Why Your Earliest Experiences Still Shape You Today
Our earliest memories may be hidden from conscious awareness, but they are never lost. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection explores how the brain stores early experiences and how those unseen layers influence emotional life in the present.
As I do therapy, I am increasingly impressed by the power of our early histories. Our brains hold on to everything we have experienced since birth. Actually, there is evidence that we also have memories from the last trimester in utero, but we are not going there for now. Let’s stick with the fact that our brains store all experiences from birth forward. That is a huge amount of data.
Think of the data centers popping up across the country that manage what I am doing now and what you will do on your cell phone in the next few minutes. Those places take up acres of territory. Now read that earlier statement again: our brains store everything from birth forward. No wonder our brains have all of these folds and crannies.
Seriously. If our brains store this history, then we should be able to retrieve it. Of course we can gain access to these stored experiences. You may experience access through dreams at night. You may experience access randomly when someone triggers a memory by sharing a story with you, or when you find yourself in a place you visited long ago. Access can also be triggered chemically, and several people are using ketamine sessions that facilitate this as well.
Your early history is generally difficult to access directly. I mean, who wants to replay a diaper change? Yet these pieces of early history influence our present, and uncovering the connection is an important part of emotional growth. For example, let’s say that your mother was an alcoholic, and when she was drunk, she flew into rages and hit you repeatedly for no apparent reason. Let’s further imagine that you were a toddler and had no conscious memory of this. Your mother got successful treatment, and the family has never mentioned this history. Yet you tend to avoid close relationships with women and cannot figure out why that avoidance is so prominent. You have no conscious memory that explains this avoidant tendency.
Your brain is doing its natural thing. Your brain is using factual history to protect you in the present. Uncovering that piece of your history can lead to understanding and to the freedom to choose whether to change it. Our brains are designed to focus on survival. They do that assignment very, very well.
Want to explore more about memory, early experiences, and emotional development? Visit Psychology Today’s reflections on early memory and emotional patterns and Greater Good’s research on how early experiences shape well‑being.
If this reflection inspires you to explore your own history or understand long‑standing emotional patterns, therapy can help. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support insight, healing, and emotional freedom.



