Upside Down Eagle
Diamond Member
Hi peeps.
I'm going to tell you a story, about the kinds of contact with my perpetrators (my parents) I've had over the years. And I wonder, what you think about it, and how you dealt with your parents, if they were also your abusers.
As a kid, I was a sort of martyr. I am sure many of you can relate to you as a child, being abused by your parents, and yet defending them and loving them to death. I would defend my parents towards anybody who said anything bad about them, more so (!) even because I knew the allegations were true.
I was physically abused by my mother until I was fourteen and I have memories of being sexually abused although I can't recall it really happening. After the divorce, my dad transformed into nothing less than an authoritarian "man of the house" who controlled and supervised everything I did.
Now when I was around my early twenties, I tried everything to restore contact with them. I still believed we "could be friends". I succeeded. I restored normal contact with both parties. Some people declared me "crazy" for wanting to be friends with my perpetrators. Others said they thought it was courageous.
The older I get, the less I feel the need to be in contact with either of them. I feel it is still unequal and destructive for me to be around them, even though they've both gradually grown more peaceful and forgiving over the years. Now, they blame me yet again, saying that I'm "too full of spite" and they hope I can "get over it".
But I'm not full of spite. I just feel like they are a part of my past, and irrelevant to the life I have now. I bear no responsibility to be their friend, as they have never done me any favors in my youth, except for giving me food and allowing me to stay alive (which sometimes barely).
Do any of you recognize this change? How do you deal with your ex-abusers, if they are family?
Radise
I'm going to tell you a story, about the kinds of contact with my perpetrators (my parents) I've had over the years. And I wonder, what you think about it, and how you dealt with your parents, if they were also your abusers.
As a kid, I was a sort of martyr. I am sure many of you can relate to you as a child, being abused by your parents, and yet defending them and loving them to death. I would defend my parents towards anybody who said anything bad about them, more so (!) even because I knew the allegations were true.
I was physically abused by my mother until I was fourteen and I have memories of being sexually abused although I can't recall it really happening. After the divorce, my dad transformed into nothing less than an authoritarian "man of the house" who controlled and supervised everything I did.
Now when I was around my early twenties, I tried everything to restore contact with them. I still believed we "could be friends". I succeeded. I restored normal contact with both parties. Some people declared me "crazy" for wanting to be friends with my perpetrators. Others said they thought it was courageous.
The older I get, the less I feel the need to be in contact with either of them. I feel it is still unequal and destructive for me to be around them, even though they've both gradually grown more peaceful and forgiving over the years. Now, they blame me yet again, saying that I'm "too full of spite" and they hope I can "get over it".
But I'm not full of spite. I just feel like they are a part of my past, and irrelevant to the life I have now. I bear no responsibility to be their friend, as they have never done me any favors in my youth, except for giving me food and allowing me to stay alive (which sometimes barely).
Do any of you recognize this change? How do you deal with your ex-abusers, if they are family?
Radise