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Feel Like a Child in an Adult’s Body?

8 September 2025by crbwebsite0

Emotional Immaturity

Do you feel like a child in an adult’s body? If so, this may be a sign of emotional immaturity. Emotional immaturity occurs when emotional growth is delayed, leaving parts of you stuck in childhood. You may appear mature; however, inside, you often feel inexperienced, vulnerable, or unsure.

Emotional immaturity is commonly linked to childhood trauma, neglect, or inconsistent parenting. As a result, emotional growth may stop developing at the stage when life became overwhelming.

If you’ve ever thought, “I missed learning how to be an adult,” this might explain why.

How Emotional Immaturity Develops

Emotional immaturity usually begins in childhood. Trauma, neglect, or even overprotective parenting can halt emotional growth.

For instance, school reports might have read:
“A mature student, or acts responsibly” 

Or you may have preferred talking to adults rather than playing with children.

Although this sounds positive, it often hides a deeper truth. You were expected to grow up too soon. Therefore, you became responsible, cautious, or protective – skipping the carefree, supportive parts of childhood necessary for emotional development.

Instead of building emotional resilience, you learned to cope with stress and fear. Consequently, these frozen patterns often follow you into adulthood.

From Mature Child to Childlike Adult

As an adult, people expect you to act grown-up. However, if your emotional skills never fully developed, that can feel impossible. You might:

  • Struggle with conflict or setting boundaries

  • Feel overwhelmed by responsibilities

  • React to stress with childlike behavior

Partners may say: “Why are you acting like a child?” In fact, it’s not laziness – it’s emotional immaturity. Your emotional muscles never had the chance to grow.

Signs of Emotional Immaturity in Adults
  • Emotional outbursts over small issues

  • Fear of responsibility or commitment

  • Difficulty maintaining long-term relationships

  • Constant need for reassurance or validation

  • Avoiding accountability

Many trauma survivors experience these patterns without realising the reason behind them.

How Trauma Causes Emotional Immaturity

When trauma occurs, the brain switches to survival mode. As a result, emotional growth stops. Play, curiosity, and learning how to handle emotions take a back seat. We don’t need these skills when we are simply trying to survive. All the time.

If you were constantly on alert for danger, you couldn’t relax and develop normally. Therefore, your inner child learned:

“It’s not safe to just be me.”

This is why so many trauma survivors carry emotional immaturity well into adulthood.

Healing Emotional Immaturity

Emotional immaturity can be healed. It takes time, self-compassion, and often professional help. If you’ve asked yourself, “Why do I feel like a child in an adult’s body?”, therapy can help you grow emotionally by looking at:

1. Inner Child Work

Reconnecting with the younger parts of yourself. Nurturing and comforting the child who was left to cope alone.

2. Trauma Therapy

Methods like EMDR, somatic therapy, EFT (Emotional Freedom Tapping) or trauma-focused CBT can process old wounds and teach emotional safety.

3. Practicing Adult Skills

Learn boundaries, emotional regulation, and responsibility. Starting small and, importantly, celebrating progress.

4. Rediscover Play

Reclaiming fun and creativity is essential. If you never got the chance to be a child, it’s never too late. Play strengthens emotional flexibility.

Example of Healing Emotional Immaturity

Sarah’s high school reports always said: “Sarah is a mature student, reliable and responsible.” She cared for siblings while her parents argued. She cared for her Mum when she would drink too much.

Now 35, she excels at work but panics in relationships. Conflict overwhelms her.

In therapy, Sarah learns this isn’t weakness – it’s emotional immaturity. She practices expressing needs and self-soothing.

Gradually, Sarah feels safe enough to act her real age and not be responsible for everyone else.

Final Thoughts

If you feel like a child in an adult’s body, emotional immaturity may be the reason. Childhood trauma and unmet emotional needs can leave you stuck between a child and an adult, with childish behaviour.

The good news: healing is possible. With therapy, self-awareness, and patience, you can develop the emotional skills you missed and be the adult you sadly needed as a child.

If this blog resonates with you, get in touch

About the author: Chris Boobier is the owner of CRB Counselling specialising in anxiety, trauma, Bereavement & loss. Supporting adults and adolescents, she is passionate about helping people be their authentic self through counselling. 

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