The Association Between Parent and Child ACEs is Buffered by Forgiveness of Others and Self-Forgiveness

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Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to examine intergenerational transmission of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) from parents to children and examine the buffering influence of forgiveness of oneself and others. Participants were 150 parents and children enrolled in Head Start in an upper midwestern, rural state who volunteered to complete questionnaires measuring ACEs and levels of forgiveness of oneself and others. Multiple correlation and regression were used to examine the associations between parent-reported parent and child ACEs and self-forgiveness and forgiveness of others. Analyses revealed that parental ACEs and child ACEs were positively correlated. Parents with low and medium levels of self-forgiveness and forgiveness of others had a stronger positive correlation between their own experience of ACEs and their child’s, whereas, for parents with high levels of self-forgiveness and forgiveness of others, the correlation between parent and child ACEs was reduced statistically to zero. The cycle of intergenerational transmission of ACEs may be interrupted, or at very least notably buffered, by forgiving oneself and others.

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APA

Skolnick, V. G., Lynch, B. A., Smith, L., Romanowicz, M., Blain, G., & Toussaint, L. (2023). The Association Between Parent and Child ACEs is Buffered by Forgiveness of Others and Self-Forgiveness. Journal of Child and Adolescent Trauma, 16(4), 995–1003. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40653-023-00552-y

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