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Hansgrohe No, you are definitely not alone. As I work on my healing and recovery, it's reassuring to hear other people's stories so I know I am not terminally unique. There are others who get me. My family did not, and my parents don't show any signs that they will ever gets me. My father recently tried to shame me (he wasn't successful), and I am 50 years old. So I have given up any hope that I will ever have a respectful, supportive relationship with my parents. It's one of the things I have to grieve, along with the childhood I never had.
I recently came to terms with the fact that my ideas about what childhood is are misinformed due to my own experiences. I became aware that I believed that childhood was practice for adulthood. But I can see that this is only because that is what my parents made it for me. My childhood was filled with chores, adult responsibilities, schedules, emotional intensity, many forms of abuse and neglect, and chaos. My brain wired itself to become hyper alert, hyper responsible, and to prefer structure and order (and to know how to create that).
As a parent, I find myself struggling to find ways to accept, tolerate, and celebrate the natural messiness, loudness, I-don't-know, mistake-filled, trial-and-error, silly, goofy, no-reason, change-my-mind, I'm-not-sure, helpless, unpredictable, inconstant, can't-justify, curious, difficult, energetic nature of childhood. Witnessing my kids go through this experience presents many opportunities for me to grieve what I never had myself. My parents couldn't and didn't accept, tolerate, and accept this in me. I was expected to be neat, clean, moderate, sure, polished, self-possessed, accomplished, dignified, justified, helpful, constant, predictable, self-sufficient, knowledgeable, expert, and easy. When I wasn't, I was shamed and punished. So I was constantly trying to figure out ways to shut down my nature and be something I wasn't. Knowing that now makes me feel incredibly sad and angry.
The last two weeks I have been considering the difference between acceptance/celebrating and tolerating/allowing. In my mind, there is a huge energetic difference, and we all know when we're experiencing one or the other. When we experience the latter we feel judged and shamed and we shut down. When we experience the former, we feel loved, safe, and like we have permission and safety to explore and expand. I'm working to extend that to myself and others, especially my kids. We can stop the cycle of abuse by not passing it down to one more generation.
Thanks for starting the conversation.