You Are Not Your Childhood: How to Rewire Your Brain for Growth
The very thing you think is not available to you is actually something you closed yourself off to— either to feel safe, loved, or belong.
Today, I want to talk about childhood. It’s a heavy topic for some, I know. But my first question is this: how many images begin emerging just by hearing the word childhood? It likely conjures a mix of memories—some good, some painful. Now, another question: When you return to the past, do you focus on the positive or the negative? And if you could go back in time and speak to the younger you—the one whose pain still shapes your present—what would you most want them to know?
Would you tell them that the past will always haunt them? Or would you tell them that there is gold hidden in the meaning you’ve attached to your experiences—and from that wisdom lies the key to your happiness?
Most people don’t realize that the thoughts imprinted on them in childhood are still running the show. The subconscious doesn’t care about the present moment. It only cares about keeping you safe, even if that means keeping you small.
Your Childhood Was the Blueprint
Psychologists Karen Horney and Carl Rogers theorized that if caretakers didn’t make it clear that a child was unconditionally loved and accepted, it caused deep insecurity and anxiety. As kids, we can’t say, “I think I’ll go it alone.” We have to find a way to win love and approval.
So, we adapt. We become the helpful one. The smart one. The peacemaker. The rebel. We wear a mask to feel safe. But what happens when that mask becomes our identity?
Your Brain and Neural Pathways
Daily habits—especially those formed in childhood as a coping mechanism—create deep neural pathways. These grooves in the brain tell us, “It’s not safe to speak up for myself,” or “I will always be rejected.”
Forty-three percent of our daily actions happen unconsciously. That’s why today feels just like yesterday. We repeat the same patterns, have the same thoughts, and reinforce the same beliefs—because the brain values familiarity over happiness.
Logically, we know change is possible. But emotionally? It feels like climbing Mount Everest. Our subconscious convinces us: I can’t change. It’s too hard. I’ll fail.
But what if that wasn’t true? What if you could rewire your mind just by changing how you respond to old patterns?
Fixed vs. Growth Mindset
Carol Dweck’s research showed that people operate in one of two ways:
➡ Fixed Mindset: Believes abilities are innate and unchangeable. Fears failure. Avoids risk. Seeks validation. Stays in the comfort zone.
➡ Growth Mindset: Believes abilities can develop. Embraces failure as feedback. Takes risks. Seeks growth. Pushes past discomfort.
If you’ve been stuck in old patterns, it’s not because you’re broken—it’s because your brain was trained for survival, not expansion.
How to Shift Into a Growth Mindset
1️⃣ Become the Observer – Notice when your old programming kicks in. Instead of reacting, pause and ask: Is this belief actually true?
2️⃣ Reframe the Story – When fear or self-doubt arises, rewrite the narrative. Instead of “I’m not good enough,” try “I am learning and improving every day.”
3️⃣ Get Comfortable with ‘No’ – Fear of rejection keeps us small. Learn to detach your worth from others’ opinions.
4️⃣ Focus on Progress, Not Perfection – Small shifts in thinking lead to massive change. The goal isn’t to “fix” yourself—it’s to grow.
5️⃣ Embody the Future You – Show up now as the person you want to become. Speak, act, and think as if you’ve already stepped into that reality.
Final Thoughts
The past does not define you—unless you let it. Your brain is neuroplastic. Your subconscious is reprogrammable. Your identity is fluid.
You are not who you were. You are who you decide to become.
And that power? It’s yours to claim.