You know what? Everyone ... and I mean EVERYONE had traumatic things happen to them when they were younger. It may have been something as simple as getting the blame for something they didn't do that has left them feeling victimised, it may have been someone touching them inappropriately that has left them feeling vulnerable.
It could be anything at any level.
I'll not go into my demons too deeply but my Wife couldn't understand why I wasn't visibly upset when my best mate died. I'd known him for years and together we had been to hell and back, my wife was my girlfriend back then, she had known him only for a couple of months but was devastated by his sudden death.
My Wife had never made the acquaintance of death at that stage, it was her first time. As well as what had happened to me in my early life, I had known death up close and personal. My daughter from a previous relationship had died in my arms, after that I found that no-ones death makes me cry.
So when my mate died, I felt bad but I didn't feel consumed by the loss yet my Wife did.
Everyone's life is different and the trauma that we each experience throughout life is not quantifiable, there is no measure for the pain we feel.
What is measurable is how we cope with it and how we allow it to affect us later in life.
The childhood I had would be considered by most to be horrific. My life started off bad from the moment I was born, from there it went downhill. However, I reckon my friend Dave had a worse time of it and if you can find a book called "Believe" then you can read about it. Dave reckons my early life was worse.
What both of us agree is that it's not a competition, what matters is how you cope with it in adult life. You can either dwell on what has happened and allow it to control you life as an adult or you can put it behind you and start living your life how YOU want to live it.
Your an adult. Make your choice. You can continue to be a victim all your life and surround yourself with psychologists and psychiatrists who will give you the attention you crave, tell you that he was a bad, bad man and ooze sympathy from every pore.
Or you can start to realise that you are an adult and as an adult you are able to make your own life choices. You can choose to put this behind you as one of the traumatic things that life tends to throw at you. Then you can take charge of your own life and stop blaming something that happened when you were unable to make those choices.
What are you going to be for the rest of your life? A victim?
Your decision.