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Tuesday, October 27, 2015

You Don’t Need to Be So Nice to Your Hurtful Parents

Another great article from Doctor Marcia Sirota:


"Our feelings toward our parents can be complicated. What we feel depends on how
they treated us when we were growing up and how they treat us today. Also, we
often go along with what our society tells us we should feel toward our folks.




If we have loving, supportive parents, we love them back and appreciate everything
they did for us. It gets more complicated when our parents were
less-than-ideal. If they failed us in some way, neglected, rejected or abused
us, we grow up with emotional wounds and unmet needs for love, care and
validation which then affect how we feel about our parents as adults.


Bad things that happened to us in childhood usually lead us to believe that it was
our own fault. Society tells us to be good to our parents, and children
typically blame themselves for any problems in the parent-child relationship.


Rather than holding our parents accountable for how they treated us, children take
responsibility for what happened and then try to change themselves in order to
finally win the love that Mom or Dad were unwilling or unable to give.


What children don’t realize is that when our parents hurt or reject us it has
nothing to do with what’s lacking in us and everything to do with their
inability to love and accept their children.


It’s easier for us to blame ourselves because it’s preferable to facing the
unthinkable fact that our parents have let us down in some way. This is an
extremely painful realization to come to terms with. Most people would rather
do anything than accept this truth. Not only is it painful; it’s humiliating.
Having hurtful or inadequate parents causes us to feel shame.


Even when we recognize that what we experienced in childhood was never about our own
failings, we don’t like the idea of admitting to other people that we grew up
with parents who were hurtful or rejecting. There’s always the fear that
they’ll wonder what we did to deserve it. It’s also hard to silence the voice
of the “inner critic” which tells us that it really was our fault.


Paradoxically, people who were loved and accepted while growing up have a much easier time separating from their parents than those who were neglected, rejected or
abused. A secure loving attachment during childhood leads to a healthy ability
to detach as an adult. People with a healthy attachment to Mom and Dad are able
to see their parents as they really are and can challenge them and question
them, when necessary.


People who grew up with a poor attachment to their parents have a much harder time
letting go as adults. They tend to over-idealize their parents and have
enmeshed relationships with them in adulthood, as they try to curry favour and
finally win the elusive approval of Mom and Dad.


The more our parents neglected or rejected us as children, the more we seek their
approval through trying to please them as adults. Loving parents create
confident, self-loving adults who won’t accept mistreatment from anyone.
Hurtful or inadequate parents raise children who are riddled with self-doubt
and feelings of inadequacy, and who go on to be people-pleasers, first with
their parents and then with the rest of the world.


Loving parents never make their children feel guilty for any of the love and care
they’re receiving, and never make the children feel responsible for taking care
of the parents’ emotional or physical needs. Dysfunctional parents, on the
other hand, let their children know how “burdened” they’ve been by their
children and how many “sacrifices” they’ve had to make in order to raise them.


Children who were well loved don’t feel indebted to their parents and aren’t driven by
guilt or shame to attend to their parents’ needs as adults. Children who were
hurt or neglected, on the other hand, believe that it’s a child’s ongoing role
to care for their parents. These people are driven by a powerful sense of guilt
and obligation.


Loved children grow into adults who are happy to be there for their folks when
there’s a valid need. On the other hand, loving parents are reluctant to impose
upon their adult children; not wanting to be a burden on them.


Hurt or neglected children grow into adults who have a very hard time refusing their
parents’ demands. They keep hoping that by being “good,” “nice” and “helpful,”
they’ll finally get their parents to give them the love, care and validation
they’ve been waiting for.


For those who grew up with hurtful or neglectful parents, they need to see that pleasing
and care-taking their parents today won’t bring them the love and validation
they need. Even if their parents finally do see the light and become more
loving and attentive, it won’t heal their wounds of childhood or meet their
needs for validation today.


Instead of being pleasing to their parents (or other people), those who grew up without
adequate parental love and care must take responsibility for themselves and
work on healing their emotional wounds and meeting their own needs, as adults.
Counseling or therapy can help them do this.


If you grew up with inadequate or hurtful parents, you must understand that first, it
wasn’t your fault and second, healing doesn’t involve your parents. You can get
over a painful or neglectful childhood, not by trying to get your parents to
understand you or to change, but by doing your own personal growth work.


Trying to please your hurtful or neglectful Mom and Dad is, in a way, rewarding them for
having been poor parents. Whether their behaviour was deliberate or
inadvertent, it’s not necessary or helpful to you to remain enmeshed with them
as adults.

Instead of trying to get your parents to love and validate you today, you’d be better
off facing the truth about them, giving up your futile attempts at winning
their love, and focusing your attention instead on developing the self-love and
self-confidence that your childhood deprived you of.



If you do that, you’ll be able to give up your people-pleasing and be able to have
relationships with peers who are capable of loving and accepting you, just as
you are."
~Marcia Sirota


Our
feelings toward our parents can be complicated. What we feel depends on
how they treated us when we were growing up and how they treat us
today. Also, we often go along with what our society tells us we should
feel toward our folks.



If we have loving, supportive parents, we love them back and
appreciate everything they did for us. It gets more complicated when our
parents were less-than-ideal. If they failed us in some way, neglected,
rejected or abused us, we grow up with emotional wounds and unmet needs
for love, care and validation which then affect how we feel about our
parents as adults.



Bad things that happened to us in childhood usually lead us to
believe that it was our own fault. Society tells us to be good to our
parents, and children typically blame themselves for any problems in the
parent-child relationship.



Rather than holding our parents accountable for how they treated us,
children take responsibility for what happened and then try to change
themselves in order to finally win the love that Mom or Dad were
unwilling or unable to give.



What children don’t realize is that when our parents hurt or reject
us it has nothing to do with what’s lacking in us and everything to do
with their inability to love and accept their children.



It’s easier for us to blame ourselves because it’s preferable to
facing the unthinkable fact that our parents have let us down in some
way. This is an extremely painful realization to come to terms with.
Most people would rather do anything than accept this truth. Not only is
it painful; it’s humiliating. Having hurtful or inadequate parents
causes us to feel shame.



Even when we recognize that what we experienced in childhood was
never about our own failings, we don’t like the idea of admitting to
other people that we grew up with parents who were hurtful or rejecting.
There’s always the fear that they’ll wonder what we did to deserve it.
It’s also hard to silence the voice of the “inner critic” which tells us
that it really was our fault.



Paradoxically, people who were loved and accepted while growing up
have a much easier time separating from their parents than those who
were neglected, rejected or abused. A secure loving attachment during
childhood leads to a healthy ability to detach as an adult. People with a
healthy attachment to Mom and Dad are able to see their parents as they
really are and can challenge them and question them, when necessary.



People who grew up with a poor attachment to their parents have a
much harder time letting go as adults. They tend to over-idealize their
parents and have enmeshed relationships with them in adulthood, as they
try to curry favour and finally win the elusive approval of Mom and Dad.



The more our parents neglected or rejected us as children, the more
we seek their approval through trying to please them as adults. Loving
parents create confident, self-loving adults who won’t accept
mistreatment from anyone. Hurtful or inadequate parents raise children
who are riddled with self-doubt and feelings of inadequacy, and who go
on to be people-pleasers, first with their parents and then with the
rest of the world.



Loving parents never make their children feel guilty for any of the
love and care they’re receiving, and never make the children feel
responsible for taking care of the parents’ emotional or physical needs.
Dysfunctional parents, on the other hand, let their children know how
“burdened” they’ve been by their children and how many “sacrifices”
they’ve had to make in order to raise them.



Children who were well loved don’t feel indebted to their parents and
aren’t driven by guilt or shame to attend to their parents’ needs as
adults. Children who were hurt or neglected, on the other hand, believe
that it’s a child’s ongoing role to care for their parents. These people
are driven by a powerful sense of guilt and obligation.



Loved children grow into adults who are happy to be there for their
folks when there’s a valid need. On the other hand, loving parents are
reluctant to impose upon their adult children; not wanting to be a
burden on them.



Hurt or neglected children grow into adults who have a very hard time
refusing their parents’ demands. They keep hoping that by being “good,”
“nice” and “helpful,” they’ll finally get their parents to give them
the love, care and validation they’ve been waiting for.



For those who grew up with hurtful or neglectful parents, they need
to see that pleasing and care-taking their parents today won’t bring
them the love and validation they need. Even if their parents finally do
see the light and become more loving and attentive, it won’t heal their
wounds of childhood or meet their needs for validation today.



Instead of being pleasing to their parents (or other people), those
who grew up without adequate parental love and care must take
responsibility for themselves and work on healing their emotional wounds
and meeting their own needs, as adults. Counseling or therapy can help
them do this.



If you grew up with inadequate or hurtful parents, you must
understand that first, it wasn’t your fault and second, healing doesn’t
involve your parents. You can get over a painful or neglectful
childhood, not by trying to get your parents to understand you or to
change, but by doing your own personal growth work.



Trying to please your hurtful or neglectful Mom and Dad is, in a way,
rewarding them for having been poor parents. Whether their behaviour
was deliberate or inadvertent, it’s not necessary or helpful to you to
remain enmeshed with them as adults.



Instead of trying to get your parents to love and validate you today,
you’d be better off facing the truth about them, giving up your futile
attempts at winning their love, and focusing your attention instead on
developing the self-love and self-confidence that your childhood
deprived you of.



If you do that, you’ll be able to give up your people-pleasing and be
able to have relationships with peers who are capable of loving and
accepting you, just as you are.


- See more at: http://marciasirotamd.com/relationships/why-were-too-nice-to-hurtful-parents#sthash.5DWYK1Pb.dpuf
Our
feelings toward our parents can be complicated. What we feel depends on
how they treated us when we were growing up and how they treat us
today. Also, we often go along with what our society tells us we should
feel toward our folks.



If we have loving, supportive parents, we love them back and
appreciate everything they did for us. It gets more complicated when our
parents were less-than-ideal. If they failed us in some way, neglected,
rejected or abused us, we grow up with emotional wounds and unmet needs
for love, care and validation which then affect how we feel about our
parents as adults.



Bad things that happened to us in childhood usually lead us to
believe that it was our own fault. Society tells us to be good to our
parents, and children typically blame themselves for any problems in the
parent-child relationship.



Rather than holding our parents accountable for how they treated us,
children take responsibility for what happened and then try to change
themselves in order to finally win the love that Mom or Dad were
unwilling or unable to give.



What children don’t realize is that when our parents hurt or reject
us it has nothing to do with what’s lacking in us and everything to do
with their inability to love and accept their children.



It’s easier for us to blame ourselves because it’s preferable to
facing the unthinkable fact that our parents have let us down in some
way. This is an extremely painful realization to come to terms with.
Most people would rather do anything than accept this truth. Not only is
it painful; it’s humiliating. Having hurtful or inadequate parents
causes us to feel shame.



Even when we recognize that what we experienced in childhood was
never about our own failings, we don’t like the idea of admitting to
other people that we grew up with parents who were hurtful or rejecting.
There’s always the fear that they’ll wonder what we did to deserve it.
It’s also hard to silence the voice of the “inner critic” which tells us
that it really was our fault.



Paradoxically, people who were loved and accepted while growing up
have a much easier time separating from their parents than those who
were neglected, rejected or abused. A secure loving attachment during
childhood leads to a healthy ability to detach as an adult. People with a
healthy attachment to Mom and Dad are able to see their parents as they
really are and can challenge them and question them, when necessary.



People who grew up with a poor attachment to their parents have a
much harder time letting go as adults. They tend to over-idealize their
parents and have enmeshed relationships with them in adulthood, as they
try to curry favour and finally win the elusive approval of Mom and Dad.



The more our parents neglected or rejected us as children, the more
we seek their approval through trying to please them as adults. Loving
parents create confident, self-loving adults who won’t accept
mistreatment from anyone. Hurtful or inadequate parents raise children
who are riddled with self-doubt and feelings of inadequacy, and who go
on to be people-pleasers, first with their parents and then with the
rest of the world.



Loving parents never make their children feel guilty for any of the
love and care they’re receiving, and never make the children feel
responsible for taking care of the parents’ emotional or physical needs.
Dysfunctional parents, on the other hand, let their children know how
“burdened” they’ve been by their children and how many “sacrifices”
they’ve had to make in order to raise them.



Children who were well loved don’t feel indebted to their parents and
aren’t driven by guilt or shame to attend to their parents’ needs as
adults. Children who were hurt or neglected, on the other hand, believe
that it’s a child’s ongoing role to care for their parents. These people
are driven by a powerful sense of guilt and obligation.



Loved children grow into adults who are happy to be there for their
folks when there’s a valid need. On the other hand, loving parents are
reluctant to impose upon their adult children; not wanting to be a
burden on them.



Hurt or neglected children grow into adults who have a very hard time
refusing their parents’ demands. They keep hoping that by being “good,”
“nice” and “helpful,” they’ll finally get their parents to give them
the love, care and validation they’ve been waiting for.



For those who grew up with hurtful or neglectful parents, they need
to see that pleasing and care-taking their parents today won’t bring
them the love and validation they need. Even if their parents finally do
see the light and become more loving and attentive, it won’t heal their
wounds of childhood or meet their needs for validation today.



Instead of being pleasing to their parents (or other people), those
who grew up without adequate parental love and care must take
responsibility for themselves and work on healing their emotional wounds
and meeting their own needs, as adults. Counseling or therapy can help
them do this.



If you grew up with inadequate or hurtful parents, you must
understand that first, it wasn’t your fault and second, healing doesn’t
involve your parents. You can get over a painful or neglectful
childhood, not by trying to get your parents to understand you or to
change, but by doing your own personal growth work.



Trying to please your hurtful or neglectful Mom and Dad is, in a way,
rewarding them for having been poor parents. Whether their behaviour
was deliberate or inadvertent, it’s not necessary or helpful to you to
remain enmeshed with them as adults.



Instead of trying to get your parents to love and validate you today,
you’d be better off facing the truth about them, giving up your futile
attempts at winning their love, and focusing your attention instead on
developing the self-love and self-confidence that your childhood
deprived you of.



If you do that, you’ll be able to give up your people-pleasing and be
able to have relationships with peers who are capable of loving and
accepting you, just as you are.


- See more at: http://marciasirotamd.com/relationships/why-were-too-nice-to-hurtful-parents#sthash.5DWYK1Pb.dpuf

Monday, October 26, 2015

The Ultimate Punishment!


Even though we’ve struggled with the idea of maintaining absolutely no contact, many of us have found out the hard way that leaving the door open even by a sliver is an invitation for our abusers to hoover us back down the rabbit hole into their version of Crazyland. Strict no contact robs them of a chance to manipulate us and is the essential step required to protect ourselves from further abuse.

No contact is the ultimate punishment we can inflict on narcissists, which is one of the reasons they simply cannot let us go! Ignoring narcissists robs them of the chance to devalue and demean us which they desperately need to do in order to maintain THEIR exaggerated sense of worth.

Narcissists' panicked reactions to our sudden indifference will dispel all doubts about the value of no contact for; they will be unable to function without the unhealthy dynamic they've created with us. They label their victims as inferior, while behind the scenes they simply can’t live without our “presence” in THEIR miserable lives, even if that presence is maintained by visiting a blog almost daily, drawing a child-like caricature, repeatedly calling a blocked number or sending an email stupidly admitting their misdeeds.

How empowering for us that, many narcissists, when trying to prove that we are unimportant to them, do just the opposite by revealing how much space we occupy “rent free” in THEIR heads instead of the other way around!

An extended period of no contact eventually turns the tables by making narcissists realize that we find them irrelevant, dispensable and somewhat pathetic. Their punishment is complete when they realize their favourite doormat has simply gotten up off the floor and walked away. (Fortunately for them, new doormats are quite reasonably priced at Walmart.)


FUCK 'EM!