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Anybody Try Imaginary Parents?

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I went through something similar to this when I was getting ready to start EMDR. It just so happens that I was gifted a set of 'new' parents as I was growing up and they are still parenting me today. 25yrs later, they still love me and call me their first daughter. This week, I called him dad :).

It's worth the work, real or imagined.
 
It's an interesting experiment. I hope you'll feel able to update us on how it goes and any affects on you.

I was adopted when I was five. My adoptive parents were and are good people. However there were significant 'gaps' in their parenting of me in that they were unable to recognise and respond to my needs and issues being different to those of their own biological children.

To try and fill that emotional void as a child I used to frequently fantasise about either being with my own biological parents (of whom I know nothing) or more often, imagine that I had been adopted by a different family (a childless couple) who were able to fulfil my child's view of the parents I needed.

I haven't fantasised in this way since I was a child. But for the last three years I have been seeking information about my adoption and biological parents which I guess means I am still trying to fill a void.
 
I did that exercise, but I had trouble getting it to "stick." I suppose I know how to choose the alternate internal parents, but I don't know what to do with them once I have them. I chose Fanny and Elijah from the Judds song, "Guardian Angels."
 
I did that exercise, but I had trouble getting it to "stick." I suppose I know how to choose the alternate internal parents, but I don't know what to do with them once I have them.
It's funny how this thread is just now getting replies. After I posted this, I really didn't bother to stick to a regimen, and so it didn't really "stick" for me either -- though, I didn't really try. I'm glad to see that some people are finding the idea useful, and I say if it makes them feel better, then great.
It's an interesting experiment. I hope you'll feel able to update us on how it goes and any affects on you.
What I'm doing these days is trying to get in touch with the "nameless dread" that results from negligent parents, attachment disorder, etc. The feeling that something is always wrong and you're never good enough. I am trying to contact this (is it my inner child?) through meditation and just silently listen to the pain inside to find out what it is and what it needs. Does it need to be let go somehow? Or does it indeed need to be redressed through imaginary parents, if necessary? I don't know yet, but I'm listening.
 
Yes, all of the above.
Me, too. Just now in my middle-age, I'm learning how to love and value myself. The shame that has controlled me all my life is falling away. I think that's what you will need to do, as well.
 
I'm a little late to this conversation but I've been looking all over the web to find other people talking about this.

My dad died when I was four and my mom has severe emotional/mental health problems. As a result she was verbally and psychologically abusive towards me my whole life, and can't maintain stable relationships with other adults. So growing up, I had nobody. That insidious "good enough" equation that @Dana1010 talks about ended up underlying everything I did in life, but of course, I didn't realize it. I'm in my late 30s now and I'm only just starting to realize it.

I never had "imaginary" parent figures growing up and I didn't create any intentionally, but about six months ago, out of the blue, I had a dream in which a famous person who's in his 70s now, someone who I really admire, met me at an event and immediately sort of "adopted" me, so to speak, in a fatherly, supportive way. He had a wife in the dream (no resemblance to a real person that I know of; nothing like his real-life partner), and she was also very kind and interested in me as a person. At one point, something I said made him laugh and he put his hand on my shoulder and squeezed it just a little bit. Platonically affectionate, supportive, almost proud.

I'm *still* crying about this dream, at least once a week if not more often. I had a few difficult life events occur unexpectedly in the months after I had the dream and when things were tough I'd imagine his hand on my shoulder squeezing it supportively, like he did in the dream. Sometimes I'd imagine phone conversations with him where he helped me figure out what to do or just listened and made me feel good about myself, and sometimes I even imagined that he came to visit the way a real father would, to help me around the house while things got back to normal, etc.

I think I'd buried the hurt and the longing for some kind of supportive parental relationship really deep so that I could finally move on from the devastating effects it's had on my life -- and for a while, it worked. I'm doing really well in life, finally -- marriage, good career, etc. But this dream has made it all fresh again and these daydreams -- sometimes they feel really nice, and sometimes they just sort of re-open the wounds. I wish it made me feel better about my upbringing, like you describe, @Dana1010, showing me my mom was just like any other crappy person with no real power over me. Instead I think it just digs up more and more and more grief for the love I never had and the difficulty I've always had and will probably continue to have feeling safe and truly connecting with other people. I've been able to channel a lot of these feelings into the creative work I do, so at least there's somewhere to put it, but I haven't even been able to bring myself to tell my therapist about it yet. I think I really cherish this vivid shoulder-squeezing moment from my dream so much that I'm afraid if I tell anyone about it it'll somehow slip away from me. It sounds silly, I know ....
 
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