Help! I’ve Become My Parents

How to Break Cycles of Generational Trauma & Shame


Watch Ep 17

Have you ever caught yourself doing or saying something — and suddenly realized: I've become my parents?!

That unsettling moment of recognition is where this conversation begins.

In Episode 17 of The Work Within podcast, John Lin is joined by therapists Ly Tran (LPC-S) and Dieula Previlon (LPC-S) to explore one of the most universal and consequential dynamics in human life: the patterns we inherit from our families, and what it takes to change them.

They unpack how family loyalty — that deep, often unspoken allegiance to our family of origin — can quietly prevent us from doing the work we most need to do, even behind closed doors in a therapist's office. How attachment patterns and conflict styles get absorbed from watching how the adults around us handled fear, failure, stress, and each other. How shame operates below the surface, wiring our nervous systems to react in ways we’re often not even aware of.

And why, even when people are acutely aware that a pattern is destructive — domestic violence, emotional unavailability, explosive anger — they so often still repeat it.

Ly puts it plainly: "It comes down to how people deal with pain. If that's all you've ever seen, that's how you'll respond. There was never another example."

But this episode isn't just about the weight of what gets passed down. It's also about hope. About what Exodus 34:7 actually means when you read it alongside the rest of Scripture — and why John no longer reads the phrase "generational sin" with despair. About what it looks like, practically, when awareness breaks the spell. About the unglamorous, necessary work of repair — going back to your kids or your spouse after you blew it, owning what happened, and doing it differently next time.

Their conversation is grounded in the belief that with intentional awareness and effort, we can break generational cycles and create something truly new and different. 

Also in this episode:

  • How the fear of dishonoring your parents can prevent healing

  • How conflict styles and attachment patterns are "caught, not taught" in childhood

  • What shame has to do with generational trauma — and why we can't see it clearly from the inside

  • A theological lens on Exodus 34:7 — what "generational sin" actually means (and what it doesn't)

  • Practical wisdom for beginning this work with grace, patience, and honesty


Dive Deeper

Check out these curated articles to explore concepts related to the show. Each article is grounded in biblical truth and evidence-based mental health tools.

“WE BECOME WHAT WE’VE SEEN”

We all carry patterns inherited from our families, but the irony is how often repeat these despite vowing not to. In this article, Brittany Ertz, LPC, draws on Bandura's social learning theory and the biblical narrative of Joseph to explore how generational cycles form and how they can be broken. She offers a three-step framework rooted in honest self-examination, compassion toward others, and surrendering your story to God as pathways toward healing and freedom.

“THE PARENTING SKILL THAT BREAKS THE GENERATIONAL CURSE”

When her daughter said "you make me feel dumb and like you don't trust me," counselor Cindy Park had to face the gap between her good intentions and their painful impact. Drawing on attachment research—including the finding that healthy parents and children are fully in sync only about 30% of the time—this article dismantles the myth of perfect parenting and shows why repair matters more than flawless attunement. With five practical steps for reconnecting after conflict, it offers parents a way to break generational patterns and become not perfect, but the kind who know how to come back.


Transcript