A "life-trap" (clinically known as an early maladaptive schema) is a deeply entrenched, self-defeating pattern of thinking, feeling, and behaving that develops during childhood and persists throughout an individual’s life. Popularized by Dr. Jeffrey Young in his development of Schema Therapy, these traps are forged when a child’s core emotional needs—such as safety, connection, and autonomy—are not adequately met. While they originate as survival mechanisms to help a child cope with a difficult environment, they become rigid, dysfunctional cages in adulthood. To ask "Do you have life-traps?" is to ask a universally applicable question, because no human being emerges from childhood entirely unscathed. The Architecture of the Trap

The chronic fear that loved ones will leave, leading to either desperate clinging or pushing people away preemptively.

An core feeling of being inwardly flawed, unlovable, and filled with shame.

Life-traps are remarkably difficult to break because they feel familiar and inherently "right," even when they cause immense pain. Psychologists have identified several common life-traps, including:

The belief that your emotional needs will never be met, often leaving you feeling hollow and chronically disappointed in others.