I See Glass Children

Hypervigilance, Guilt, and Childhood Trauma: Constanza Speaks


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In today’s episode, we travel to Santiago, Chile to meet Constanza Varas Kahler, a 24-year-old adult glass child who is not only living this reality, but also researching it for her university thesis. Children’s mental health is the focal point of Constanza’s story.

Constanza grew up as the youngest of three, with a middle sister who has Down syndrome and later developed epilepsy. From the outside, Constanza was the quiet, well-behaved, responsible one. On the inside, the weight of childhood trauma and parentification triggered exhaustion, hypervigilance, and caused her to slowly disappear under the weight of everyone else’s needs.

By age six, she was her sister’s translator. By ten, she was her mother’s emotional support, her sister’s comforter, and the family’s peacemaker—while her father’s yelling, her brother’s coldness, and her mother’s emotional absence left her with nowhere to put her own fear and grief.

Constanza describes learning to read danger from footsteps in the hallway, feeling guilty any time she tried to rest, and believing her worth depended on productivity and caretaking. She shares bravely about depression, suicidal thoughts, and the moment she chose therapy—and chose life—for herself, even when her father dismissed therapy as “a waste of time” for “crazy people.”

This episode is a raw, global snapshot of what it means to be the invisible child in a high-needs family—and what it looks like to slowly claim your right to exist as your own person.

A gentle trigger warning: This conversation includes references to childhood emotional neglect, parentification, verbal/emotional intensity in the home, depression and suicidal ideation. Please listen with care and seek support if needed.

This is Constanza’s story.

Welcome to the I See Glass Children podcast.

What You’ll Hear

  • Parentification:
    • How Constanza became her sister’s translator at age six because no one else could understand her speech
    • At ten years old she comforted  her sister during their grandparents’ deaths, she held her mother’s emotions, and tried  to keep peace with a short-tempered, angry, yelling father
    • A vivid description of hypervigilance: learning to read everyone’s mood from the sound of their footsteps and never being able to truly relax
    • What it’s like to study, sleep, and live in constant proximity to a high-needs sibling—through surgeries, epilepsy, fainting spells, broken bones, and hospital visits
    • Unrecognized childhood trauma
    • How years of being “the calm one” and “no trouble” created:
      • chronic exhaustion
      • deep resentment she feels guilty for
      • intense guilt any time she does something just for herself
      • How Constanza’s perfectionism and overachievement rose up as a trauma response:
        • needing to be productive to feel worthy
        • feeling lost and empty when life finally asks, “What do you want?”
        • The moment she considered ending her life—and what she chose instead
        • The battle to seek help when her own father called therapy a waste of money and “for crazy people”
        • What she’s learning in therapy now:
        • A powerful explanation of parentification
        • Constanza’s message to parents of high-needs children – how to properly address mental health in children.
        • Constanza’s message to adult glass children around the world:
        • Connect & Engage

          Ready to join the movement? Here’s how you can help break the silence around glass children:

          1. Subscribe to the I See Glass Children Podcast on YouTube | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | or wherever you get your podcasts.
          2. Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it and tell them, “You have to hear this.”
          3. Visit https://iseeglasschildren.com and subscribe to Behind the Glass for exclusive updates, behind-the-scenes content, and a special PDF with tips for helping glass children.
          4. Spread the Word: Share this episode with your bestie, your therapist, your teachers, your minister, friends. Sharing is caring—and hearing is healing.
          5. REMEMBER:

            If you’re struggling, reach out to a mental-health professional. You do not have to do this alone.

            Thank you for listening to the I See Glass Children podcast.

            I’m Alicia Meneses Maples, and I see you.

            Produced by: Brewing.Media

            Dedicated to: My Daddy. I love you with all my heart forevers.

            Special thanks to: BlueHair

            The post Hypervigilance, Guilt, and Childhood Trauma: Constanza Speaks appeared first on iseeglasschildren.com.

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            I See Glass ChildrenBy Alicia Meneses Maples

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