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Closing the Dissonance Gap

Why Emotional Validation Builds Lifelong Safety and Trust

What happens when a child’s emotions are ignored? Often, they don’t disappear and stay under wraps until something happens to make them resurface later. At the Children’s Recovery Center, we see it every day: children learning to perform the “right” emotions while hiding the real ones. Over time, this creates what we call the Dissonance Gap: a disconnect between what a child feels and what they’re allowed to express. This filling this gap is paramount to child safety.

When that gap grows wide enough, something even more critical is at risk: A child’s ability to tell a trusted adult when abuse or maltreatment occurs.

The Dissonance Gap

The Dissonance Gap refers to the internal disconnect between what a child feels and what they’re allowed (or expected) to express. Over time, this gap can distort emotional development, erode self-trust, and make it harder for a child to come forward when something is wrong.

While inspired by cognitive dissonance (Festinger, 1957) and emotional dissonance in psychological literature, the Dissonance Gap is a distinct concept rooted in child behavioral work. It describes how repeated emotional invalidation (“Man up,” “Don’t be a brat,”) teaches children to perform “acceptable” emotions instead of expressing real ones.

Like cognitive dissonance, the Dissonance Gap refers to the discomfort caused by inner–outer emotional conflict. And much like expressive dissonance, it highlights how masking one’s true feelings can quietly erode trust and diminish disclosure, especially in childhood.

So when this performance becomes habitual, the child’s inner world becomes harder to access, and harder to share. In turn, during moments of distress, abuse, or trauma, closing the Dissonance Gap means creating enough safety, consistency, and emotional validation for the child to trust that their truth will be received, not corrected.

Why Emotional Validation Matters

Research shows that children who receive consistent emotional validation are more likely to:

  • Self-regulate during stress
  • Form secure attachments with caregivers
  • Speak up when they’re hurt or afraid

Some common phrases that can shut down a child’s emotions are: “You’re fine,” “That didn’t happen,” “Don’t be dramatic”

These, seemingly harmless messages can cause children to internalize a dangerous message:
What I feel doesn’t matter. Maybe what happened didn’t matter either.

This can make it harder for a child to come forward when they’ve been harmed, even when they know something bad happened to them.

How the Dissonance Gap Forms

  1. A child feels overwhelmed (fear, anger, sadness)
  2. An adult minimizes or corrects the emotion
  3. The child learns to mistrust or hide their feelings
  4. That emotional disconnection often shows up (anxiety, aggression, withdrawal, or silence)

What Helps Emotions

Name the feeling: “You look frustrated.”
Validate it: “That would upset me too.”
Offer regulation, not solutions: “Want to take a breath together?”

These simple, repeated moments create emotional safety. Over time, they send a powerful message:
Your feelings matter here. I will listen.

The Takeaway

Children don’t expect us to be perfect. They expect us to help them hold their feelings until they can do so themselves.

When we show up with calm, consistent validation, we teach children to trust their inner world and trust us with it, too.

That’s how we prevent harm before it happens, and make disclosure possible when it does.

Because the real foundation of safety isn’t just physical (though that’s important too), it’s emotional. And it starts with closing the Dissonance Gap.

Resources

http://www.scparents.org
https://childmind.org
https://www.nctsn.org
https://childrensrecoverycenter.org/understanding-child-abuse/


Rebecca Doherty
Outreach Coordinator
rdohert
y@childrensrecoverycenter.org

http://www.childrensrecoverycenter.org

Learn more about our mission at the Children’s Recovery Center. Together, we can help children feel whole, safe, and heard again.


Further Reading

While there isn’t a formal academic definition of the Dissonance Gap, it combines well‑established ideas: cognitive dissonance (Festinger, 1957), expressive/emotional dissonance (e.g., Grandey et al., 2008), and attachment‑based parenting models (e.g., VIPP‑SD research). Together, they show how suppressing or performing emotion in childhood creates emotional disconnection and how validation and attunement reverse the pattern.

The concept of the Dissonance Gap draws from a blend of psychological research:

  • Festinger, L. (1957). Cognitive Dissonance Theory, A Theory of Cognitive Dissonance. Stanford University Press.
  • Grandey, A. A. (2003). Emotional and Expressive Dissonance, When “The Show Must Go On”: Surface Acting and Emotional Labor.
  • Thompson, R. A. (1994). Emotional Suppression and Child Development, Emotion Regulation: A Theme in Search of Definition.

Together, these studies help illuminate why emotional validation matters—and why children need to trust that their feelings are safe before they can bring forward their truths.

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