KwanYingirl
Diamond Member
my daughter, aged 31, came to visit with her partner and her dog. She had a wonderful childhood and I found many educational adventures for her in her teens and during college. She is the polar opposite of me, which totally proves how developmental trauma f*cks you up. She has loads of self esteem, is daring and has no fear. She has many friends that also were raised right. I just love them all so much.
I can't identify with my daughters sentimentality. She attaches to things, that's what I think the difference is. She kept her first car going until it was 16 because of her sentiment for it. She goes out of her way to celebrate holidays and continues traditions I started since I had none from childhood.
Are you sentimental? I'm not. I see it in others and wish I could connect to things that are meaningful. I think my possessions were few and often ripped away from me by my dickhead father. I never had a doll or stuffed animal. Now, I buy shoes. Like, many. Am I compensating for my barren childhood? My daughter just bought her first new car, interestingly, it is a white Jeep Cherokee. The same color and make of my car that I raised them in. She told me it was very sentimental and she felt connected to it when she was shopping for an SUV.
What purpose do you think sentiment serves us as Humans? Am I the only PTSDer that isn't? I mean, why attach when anything that matters gets taken away? Or dreadful drunken monster father every holiday.
I can't identify with my daughters sentimentality. She attaches to things, that's what I think the difference is. She kept her first car going until it was 16 because of her sentiment for it. She goes out of her way to celebrate holidays and continues traditions I started since I had none from childhood.
Are you sentimental? I'm not. I see it in others and wish I could connect to things that are meaningful. I think my possessions were few and often ripped away from me by my dickhead father. I never had a doll or stuffed animal. Now, I buy shoes. Like, many. Am I compensating for my barren childhood? My daughter just bought her first new car, interestingly, it is a white Jeep Cherokee. The same color and make of my car that I raised them in. She told me it was very sentimental and she felt connected to it when she was shopping for an SUV.
What purpose do you think sentiment serves us as Humans? Am I the only PTSDer that isn't? I mean, why attach when anything that matters gets taken away? Or dreadful drunken monster father every holiday.