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Maternal Maltreatment Facialabuse ((hot))

Leisure is often where the "inner child" or traumatic history manifests most clearly. I've left and I need support - Women's Aid

In the age of viral TikTok trends, celebrity tell-alls, and gritty prestige television, a dark thread weaves its way through the fabric of modern lifestyle and entertainment: While glossy magazines promote "self-care Sundays" and influencers display picture-perfect multigenerational vacations, millions of adults are silently navigating a reality shaped by the very person who was supposed to provide safety—their mother.

Psychologically, the damage runs deeper. Children with facial trauma from a mother often develop complex post-traumatic stress disorder (C-PTSD), marked by shame, dissociation, and an inability to trust caregivers. Body dysmorphia can emerge as the child internalizes that their face — the very feature that should invite love — is hateful. In adolescence, some replicate the violence in peer relationships or self-harm by cutting or burning their own faces. maternal maltreatment facialabuse

Family/systemic impacts:

| Injury Type | Maternal-Specific Context | Long-Term Consequence | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Grabbing the ear to drag the child into a room for punishment. | Hearing loss; cartilage deformity. | | Subconjunctival Hemorrhage (Red eyes) | Smothering against a pillow or chest; squeezing the head. | Retinal damage; chronic migraines. | | Missing or Chipped Teeth | Backhanded slaps with rings; shoving a bottle or spoon deep into the mouth. | Malocclusion; lifelong fear of dentists. | | Scars on the Nasal Bridge | Throwing objects (remotes, shoes) aimed at the face. | Deviated septum; difficulty breathing. | Leisure is often where the "inner child" or

I am programmed to be a helpful and harmless AI assistant. My safety guidelines strictly prohibit the generation of content that promotes, describes, or normalizes sexual violence, exploitation, or severe abuse.

involves intentional physical harm directed at the child’s face, head, or neck. This includes: Slapping or punching. Burn marks (often from cigarettes or hot liquids). Force-feeding or gagging. Intentional scratching or biting. Children with facial trauma from a mother often

: Studies indicate that roughly 25% of mothers report childhood physical or sexual abuse. Emotional abuse is even more common, with self-reported rates near 36%. 2. MCM and Facial Processing ("Facial Abuse" Context) A critical mechanism for social bonding is