Toxic family: 20 questions to measure the impact on your adult life (test)
Test: did you grow up in a toxic family? 20 questions to evaluate the impact
Family wounds never truly disappear. They embed themselves in our relational patterns, our romantic behaviors, and our vision of ourselves. If you grew up in a dysfunctional family environment, you probably already know: it affects your romantic relationships, your self-esteem, and your ability to form healthy bonds.
This article offers you a self-assessment test based on Bowlby's attachment theory and Young's schémas — two pillars of psychological understanding of early wounds. We'll explore together how to recognize the signs of a toxic childhood, and above all, how to heal.
What is a toxic family?
A toxic family isn't necessarily one with screaming or visible violence. It can be:
- Émotionally cold: little affection, validation, or listening
- Unpredictable: rules that change without reason, unstable parental moods
- Controlling: little autonomy, imposed décisions, unhealthy enmeshment
- Constantly critical: comparisons, demanded perfectionism, few congratulations
- Neglectful: physical or psychological absence of parents
- Violent: physical, verbal, or psychological abuse
How family wounds affect your romantic relationships
Before taking the test, understand this link. If you grew up without emotional security, you often reproduce the same patterns in love. For example:
- You seek a partner who "fixes" you
- You accept mistreatment because it's "normal"
- You fear intimacy or, conversely, cling too quickly
- You struggle to express your needs
- You confuse anxiety with love
The test: 20 questions to evaluate your childhood
Answer honestly each question with Yes, Partially, or No. There's no "right" answer — only your truth matters.
Émotional safety and affection
Autonomy and respect for boundaries
Stability and predictability
Validation and support
Interpreting your score
15-20 "Yes": Relatively healthy childhood
You were fortunate to grow up in a sufficiently safe and caring environment. This doesn't mean everything was perfect — no family is — but you likely developed secure attachment. Your romantic relationships benefit: you generally have good self-esteem and an ability to communicate your needs.
What to do: Continue nurturing this relational health. Take our free psychological tests to explore other aspects of your well-being.8-14 "Yes": Mixed childhood with shadow areas
You received love but also wounds. This is most people's reality. Perhaps one parent was absent, or there was criticism, or moments of unpredictability. These experiences likely created anxious or avoidant attachment.
This means you may:
- Fear being abandoned and constantly seek to reassure your partner
- Or, conversely, keep your distance to avoid being hurt
- Struggle to express your real needs
- Confuse love with suffering
As we've seen in our article on the 18 Young schémas, these wounds create unconscious patterns that replay in love. What to do: Begin therapeutic work to identify your schémas. Consult a CBT psychotherapist to transform them.
0-7 "Yes": Toxic or very dysfunctional childhood
You grew up in an environment where emotional safety was rare. This likely created disorganized attachment or relational trauma. You may have learned to:
- Distrust others
- Accept mistreatment as "normal"
- Feel responsible for others' moods
- Isolate yourself for protection
These patterns replay in your romantic relationships. You may be attracted to toxic partners, or struggle to trust even someone caring. What to do: Therapeutic follow-up is strongly recommended. CBT and trauma-oriented approaches can help you heal these deep wounds.
Beyond the test: understanding romantic patterns
If you have a low or medium score, it's crucial to understand how your childhood affects your current relationships. For example:
If you grew up with a critical parent, you risk:- Choosing a critical partner (pattern reproduction)
- Or seeking someone excessively kind (compensation)
- Struggling to receive a compliment
- Constantly doubting your worth
- Accept an emotionally distant partner
- Or be hyper-attached and constantly demand attention
- Confuse anxiety with love (see our article: Confusing Anxiety with Love)
- Develop emotional dependency
- Either reproduce that control with your partner
- Or seek someone very dominant to "direct" you
- Struggle to express your needs
- Feel suffocated quickly in relationships
How to heal family wounds
1. Name and validate your experience
The first step is recognizing: "Yes, I grew up in a toxic environment. It wasn't my fault." This seems simple, but it's revolutionary for many people who have internalized guilt.
2. Identify your Young schémas
Young's 18 schémas describe early emotional wounds. If you grew up in a toxic family, you likely have several active schémas: abandonment, insufficiency, enmeshment, mistrust, etc. Recognizing your schémas allows you to progressively deactivate them.
3. Work on your attachment
Your attachment style isn't fixed. You can move from insecure to secure attachment through healthy relationships and therapy.
4. Practice self-compassion
Instead of criticizing yourself for your reactions, practice self-compassion. You survived a difficult childhood — that's a strength, not a weakness.
5. Analyze your conversations
If you're in a relationship, analyze your conversations to see how your family wounds manifest. Do you speak critically? Do you withdraw emotionally? Can you express your needs? This will give you concrete clues about what to work on.
Traps to avoid
The "repair" trap
Don't seek a partner who "repairs" you. Only you can heal your wounds. A loving partner can support you, but not save you.
The reproduction trap
You risk being attracted to someone who reproduces the same toxic dynamics as your family. It's an unconscious attempt to "correct" your childhood. It doesn't work.
The isolation trap
Some people who grew up in a toxic family shut down completely. They think relationships are nothing but suffering. But isolation increases dépression and anxiety. As we've seen in our article on how to help a dependent loved one, human connection is a fundamental need.
When to consult a professional?
Do you need a therapist? If you have a low score on the test, or if you recognize your family wounds in your current relationships, it's time to consult.A CBT psychotherapist can help you:
- Identify your unconscious schémas
- Transform your limiting beliefs
- Develop healthy communication skills
- Heal your attachment
- Build fulfilling relationships
Resources to continue your exploration
To go further, explore our related articles:
- Gottman's 4 Horsemen: recognize toxic behaviors in your relationships
- 10 Cognitive Distortions: how your thoughts sabotage your relationships
- Relational Anxiety: if you're afraid of losing your partner
Next steps
You can also analyze your conversations to see how you communicate with your partner — this often reveals patterns inherited from your family of origin.
Conclusion: healing is possible
Growing up in a toxic family leaves marks. But these marks aren't permanent scars — they're lessons. You survived a difficult childhood. You are resilient. And you can choose a different relational life.
The first step is always awareness.
Video: To go further
To deepen the concepts discussed in this article, we recommend this video:
The childhood lie that ruins our lives - Dr. Gabor Mate | DOACThe Diary of a CEO
Complete guide: read our Toxic Relationships and Manipulation: The Complete Guide to Protecting Yourself for a comprehensive overview.
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