You do not have to remain a prisoner of a past you never lived. You can be the one who finally speaks the unspeakable. The one who feels the forbidden grief. The one who, instead of passing the wound forward, lays it down.
Trauma, it turns out, is not just psychological. It is biological. It can linger in the body, in the nervous system, in the very chemistry of our cells. Studies in epigenetics have shown that the experiences of our parents and grandparents—especially those marked by terror, loss, or violence—can leave molecular scars that shape how we respond to stress, connection, and fear. In other words, your great-grandmother’s unshed tears may still be falling through you. nao comecou com voce livro
This book—this idea—invites you on a quiet, courageous journey. It asks you to listen to the silence between family stories, to notice the patterns that repeat across generations like curses or prayers. It gives you a tool: the core language approach, a way to trace your most stubborn emotional reactions back to a specific event that happened long before you were born. You do not have to remain a prisoner
What if the silence you keep during arguments isn't yours, but belonged to a grandfather who never learned to speak his pain? What if the fear of being abandoned—the one that makes you hold on too tight or run away first—is a ghost that has been passed down like a family heirloom no one wanted? What if the emptiness you try to fill with work, food, or love is not a void you created, but one you inherited? The one who, instead of passing the wound
This is the unsettling premise of Não Começou com Você : that our deepest suffering often carries a language we did not learn to speak, and a memory we did not live.