  • Shame, embarrassment, or grief about birth family, contact, or identity.
  • Big feelings without words, anger is easier than sadness.
  • A test of safety, “Will you still care if I’m awful?”
  • Feeling powerless, harsh words create distance and control.
Support that helps
  • Expect it around vulnerable times, bedtime, after school, after contact, after a telling off, after fun.
  • Lower demands when you see the wobble, keep language short and steady.
  • Offer two calm choices that keep dignity, for example, “Do you want space in your room or a brew and a sit with me?”
  • Build repair into everyday moments, predictable routines, gentle connection, and warm check-ins that do not demand eye contact.
Gentle prompt
What might they be protecting themselves from feeling right now?
Write your awesome label here.

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