Liberating the Inner Child: Joy as a Pathway to Freedom

liberating inner child

There comes a moment in healing when survival is no longer enough. The panic may lessen. The nervous system may begin to regulate. The chronic overgiving may soften. We may become more aware of our boundaries, our trauma responses, our inherited patterns, and the ways we learned to survive.

And then another question quietly emerges:

What happens after survival?

For many people healing from chronic stress, addiction, emotional neglect, family dysfunction, or intergenerational trauma, this question can feel surprisingly difficult to answer. We become so accustomed to managing pain that we forget how to experience aliveness.

Joy can feel unfamiliar. Playfulness may feel unsafe. Creativity may seem indulgent. Rest may seem undeserved.

But what if joy is not separate from healing? What if joy itself is part of the healing?

In both trauma recovery and ancestral healing work, I have seen again and again that reclaiming playfulness, creativity, wonder, movement, and delight is not superficial. It is deeply restorative. It is often one of the clearest signs that the nervous system is beginning to remember safety again.

And from the perspective of the Vedas, this makes profound sense. According to the ancient Vedic teachings, joy is not something we must earn.

Joy is our true nature.

The Vedic Understanding of Joy

In the Vedic tradition, the essence of who we are is described as:

  • Sat (truth or existence),
  • Chit (consciousness),
  • Ananda (bliss or joy).

Ananda is not fleeting pleasure or forced positivity. It is not dependent upon achievement, validation, or external conditions. It is the innate state of wholeness and aliveness that exists beneath fear, conditioning, and separation.

From this perspective, healing is not about becoming someone new. Healing is about remembering who we were before survival became our identity: before hypervigilance,
inherited fear, emotional suppression, and generations of unresolved grief, scarcity, addiction, silence, or trauma shaped the nervous system around protection rather than presence.

The inner child often naturally remembers this.

Children are born with a natural curiosity, movement, imagination, creativity, wonder, and a desire for connection. Unless those qualities become interrupted by fear or adaptation, joy emerges spontaneously. This is why reclaiming joy is not avoidance of healing. It is a return to essence.

When Survival Replaces Aliveness

Many people grew up in environments where emotional safety was inconsistent or unavailable.

Perhaps there was:

  • addiction
  • chronic stress
  • emotional unpredictability
  • criticism
  • perfectionism
  • emotional neglect
  • generational trauma
  • family dysfunction
  • or unspoken grief moving through the household.

In those environments, children often become highly adaptive.

They learn to:

  • monitor moods
  • suppress emotions
  • stay small
  • become useful
  • overachieve
  • people-please
  • emotionally caretaking others
  • or disconnect entirely from their own needs.

The nervous system organizes itself around survival, and over time, survival can become mistaken for identity. Many adults do not realize how disconnected they have become from joy because they have spent years, sometimes generations, simply trying to get through life.

This is especially true for people carrying the effects of intergenerational trauma.

Intergenerational Trauma and the Suppression of Joy

When we speak about ancestral healing, we often focus on inherited pain, such as:

  • war trauma
  • poverty
  • addiction
  • displacement
  • violence
  • oppression
  • emotional repression
  • abandonment
  • chronic stress
  • survival conditioning

Research in epigenetics and historical trauma continues to deepen our understanding of how unresolved stress patterns can affect future generations. In my work as a Historical Trauma Specialist and Ancestral Clearing Practitioner, I have witnessed how many people carry burdens that did not begin with them.

But alongside inherited pain, many families also inherited the suppression of joy.

In survival-based family systems, joy can unconsciously become associated with:

  • danger
  • irresponsibility
  • instability
  • disappointment
  • vulnerability
  • or loss.

If previous generations experienced war, scarcity, addiction, or prolonged uncertainty, playfulness may have been viewed as unsafe or unnecessary. Survival becomes the focus. Over time, nervous systems conditioned by survival often struggle to trust ease, rest, softness, creativity, or delight.

This is why some people feel guilty when they relax, why rest can create anxiety, why stillness feels uncomfortable, why creativity may seem frivolous, and why joy can feel strangely vulnerable.

The body has learned: “Staying alert keeps me safe.” And yet, healing asks us to explore another possibility gently.

Joy as Nervous System Healing

Joy is not merely emotional. Joy is physiological.

When we experience genuine moments of safety, playfulness, connection, creativity, laughter, awe, or presence, the nervous system receives important signals:

  • the body softens
  • breath deepens
  • rigidity decreases
  • creativity expands
  • connection increases
  • and stress physiology begins to shift.

Trauma narrows perception. Joy expands it.

Playfulness helps restore flexibility to the nervous system by naturally interrupting chronic defense patterns. During genuine play, we become present. Time softens, curiosity returns, and the body begins relating to life through engagement instead of protection.

This is not insignificant. These are signs of regulation.

For many people, healing trauma, joy initially feels uncomfortable because the nervous system has spent years bracing against disappointment, criticism, rejection, or pain. This is why reclaiming joy must be gentle.

Allowing small moments of aliveness, such as:

A walk outside, music that moves the body, creative art therapy, laughing with a trusted friend, watching children play, dancing in the kitchen, singing in the car, gardening, journaling, resting without apology, creating something imperfect simply because it brings pleasure.

These tiny moments matter because the nervous system heals through experience and repetition.

The Inner Child and the Memory of Freedom

The inner child is not a metaphor in the dismissive sense. The inner child represents real developmental experiences, emotional imprints, attachment patterns, unmet needs, and survival adaptations that continue to live within the body. Many adults who struggle with chronic anxiety, emotional exhaustion, perfectionism, burnout, addiction, or chronic pain were never fully allowed to inhabit the natural freedom of childhood.

The child within them learned:

  • “I must earn love.”
  • “I cannot relax.”
  • “My needs are too much.”
  • “I must hold everything together.”
  • “I must stay vigilant.”
  • “It is safer to perform than to feel.”

And yet beneath those adaptations lives something untouched: curiosity, wonder, creativity, and playfulness.

The Vedas remind us that beneath conditioning exists Ananda: our essential state of wholeness and joy.

Healing, then, becomes less about fixing ourselves and more about removing what obscures our original nature.

Creativity as Ancestral Liberation

Creativity is one of the most powerful ways we reclaim freedom from inherited survival patterns. Many of our ancestors did not have the safety, privilege, or opportunity to fully express themselves creatively. Their lives may have been consumed by survival, duty, oppression, caretaking, labor, war, or emotional suppression.

When we create consciously, we interrupt inherited rigidity.

Creativity says: “I am more than survival.” This does not require becoming a professional artist. Creativity is a life force moving through form.

It can look like:

  • writing
  • cooking
  • gardening
  • movement
  • music
  • storytelling
  • entrepreneurship
  • photography
  • decorating a home
  • ritual
  • dance
  • building community
  • or expressing emotions honestly for the first time.

Every act of authentic creation expands possibility within the nervous system and, perhaps, within the lineage itself. whereas trauma often repeats through constriction, healing expands through imagination.

Joy Is Not NaĂŻve

In painful times, some people feel resistant to joy because they fear it minimizes suffering. But joy is not denial. Joy is not disengagement. Joy is not pretending the world is not hurting.

Authentic joy nourishes resilience, reconnects us to humanity, strengthens connection, restores perspective, and reminds the body that beauty still exists alongside pain.

A nervous system that never experiences joy eventually forgets why healing matters. Joy reconnects us to life itself.

Reclaiming Joy as a Sacred Act

When we reclaim joy consciously, we are doing more than feeling better. We are disrupting inherited survival patterns. We are teaching the nervous system that it is safe to be alive here.

We are becoming the generation that allows softness, creativity, emotional truth, rest, pleasure, wonder, and connection to coexist with responsibility and depth.

This is sacred because many people have inherited generations of bracing, such as generations that survived war, addiction, emotional repression, scarcity, disconnection, and fear.

Honoring our ancestors does not require continuing their suffering. Sometimes the deepest way we honor them is by becoming the generation that remembers joy again.

A Gentle Invitation

If you are walking a healing path right now, I invite you to ask yourself:

What brought me joy before survival became my identity?

What made me feel alive? Curious? Creative? Free?

You do not need to force happiness.

You only need to begin allowing moments of aliveness back into the body because every moment of embodied joy sends a message through the nervous system and perhaps even through the lineage itself:

“We are no longer surviving alone. We are learning how to live.”

And according to the wisdom of the Vedas, that aliveness was never truly lost. It has been waiting underneath the conditioning all along.

Connect with Elizabeth on The Wellness Universe and follow her on Facebook and Instagram.


Elizabeth Kipp Class Promo - Healing Here Now

Healing. Here. Now. Mindfulness, Trauma, and Recovery is a course for self-care and healing brought to you in partnership with Elizabeth Kipp, Founder of Elizabeth Kipp Stress Management, LLC and Wellness Universe Trauma Expert Leader exclusively for Wellness for All programming.

Catch the replayhttps://bit.ly/HealingHereNow

A Transformational Journey Workshops

Unlock the full transformational journey with all 29 powerful workshops!

A transformational Journey Elizabeth Kipp

Blessing for Your Transformation

with Elizabeth Kipp

Step into a powerful journey of healing and renewal with a live reading of Blessing for Your Evolutionary Transformation from the #1 best-selling book series The Wellness Universe Guide to Complete Self-Care: 25 Tools for Transformation. Release what no longer serves you, reconnect with your inner strength, and rediscover your purpose with clarity and peace. Join live for an inspiring experience of growth, conversation, and transformation—you don’t want to miss it!

Catch the Recording Here


#1 BEST SELLER AVAILABLE NOW!

The Wellness Universe Guide to Complete Self-Care, 25 Tools for Transformation

25 Tools for Transformation

Ready for a gentle reset with real momentum? The Wellness Universe Guide to Complete Self-Care: 25 Tools for Transformation is a 5-star Amazon favorite, and readers say,

“This book should be your bedside table guidebook.”

Open to any page, choose a tool, and let one small shift become your next breakthrough.

👉 GRAB YOUR COPY TODAY 

COMING SOON!

The Wellness Universe Guide to Complete Self-Care:
25 Tools for Navigating Loss, Grief and Transition

the wellness universe guide to loss, grief, and transition

The Wellness Universe Guide to Complete Self-Care, #1 Bestselling book series brings more well-being support to you soon. 25 Tools for Navigating Loss, Grief & Transition available soon. Sign up now for free gifts and win a prize in our Mega Wellness Prize Bonanza – Over $20,000 in prizes & everyone will win:

👉 Join Our Launch Team & Win Prizes


Take My Hand Support Series

workplace wellness
Wellness in the Workplace

Research shows that workplace wellness is a serious global concern, with rising levels of burnout, emotional exhaustion, and mental health decline across industries. Many employees struggle under chronic stress, long hours, and high‑pressure environments that leave them vulnerable to depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation. This session addresses these challenges head‑on, offering insight, education, and compassionate support for individuals and organizations seeking healthier ways to work and live.

Join us for “Wellness in the Workplace,” on Saturday, July 11, 2026, hosted by Jean Voice Dart, Psychotherapist, Grief, Trauma, and Chronic Pain Specialist, with guest speakers:

  1. Sonya Bohmann — Executive Director, Construction Industry Alliance for Suicide Prevention
  2. Meagan Hopper — Certified Wellness Specialist & High‑Pressure Leadership Consultant
  3. Linda Dieffenbach —Trauma‑Informed Coach, Workplace Wellness & Suicide Prevention Advocate

Together, they explore workplace stress, mental health, and suicide risk, examining how high‑demand environments contribute to burnout, emotional overload, and feelings of isolation. Our panelists will share evidence‑based strategies, effective resources, trauma‑informed practices, and real‑life examples that provide proven pathways to healing.

You are not alone, and your mental wellness matters.

đź“…Saturday, July 11, 2026
⏰12:00pm ET/9:00am PT
Register & Join Live: https://bit.ly/WUTakeMyHandSupportSeries
From spiritual wellness to self-development, inspiring conversations for mind, body, soul to educational professional development workshops, we have over 1000 transformational classes that are free to join! 
Check out our library of classes today.
See how our self-care books are helping thousands of people around the world. Digital and paperback are available now.
Grab your copy today!
Connect to the people that help you live your best life: The Wellness Universe
All information, content, and material are for informational purposes only and are not intended to serve as a substitute for the consultation, diagnosis, and/or medical treatment of a qualified physician or healthcare provider. The information supplied through or on this page, or by any representative or agent of The Wellness Universe, is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or other professional advice. Health-related information provided through this website is not a substitute for medical advice and should not be used to diagnose or treat health problems or to prescribe any medical devices or other remedies. The Wellness Universe reserves the right to remove, edit, move, or close any content item for any reason, including, but not limited to, comments that are in violation of the laws and regulations formed pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. None of the posts and articles on The Wellness Universe page may be reprinted without express written permission.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *