The Echo of Trauma: Unraveling the Threads of Transgenerational Impact
The article explores the concept of transgenerational trauma, emphasizing that trauma's effects are not genetically fixed but shaped by environmental factors. It highlights the role of phenotypic plasticity and epigenetics in understanding trauma transmission, illustrating how cultural and relational interventions can alter inherited vulnerabilities.

- Country:
- Australia
As conflicts continue in Gaza and Ukraine, concerns arise about the transgenerational transmission of trauma, stirring recent interest in the concept of inherited trauma.
This phenomenon, known as phenotypic plasticity, reveals how environments influence genetic outcomes, with stress and body shape among the potential effects. Unlike genetic determinism, these changes highlight the fluid nature of human development.
Initiatives in Aotearoa and among Holocaust descendants demonstrate how cultural connections can mitigate trauma. Understanding trauma's environmental impact offers pathways for intervention, reframing inherited trauma as an adaptable response shaped by context.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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