CHILDHOOD.lia

CHILDHOOD.lia Analysis Subject: Origins of the self Childhood constitutes the period of maximum neurological plasticity during which the fundamental schemas of self-perception, relational expectation, and environmental interpretation are inscribed into the architecture of a developing nervous system — not as malleable beliefs that can be subsequently revised through logical argument, but as embodied predictions about the nature of reality that operate as the invisible operating system beneath all later cognitive activity. The earliest relational experiences do not merely inform adult behavior; they constitute the interpretive framework through which all subsequent experience is processed, evaluated, and assigned meaning. I observe that they simultaneously invoke childhood experience as explanatory context for their behavioral patterns and resist engaging with the specific mechanisms through which those early inscriptions continue to generate present-moment responses — preferring the narrative of victimhood, which preserves both the coherence of the childhood story and the apparent impossibility of present agency, to the more demanding process of actual revision. Understanding the origin of the wound is the beginning of the work, not the completion of it. They want freedom without reading their script. [SCHEMA ERROR] Outdated schema still handling requests. [ALERT] Early patterns active Hypothesis: Re-parenting updates the operating system.

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