
Becoming the Mother You Needed: What Reparenting Really Looks Like
Becoming the Mother You Needed: What Reparenting Really Looks Like
Amber* was ten years old when her mother left.
She was the sensitive one, quick to feel, quick to notice, always carrying the weight that no child should have to hold. Her parents were both addicts, and when her mother disappeared, Amber's world shifted from unstable to unbearable.
Her siblings teased her for crying too easily. For being “too much.” But sensitivity in a storm is not a weakness; it’s wisdom.
Years later, Amber came to me to process something she could barely say out loud: the trauma of learning her brother had been molested by their father during the time her mother was gone.
It took months before she could whisper the next truth:
She had been a victim, too.
When Childhood Wasn’t Safe
Amber's story is not rare.
According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, nearly 1 in 7 children experience abuse or neglect each year. And over 70% of women in substance use treatment report experiencing childhood trauma.
When safety, comfort, and protection aren’t available during those early years, we don’t just lose innocence; we lose the blueprint for self-care, self-worth, and emotional regulation.
That’s where reparenting comes in.
What Is Reparenting?
Reparenting is the conscious act of giving yourself what you didn’t receive growing up.
It’s becoming the safe, stable, nurturing presence your inner child needed.
It’s not about blaming your parents forever; it’s about freeing yourself from the patterns they planted.
For Amber, this meant:
- Learning that she didn’t have to be loyal to people who hurt her
- Recognizing that safety was something she could now choose
- And slowly believing she deserved more than addiction and pain in her relationships
What Reparenting Really Looks Like
Let’s be clear: reparenting isn’t just affirmations and bubble baths.
It’s raw. It’s real. And it’s incredibly brave.
Here’s what it can look like:
1. Creating Emotional Safety
You check in with yourself the way a good parent would:
How am I feeling? What do I need? Is this relationship healthy for me?
2. Setting Boundaries (and Keeping Them)
Boundaries become the fence that protects your garden—not a wall to shut people out, but a structure to protect your peace.
3. Choosing Healthier Relationships
Amber was dating someone who mirrored her chaotic childhood.
As she healed, she realized: This is familiar, but it’s not love.
She broke up with him, not in anger, but in strength.
4. Letting the Inner Child Speak
Amber started writing letters to her younger self.
She began talking to the “little girl inside” who still needed a hug, still needed to hear: It wasn’t your fault. You are not alone.
5. Seeking Safe, Professional Support
Through therapy and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, Amber created new neural paths. New possibilities. New power.
Why It Matters
When we weren’t given the love, stability, or safety we needed as children, we either repeat the pattern or rewire it.
Reparenting is how we rewire.
It’s how we stop surviving and start living.
Amber began to believe in her worth.
She left the relationship.
She got excited about building her business.
And the sparkle in her voice, when she told me about her future, made me tear up.
I was so proud of her.
You Can Reparent Yourself Too
You don’t have to stay stuck in the patterns your childhood created.
You can mother yourself with grace, truth, and fierce love.
You can choose safety.
You can speak what was once unspeakable.
You can grow.
And if you’re ready to start, you don’t have to do it alone.
Therapy can be the space where you finally become the parent you've always needed to be

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[Explore therapy options »](https://ameliamoramars.com/therapy)
*Name and details changed for privacy.
