In my previous post, I described the euphoric idealization, the confusing devaluation, the trauma bond, and the abrupt discard that often mark relationships involving untreated Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) traits. What I didn’t fully explore there was the hidden engine driving much of that pain: multi-generational trauma and the quiet, unsustainable role that children—especially the oldest or most responsible one—can be forced to play.
This is the story of the “hero child” or parentified child: the one who becomes the emotional regulator, the mediator, the stabilizer for a parent whose own abandonment wounds and emotional dysregulation make everyday life feel like a constant threat of collapse. In families shaped by these traits, role reversal is common. The parent, battling intense fears of abandonment and unstable moods, leans on the child not just for practical help, but for nervous-system co-regulation — the daily work of soothing anxiety, absorbing mood swings, and providing the steady validation the parent’s fractured sense of self craves.
From the outside, the hero child may appear caring, responsible, and resilient. Inside, they carry a burden no child should bear. Research on parentification shows that children in these dynamics often grow up with heightened risks for depression, anxiety, substance use, boundary difficulties, and their own challenges with emotional regulation. The pattern doesn’t stop with one generation. Unresolved trauma and insecure attachment styles transmit forward, creating a legacy where each new generation inherits the same unspoken contract: “Your job is to keep me from falling apart.”
In the family system I stepped into, the oldest daughter had quietly become that primary emotional crutch. She comforted her mother through crises, absorbed the push-pull of closeness followed by sudden distance, and helped hold the family together amid chaos. She was bright, creative, and kind — qualities that made her both a natural fit for the role and someone who paid a heavy price for it. Her struggles with periodic depression and her eventual death were devastating, but they did not come out of nowhere.