Ten ACEs, One Nervous System
What each category does — and what it teaches a child about the world
850 words – 5 min read – Published 2026-05-27
OpenThe ACE questionnaire lists ten categories. Grouped into Abuse. Neglect. Household dysfunction. Each marked yes or no.
But lived experience does not compress neatly into numbers.
This article walks through each category not as a checklist, but as a description of how each one shapes a developing nervous system — and why.
The aim is not to diagnose damage, but to offer understanding where there may have been confusion, silence, or shame.
What a developing nervous system needs
A child’s nervous system does not arrive completely formed. It builds itself in relationship, calibrating to the world it inhabits: what is safe, what is predictable, who can be trusted.
These are not conscious conclusions. They are learned patterns, encoded long before language or reasoning is available.
Early experience matters because it is not just remembered — it is incorporated. Each ACE disrupts this process in a specific way.
*→ The Foundational series explains how the nervous system builds its responses to safety and threat. [Start here.]*
Abuse
Emotional abuse
Emotional abuse is the repeated use of words, tone, or behavior to frighten, diminish, humiliate, or control a child. It leaves no visible marks and often goes unnamed.
What the nervous system registers: the person I depend on for safety is also a source of threat. The child must stay attached to someone who is hurting them — an unsolvable paradox.
Long-term patterns often include hypervigilance, uncertainty about self-worth, difficulty reading social cues, and organizing around others’ moods because that once ensured survival.
Physical abuse
Physical abuse involves hitting or other bodily harm.
What the nervous system registers: the body is not safe. Home becomes unpredictable at a physical level. Sensation itself carries threat.
Children often develop extreme sensitivity to movement, tone, and emotional shifts. This is not innate anxiety — it is accurate threat detection learned in dangerous conditions. The body that learned to brace does not easily stop.
Sexual abuse
Sexual abuse involves sexual activity a child cannot understand, resist, or consent to — often by someone known and trusted.
What the nervous system registers: my body is not my own; boundaries are violated; trust is dangerous.
Shame is common — not because of wrongdoing, but because the nervous system turns blame inward when the source of danger cannot be safely located outside.
Self-blame often forms before the child has language for what occurred.
Neglect
Emotional neglect
Emotional neglect is the persistent absence of parental response to a child’s inner world.
The child is fed and housed, but emotionally unseen. What the nervous system registers: what I feel doesn’t matter — or I don’t matter.
This is associated with difficulty identifying emotions, chronic emptiness, depression without clear cause, and distress without a story to point to — just a long absence.
Physical neglect
Physical neglect involves unmet basic needs such as food, medical care, supervision, or shelter.
What the nervous system registers: survival is uncertain; resources may disappear.
Children often develop a nervous system oriented toward scarcity — hyperaware of availability, reluctant to trust stability.
In adulthood, these patterns can appear disproportionate until their origin is understood.
Household dysfunction
Parental substance use
Problematic substance use creates chronic unpredictability.
Warmth may alternate with absence or volatility. Promises dissolve.
What the nervous system registers: safety is conditional. I must stay ready.
Children often assume adult responsibilities early — managing siblings, emotions, or the household — because no one else will.
The cost of this role is rarely visible.
Parental mental illness
When a parent is chronically dysregulated, the child faces a similar challenge across many diagnoses: the regulator needs regulation.
What the nervous system registers: I must monitor and manage the emotional atmosphere. My needs come second.
These children often become exquisitely attuned to mood and context — a survival skill that frequently persists as exhaustion in adulthood.
Domestic violence
Exposure to violence between caregivers activates the same threat response as direct abuse. Children do not need to be hit for their nervous systems to be shaped by danger.
What the nervous system registers: home is unsafe; the people meant to protect me are unsafe together.
Vigilance becomes focused on tone, timing, and atmosphere — reading the room before entering it.
Incarceration of a household member
Incarceration disrupts attachment, routine, income, and identity — often without appropriate explanation.
What the nervous system registers: loss can arrive suddenly; stability is fragile; there may be something wrong with my family — and therefore with me.
Stigma compounds grief. The loss is often treated as shameful rather than mourn-able.
Parental separation or divorce
Separation is common and frequently minimized. Its impact varies widely based on conflict, attachment continuity, and adult behavior.
When poorly handled, what the nervous system registers is: love is unstable; loyalty is dangerous; I might lose a parent.
Children placed in the middle — or simply witnessing the restructuring of their world — experience real loss, even when adults insist they will be fine.
The meaning-making layer
All ten ACEs share something the questionnaire does not measure.
Each one teaches the child something about who they are. Not in words, but through repeated experience and response.
I’m a burden. I’m not worth protecting. Something is wrong with me. Love must be earned. I take up too much space.
Two children can experience the same events and encode different meanings — depending on whether they are believed, protected, or blamed. The events may match; the conclusions do not.
Those conclusions often shape long-term outcomes more than the events themselves. They influence how threat is perceived, whom we trust, whether help feels safe, and whether the self feels fundamentally worthy.
This is why focusing only on what happened often misses the core of trauma work. A more revealing question is often: *What did it teach you about who you are?*
A note before continuing
If you recognized yourself in more than one category, hold this:
These nervous system responses are not signs of weakness. They are evidence of accurate adaptation to the environment you lived in.
What you carry is not a character flaw. It is a calibration. And calibrations — unlike histories — can be updated.
Trauma isn’t just what happened.
It’s what it taught you to be who you are.
Related Series
Foundational Series
If you came to this article directly, the Foundational Series is the place to start. It covers what trauma is, how it affects the body, and why healing takes the time it does — one article at a time, no pressure to move quickly.
Trauma in Later Life Series
Something often shifts when life slows down. The Trauma in Later Life Series explores why unresolved experiences can surface in later life, what is happening in the body when they do, and what actually helps — without rushing you toward answers you are not ready for.
Cross-portal note — conditional. Format: “This article also appears in: [Portal] — [Path] →”. Delete entirely if no cross-portal connection. Never force a connection.