ACE here is not the winning card. Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) “are any stressful or traumatic events that occurred in childhood.” The experiences include sexual and physical abuse and neglect, but also household and family dysfunction, such as witnessing domestic violence or substance abuse. Adverse events also include parental separation, divorce, or parental incarcerations. Emotional abuse or neglect, including separation, appear to be a significant as physical abuse.
A child can feel neglected and uncared for even when the separation is out of the parent’s control (for example: the recent separation of young children from parents who were seeking asylum at our southern border). Whenever a child, be they infant or toddler, or older, experiences emotional or physical abandonment or both, the reasons are superfluous. The result is the same. Such children have suffered trauma and the younger the child is, the deeper the wounds. Now, with research in neuroscience becoming more able to pinpoint parts of the brain that are affected by such traumatic experiences, we can know that the neurological development of children is indeed profoundly affected. What affects our physiology—our brains and bodies—can be expressed behaviorally. ACE is one test that has corroborated the effects into adulthood.
Adverse Childhood Experiences study results were first published in 1998, and it was determined that there is “a stunning link between childhood trauma and the chronic diseases people develop as adults, as well as social and emotional problems.”
Find the ACE test below and remember that the ACE is only a guideline. Some of us experience toxic stress later in life. We must also remember that there are antidotes to these stressors. Emotional support, community, connection, psychotherapy, and other healing techniques can counter many of the negative effects of toxic stress. Resilience can build throughout life, says Dr. Jack Shonkoff, Director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University.
A high ACE score is not the whole story—nor the bottom line. We hope for the caring people who are there for us in difficult times. Was there a trusted teacher? A loving grandparent? A special aunt? These are the helpers who may “mitigate the long term effects of early trauma.” (NPR, Health-Shots, 3/2/15).
As Mr. Rogers would say, “Look for the helpers.”
See:
Prior to your 18th birthday:
Your ACE score is the number of ‘yes’ answers to the above ten questions.