Read If You Had Controlling Parents Online
Authors: Dan Neuharth
Controlling Parents' Early Trauma
Here are examples of how early trauma in the lives of the controlling parents of the people I interviewed may have translated into a controlling parental style. These admittedly simplified portraits list a parent's central trauma in childhood, her or his controlling style as a parent, and offer some hypotheses for
how
that trauma may have led to controlling behavior. Obviously, much more goes into personality development than a single trauma, and each parent's style is more complex than any thumbnail sketch. Still, I include these examples in the hope that they may help you develop your own hypotheses about why your parents may have needed to control you. From doing this, you'll gain a greater understanding of their actions and also better recognize and understand your internalized parents' ongoing negative messages.
Henry: Smothering Parent
Henry's Trauma: Death of a Father
Remember Sally, whose Smothering father greeted his daughter's coming out as a lesbian by ripping the pink triangle bumper sticker off her car and asking for years afterward when she was going to find a man and get married? When Sally's father, Henry, was four, his father died in a farming accident, so the boy was raised in an all-female home by his mother, grandmother, and aunt. In adulthood, Henry became a Smothering parent who micromanaged Sally's eating and bedtime habits.
Hypotheses
Nathan: Perfectionistic Parent
Nathan's Trauma: A Brother's Death
Remember Will, whose Perfectionistic father rode herd on him before swim meets but rarely praised his son's victories? Will's father, Nathan, was five weeks old when his older brother died, yet Nathan was not told of it and only learned of the loss years later when a relative brought it up. In time, Nathan became a Perfectionistic parent, rarely becoming emotional about anything, yet able to talk for hours in minute detail about the technical challenges of his work as an engineer. He raised his children to always be in control of their feelings.
Hypotheses
Rita: Depriving, Perfectionistic Parent
Rita's Trauma: Emotional Abandonment
Rita was treated “like a princess” by her mother until she was five. Then a sister was born, and Rita was suddenly dropped from favor as her mother transferred her affection to the newborn. Two years later, Rita's mother did the same thing to Rita's sister when a third girl arrived. Rita grew up thinking her mother hated her, and consequently became a Depriving, Perfectionistic parent, living an emotionally barren life based on the philosophy, “You can't trust people.” Rita micromanaged her daughter's eating and dress habits and rarely praised her accomplishments. Her daughter never recalls seeing Rita cry.
Hypotheses
Larry: Chaotic Parent
Larry's Trauma: Manipulation and Disinheritance
In his teens, Larry worked three jobs to earn money for college, but his fatherâwho insisted his son follow in his footsteps and join the militaryâappropriated the money and gave it to Larry's sister for college. With little financial support, Larry acceded to his father's wishes and joined the army, but he never forgave his father and refused to visit him on his deathbed. His father, in turn, left Larry a one-dollar inheritance, transferring his wealth to his grandchildren, who today are fighting over a substantial fortune. As a father, Larry had a volatile, Chaotic presence and always seemed on a vendetta against somebody. He repeatedly disowned his children when they disagreed with him.
Hypotheses
Helen: Using, Abusing Parent
Helen's Trauma: Assault and Banishment
Remember Ellen, who was coerced every night to tell her mother, Helen, how beautiful she was? In Europe during World War I, seven-year-old Helen was raped by a “friendly” soldier, then beaten by her parents for being raped. When she was thirteen, her father died, and she was sent to live with relatives, though her mother kept Helen's younger sister with her for reasons Helen never knew. Helen was physically abused by her relatives and never saw her mother again. In time she became a Using, Abusing parent, hypersensitive and depriving, coercing her daughter into a nightly ritual of doing Helen's hair and nails and hitting her if she made a mistake.
Hypotheses
George and Paula: Depriving, Perfectionistic Parents
George's and Paula's Traumas: Death of Their Mothers
You may remember David, whose Depriving, Perfectionistic parents didn't let him have film for his Brownie camera because they were trying to discourage his artistic interests. As David told me about his bleak childhood, I began wondering if his parents grew up feeling deprived and joyless, which was exactly how they raised David. It turns out that both David's father, George, and mother, Paula, lost their mothers at an early age.
George lost his mother before age five, at which point George's father sent him off to boarding school. As George grew up, his distant father made him work in the family business, paying him the minimum wage. As an adult, George rarely talked about his feelings or his childhood. He developed hardening of the arteries and died at forty-six.
Paula lost her mother when she was four. Following her mother's death, her father sent Paula to live with another relative and moved away. Paula was raised by an aunt who treated her like an intruder; she didn't see her father again until she was fourteen. When the aunt's husband died in World War II, the aunt developed phobias and depression. As a parent, Paula became a “severe worrier” who obsessed about order.
Hypotheses
Mike: Using Parent
Mike's Trauma: Injury and Abuse
Remember Magda, whose immature, Using father, Mike, bought her birthday gifts, only to play with them himself? When Mike was six, his mother gave him a yard of rope from the family store to make a jump rope. When his father discovered Mike jumping rope, he cut the rope into one-inch pieces, threw them into his son's face, then beat him. At age nine, Mike suffered brain damage from a car accident but apparently received little or no treatment or neuropsychological testing. As an adult, Mike, in charge of quality control at a large corporation, became a Using parent who frequently beat his children.
Hypotheses
Lucy: Childlike Parent
Lucy's Trauma: Ostracism
After Lucy's father skipped town when she was five, her mother, because of finances, felt she had to quickly remarry, eventually marrying a man with whom she had four children. Lucy, the oldest child, felt like the black sheep of the family because she was the only sibling with a different father. When, at thirteen, she was caught stealing a neighbor's milk, her mother sent her to reform school, claiming she'd get an education, and more food than she would get at home. Her mother also told Lucy that she was a “thief” and deserved to be sent away. Lucy in time became a frail, Childlike parent, repeatedly sacrificing her daughter Molly to her husband's wrath. Lucy lived under her husband's thumb, doing errands and making phone calls only at the times he permitted. She was also overinvolved in her children's bodily functions, giving enemas, douches, and medications.