
“The curious paradox is that when I accept myself just as I am, then I can change.” ~Carl Rogers
I remember sitting on the living room floor one evening while my boys were playing nearby. One of them was trying to build something out of Legos and getting more and more frustrated every time it collapsed. I don’t even remember exactly what he said now, only the feeling I got watching him.
Because I suddenly recognized that frustration in myself.
Not just in that moment, but from most of my life.
That feeling of wanting to do something, sometimes badly, but somehow not being able to stay steady inside yourself long enough to actually do it consistently.
I used to call that laziness.
A lot of people probably did.
Growing up, things at home could change quickly depending on the day. My father drank heavily at times. Sometimes there was tension before he even walked through the door. You could feel it in your stomach before anything had even happened yet.
But childhood is strange. I still remember good things too.
Football with friends during summer evenings. Watching TV with my brother. The smell of coffee in the kitchen early in the morning before school. Ordinary moments mixed together with things that probably weren’t ordinary at all.
I think that confused me for years because I didn’t feel like someone who had been through “real trauma.” I thought trauma belonged to other people. People who had it worse.
Meanwhile, my body was reacting to stress constantly, and I didn’t even realize it.
As I got older, I started drinking myself. Later came drugs, chaos, stupid decisions, periods of feeling completely lost, and then periods where I looked totally fine from the outside. That was part of the confusion too. I could function extremely well under pressure sometimes. Better than many people around me.
But everyday life? Normal routines? Calm structure? That was often harder.
I could stay focused during intensity, conflict, urgency, high stress. But folding laundry, answering emails, staying emotionally present, doing small repetitive things day after day without escaping into distraction somehow felt exhausting in a way I couldn’t explain to anyone.
And honestly, I carried a lot of shame about that.
Especially after becoming a father.
Because once you have children, you start seeing yourself differently. Or maybe more clearly. I don’t know.
I only know there were moments where I would react too fast, become emotionally overwhelmed too quickly, or completely lose motivation and disappear into my own head, and afterward I’d sit there thinking:
For years, I thought the answer was discipline. Or lack of discipline.
I thought maybe I just needed to try harder.
But eventually I started reading more about stress, dopamine, motivation, nervous system regulation, and how repeated experiences shape the brain over time. Not in an academic way at first. More in a desperate way, honestly. Like someone trying to understand why life felt harder than it seemed to feel for other people.
And slowly, pieces started connecting.
Not excuses. Just understanding.
I started realizing that the brain adapts to environments much more than most of us think. Especially during childhood. If stress, unpredictability, emotional tension, overstimulation, or chaos get repeated enough times, the nervous system starts organizing itself around that.
You begin living in reaction before you even notice it’s happening.
I think a lot of adults are walking around calling themselves lazy when what they’re actually experiencing is a nervous system that learned survival long before it learned safety.
And survival patterns don’t disappear automatically just because your life looks more stable later on.
Sometimes they follow you into relationships.Into parenthood.
Into work. Into motivation. Into rest. Into your ability to sit still without needing noise, stimulation, food, alcohol, scrolling, conflict, or distraction.
I still catch myself doing this.
Especially now, in quieter moments.
What changed for me wasn’t becoming some perfectly healed person. Honestly, I don’t think life works that way. What changed was learning to stop immediately turning every struggle into a character flaw.
Now I’m more curious about it.
What is this reaction? Why does my body go there so quickly? What did my nervous system learn years ago that it still thinks I need today?
That shift alone changed the way I parent my children.
Because children are learning from experiences constantly. Not only from what we say to them, but from what life around them feels like over and over again.
I think about that a lot now.
Not in a guilty way anymore. More in a responsible way.
And maybe that’s the difference.
About Patrick Dahlstrom
Patrick Dahlstrom is the founder of Hope for Families, a neuroscience-informed platform focused on dopamine, motivation, emotional regulation, and early prevention in children and families. Drawing from both lived experience and neuroscience education, he writes about stress, behavior, parenting, and how repeated experiences shape the developing brain.