What Are “Emotional Inheritances” (Hint: What Grandma Really Left You)

What Are “Emotional Inheritances” (Hint: What Grandma Really Left You)

When people talk about what they inherited from their grandparents, they usually mean the china, the house, maybe a trust fund if they were lucky. But there’s another inheritance most of us received—one that we may not even know we’re carrying. It’s called emotional inheritance, and it includes unprocessed traumas, family secrets, anxiety that seems to come from nowhere, and patterns we repeat without understanding why. Your grandmother may have left you more than her recipes. She may have left you her fears.

1. It’s A Real Phenomenon With Scientific Backing

Three generations of women with grandmother, daughter and granddaughter
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The concept of intergenerational trauma was first introduced in psychiatric literature through observations of Holocaust survivors’ children. As researchers noted in a pivotal early paper, “The parents are not broken conspicuously, yet their children, all of whom were born after the Holocaust, display severe psychiatric symptomatology. It would almost be easier to believe that they, rather than their parents, had suffered the corrupting, searing hell.” The American Psychiatric Association now defines intergenerational trauma as a situation in which descendants of survivors show similar unfavorable emotional and behavioral responses as those survivors themselves.

Research has documented biological markers—altered cortisol levels, changes in stress-response genes, modified DNA methylation patterns—that differ between trauma survivors, their offspring, and control groups. What happens to one generation can literally mark the next.

2. It Gets Transmitted Through Multiple Channels

Three generations of smiling men with grandfather, father and child.
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Emotional inheritance doesn’t travel through just one pathway. It moves through behavior—the way a parent flinches at certain sounds, avoids certain topics, or goes rigid when particular subjects arise. It moves through attachment—the emotional availability or unavailability of caregivers shapes how children learn to connect. It moves through silence—what’s never discussed can be as formative as what’s explicitly taught.

Children are attuned to their parents’ emotional states. They absorb fears, anxieties, and coping mechanisms long before they have language to name them. A child doesn’t need to be told that money is terrifying if they watch their parent’s face change every time a bill arrives.

3. What’s Not Talked About Often Hurts Most

Family sit on couch having dispute, grown up daughter proves her right aggressively argue with elderly mother, 60s mom in despair due to misunderstanding. Generational gap, conflicts at home
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Research on trauma communication has identified what’s called the “conspiracy of silence”—a phenomenon first documented in Holocaust survivor families but since observed across many trauma-affected populations. Within this framework, parental trauma experiences become family secrets, enabling intergenerational transmission through the very absence of discussion. Children sense the weight of what’s unspoken without understanding its source, often filling the gaps with self-blame or free-floating anxiety.

Psychoanalytic research describes it this way: “What haunts are not the dead, but the gaps left within us by the secrets of others.” The things your grandmother never spoke about—the lost pregnancy, the violent father, the reason she left her homeland—may be shaping your emotional life in ways you’ve never connected to their source.

4. Your Attachment Style Might Not Be Entirely Yours

A happy smiling senior mother hugging her son, two generations
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Attachment theory has long established that the way caregivers respond to infants shapes those children’s relationship patterns for life. But here’s the recursive part: attachment styles transfer across generations. A parent with an avoidant attachment style—perhaps developed because their own parent was emotionally unavailable due to unprocessed trauma—will likely parent in ways that create similar patterns in their children.

A recent large longitudinal study found that early dynamics with mothers predicted future attachment styles across all primary relationships in participants’ lives, including with parents, best friends, and romantic partners. The way you relate to intimacy may be an inheritance from someone you never met.

5. Epigenetics Offers A Biological Mechanism

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Research published in World Psychiatry examined how trauma effects might be transmitted through epigenetic mechanisms—changes that affect how genes are expressed without altering the DNA sequence itself. Studies of Holocaust survivors and their adult children found that both generations showed distinctive patterns of DNA methylation on stress-related genes, even though the children were conceived after the traumatic events. The research team noted this was “the first demonstration of an association of preconception parental trauma with epigenetic alterations that is evident in both exposed parent and offspring.”

This doesn’t mean you’re doomed by your ancestors’ experiences. Epigenetic changes can be influenced by your own life experiences and interventions. But it does mean the body keeps score across generations.

6. It Shows Up In Unexpected Places

An elderly senior grandmother with her granddaughter helping out
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Emotional inheritance might appear as an inexplicable fear of water in someone whose grandmother nearly drowned. An inability to save money in someone whose family lost everything in the Depression. A reflexive distrust of authority in someone whose ancestors fled persecution. A terror of abandonment in someone whose great-grandmother was orphaned.

These patterns often feel like personality—”I’ve just always been this way”—rather than inheritance. The first step in addressing them is recognizing that some of what feels most essentially “you” may actually be a legacy from someone else’s experience.

7. Resilience Is Inherited, Too

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A recent study published in Scientific Reports examining third- and fourth-generation descendants of Holocaust survivors found something remarkable: alongside markers of trauma transmission, descendants also showed DNA methylation patterns associated with stronger activation of the oxytocin system—indicating enhanced social bonding and emotion regulation. The descendants exhibited significantly lower general attachment avoidance than the control groups.

This suggests that what gets passed down isn’t only vulnerability. The survival strategies, the capacity for connection that helped ancestors endure, the resilience that got them through—these may also be part of your inheritance. The question isn’t whether you inherited anything from previous generations. It’s learning which parts of that inheritance serve you and which parts you might want to release.

8. It Explains Feelings That Don’t Match Your Life

Beautiful senior grandmother and granddaughter at home having fun and dancing together
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One of the most disorienting aspects of emotional inheritance is carrying feelings that don’t correspond to anything in your own experience. You might feel a nameless grief, an inexplicable anxiety, a sense that something terrible is about to happen—without any personal history that would explain it.

Therapists working with intergenerational trauma report that clients often wonder, “Why do I feel this way when nothing that bad has happened to me?” The answer may lie not in what happened to you, but in what happened to those who came before. Recognizing this can be both unsettling and liberating—unsettling because it complicates your sense of self, liberating because it means these feelings aren’t evidence of something wrong with you.

9. Family Roles Carry Hidden Assignments

Three generations of men sitting by the river bank and fishing, grandfather, son and grandson
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Many families unconsciously assign roles that relate to unprocessed historical material. The child named after a deceased relative may carry unspoken expectations to redeem that loss. The firstborn may be tasked with achieving what immigration or poverty prevented in previous generations. Someone may become the family’s designated worrier, carrying anxiety that belongs to the collective.

These roles aren’t discussed explicitly—they’re absorbed. A child understands, without being told, that they’re supposed to be successful in a particular way, or careful about particular things, or responsible for particular people’s emotional states.

10. Breaking The Pattern Requires Naming It

A smiling elderly grandmother playing with her grandson
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You can’t heal what you can’t see, and you can’t release what you haven’t acknowledged. The first step in working with emotional inheritance is becoming curious about your family history—not just the facts, but the emotional texture. What were the losses? What was survived? What was never discussed? What patterns repeat across generations?

This doesn’t require assigning blame or holding previous generations responsible for your current struggles. It simply means recognizing that you exist within a larger story and that some of the chapters that most affect you were written before you were born.

11. The Body Holds What The Mind Forgets

A black grandmother and her granddaughter lying on the grass and laughing together
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Even when family histories are lost—through adoption, migration, estrangement, or simple forgetting—the body retains information. Unexplained physical symptoms, chronic tension in particular areas, strong somatic responses to seemingly neutral situations—these can be clues to emotional inheritances that were never verbally transmitted.

This is one reason body-based therapies are often effective for intergenerational trauma. The material isn’t always accessible through talking and thinking because it was never encoded that way. It was transmitted through nervous system states, through the way a parent held a child, through atmospheres that preceded language.

12. Becoming Aware Creates Choice

A haapy adult granddaughter sitting on the living room sofa with her grandmother
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Once you recognize an emotional inheritance for what it is—a pattern passed down rather than something that originated with you—you gain the ability to relate to it differently. You can still honor your ancestors’ experiences while deciding not to continue carrying what doesn’t serve you. You can acknowledge the validity of inherited fear while choosing not to let it run your life.

This isn’t about rejecting your family or pretending the past doesn’t matter. It’s about distinguishing between loyalty and repetition. You can remain connected to where you came from while choosing a different future.

13. You Can Change What Gets Passed Forward

A smiling and happy grandmother playing with her grandbabies
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Perhaps the most powerful aspect of understanding emotional inheritance is recognizing that you have a role in what continues and what stops. The patterns that have traveled through your family for generations can, with awareness and intention, end with you. You can be what some therapists call a “transitional character”—the person who transforms the family’s emotional legacy.

This doesn’t require complete healing. It simply requires enough awareness to make different choices, enough willingness to feel what previous generations couldn’t face, and enough courage to break silences that have persisted for lifetimes. What your grandchildren inherit emotionally will be shaped, in part, by the work you do now.

Danielle is a writer, editor, and copywriter with extensive experience writing about love, career and emotional patterns. She’s written for The Cut, Cosmopolitan, Men’s Health, Tinder, Bumble, WeWork, Taskrabbit, and others.

She draws on research as well as her own personal experience—the things she figured out in her thirties that she wishes she'd known in her twenties.

She particularly enjoys writing about relationship issues, leveling up in your career, and anything related to women navigating different social dynamics and life stages. When she's not writing, she's hunting for vintage finds or trying every coffee shop in a ten-mile radius. She lives in New York, NY.