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In today’s episode, you are going to hear from Abby, a 26-year-old adult glass child from the United States who has chosen to remain anonymous so she can share her story honestly and without restriction.
And this conversation is different. It is DIFFICULT.
We are taking an unflinching look at special needs sibling domestic violence. This is a topic most choose to avoid. We are presenting Abby’s story without filters because it is representative of what has happened and is happening in some high-needs families around the globe.
Abby grew up in a home where her younger brother struggled with bipolar disorder and intermittent explosive disorder. From a very young age, her childhood was marked not just by emotional neglect—but by ongoing, unpredictable violence.
And like so many glass children, what was happening inside her home was normalized.
Minimized.
Unspoken.
An important content note:
This episode contains discussions of childhood trauma, emotional neglect, emotional abuse, physical violence, and family instability. Please listen with care and seek support if needed.
What makes Abby’s story so powerful is not just what happened—but how she learned to survive it, which brace yourself, can feel almost as awful to the listener as hearing what she endured. She survived by:
Staying quiet.
Making herself small.
Walking on eggshells.
Believing that her needs, her pain, and even her safety were… irrelevant.
Now, as an adult, she is just beginning to untangle what this kind of childhood does to a person.
This is Abby’s story.
Welcome to the I See Glass Children podcast.
What You’ll Hear
- What early childhood exposure to violence actually looked like inside Abby’s high-needs home
- The long-term psychological impact of growing up without protection from her special needs brother’s domestic violence
- How Abby’s mother blamed her while she was beaten
- How Abby normalized her childhood trauma in order to survive it
- How emotional neglect teaches children that their needs are irrelevant
- The connection between glass children and loss of self-compassion
- Why many adult glass children struggle with boundaries and people-pleasing
- The confusion, anger, and grief that surfaced in Abby’s early adulthood
- Why validation from a safe relationship can feel both healing and uncomfortable at the same time
- Abby’s message to parents about intentionally seeing and supporting all of their children
- Abby’s advice to teenage glass children who feel trapped and unheard
- Abby’s insightful retroactive perspective about the involvement of Child Protective Service in her family
Connect & Engage
Ready to join the movement? Here’s how you can help break the silence around glass children:
- Subscribe to the I See Glass Children Podcast on YouTube | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | or wherever you get your podcasts.
- Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it and tell them, “You have to hear this.”
- 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.
- Spread the Word: Share this episode with your bestie, your therapist, your teachers, your minister, friends. Sharing is caring—and hearing is healing.
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