J
just me here
I am struggling with wanting to confront my parents about aspects of my childhood. It would cause alienation and bring back alot of anger and stress for all three of us, so I don't.
I am still a newby, still coming to grips with this diagnosis after thinking I was just depressed but knowing my depression was deeper and different than others for a very long time. Now I am diagnosed PTSD and not sure how or why yet but learning and accepting the diagnosis slowly.
Right now I am thinking my Dad and step-mom are responsible for stripping me of all self respect and self confidence and setting me up for sensitivity to the traumas that came almost immediately after I left home at age 14.
After my mother died when I was 11, within 6 months I had almost nothing left of the life I had lived. New town, school, food, step mother and her fanatical religion, siblings, everything but even the slightest bit of counseling or support. I was actually punished for trying to talk to aunts and uncles and teachers about my greif. I was told that I should accept Jesus and take it to the lord in prayer, and given no other options.
At age 14 I was able to identify their particular form of religion as a cult and now 34 years later I still think they need deprogramming.
Ironically, they have come to me to help them in their elder years. Of four of us kids, I was the one that didn't go to church, I was out at 14, I lived my life entirely seperated from them and they lived their lives seperate from me.
Now, they find themselves with 3 daughters that are totally ungrounded and living lives devoid of any stability other than church every week and total reliance on their current husbands for survival. I am the one with 25 years on the job, 30 years in my marriage, kids that went to the same school district from k-12 and then college.
So they buy a house in my county and want me to be their caretaker. I was only in my stepmothers home for 2 1/2 years! My father has never offered me any advice, apology, anything beyond accept Jesus and be religious. Living away from them I slowly glossed over all of the anger, and now every time I am around them I lose a little of that gloss.
I know that having them back in my life has contributed to my current state and my recent diagnosis. They aren't the trauma that haunts me, but they prepared me to be a victim and let me walk out into the real world where the traumas started piling up on almost the first day out on my own, and having them back has just reminded me of that part of my life and all the emotions that come with it.
So I vent on an internet site, knowing good and well there is no answer but still needing to talk to someone about it and hoping for some feedback.
I am not going to confront them, I will be their caretaker and smile and hug and perform all of the act that they have decided we will all perform and let the 'elephant in the living room' live on in peace.
I apologize to anyone that is following a religion, I don't consider all religions bad, in fact outside of a select few, I think most religions are great for their followers and wish them well with no feelings of ill will. But like all things in this life, there are degrees and the religion of my parents is beyond what most of you would consider a mainstream religion and has entered cult status.
Does anyone else have a similar situation? It feels very odd to be around them and want to confront them but refraining because I know it would do no good and I would probably be worse off for it and they would be at most just energized in their beleif that they can help me with their religion.
I am still a newby, still coming to grips with this diagnosis after thinking I was just depressed but knowing my depression was deeper and different than others for a very long time. Now I am diagnosed PTSD and not sure how or why yet but learning and accepting the diagnosis slowly.
Right now I am thinking my Dad and step-mom are responsible for stripping me of all self respect and self confidence and setting me up for sensitivity to the traumas that came almost immediately after I left home at age 14.
After my mother died when I was 11, within 6 months I had almost nothing left of the life I had lived. New town, school, food, step mother and her fanatical religion, siblings, everything but even the slightest bit of counseling or support. I was actually punished for trying to talk to aunts and uncles and teachers about my greif. I was told that I should accept Jesus and take it to the lord in prayer, and given no other options.
At age 14 I was able to identify their particular form of religion as a cult and now 34 years later I still think they need deprogramming.
Ironically, they have come to me to help them in their elder years. Of four of us kids, I was the one that didn't go to church, I was out at 14, I lived my life entirely seperated from them and they lived their lives seperate from me.
Now, they find themselves with 3 daughters that are totally ungrounded and living lives devoid of any stability other than church every week and total reliance on their current husbands for survival. I am the one with 25 years on the job, 30 years in my marriage, kids that went to the same school district from k-12 and then college.
So they buy a house in my county and want me to be their caretaker. I was only in my stepmothers home for 2 1/2 years! My father has never offered me any advice, apology, anything beyond accept Jesus and be religious. Living away from them I slowly glossed over all of the anger, and now every time I am around them I lose a little of that gloss.
I know that having them back in my life has contributed to my current state and my recent diagnosis. They aren't the trauma that haunts me, but they prepared me to be a victim and let me walk out into the real world where the traumas started piling up on almost the first day out on my own, and having them back has just reminded me of that part of my life and all the emotions that come with it.
So I vent on an internet site, knowing good and well there is no answer but still needing to talk to someone about it and hoping for some feedback.
I am not going to confront them, I will be their caretaker and smile and hug and perform all of the act that they have decided we will all perform and let the 'elephant in the living room' live on in peace.
I apologize to anyone that is following a religion, I don't consider all religions bad, in fact outside of a select few, I think most religions are great for their followers and wish them well with no feelings of ill will. But like all things in this life, there are degrees and the religion of my parents is beyond what most of you would consider a mainstream religion and has entered cult status.
Does anyone else have a similar situation? It feels very odd to be around them and want to confront them but refraining because I know it would do no good and I would probably be worse off for it and they would be at most just energized in their beleif that they can help me with their religion.