Toxic Parents (24 page)

Read Toxic Parents Online

Authors: Susan Forward

Tags: #Self-Help, #General

BOOK: Toxic Parents
6.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 
  • —— It is up to me to make my parents happy.
  • —— It is up to me to make my parents proud.
  • —— I am my parents’ whole life.
  • —— My parents couldn’t survive without me.
  • —— I couldn’t survive without my parents.
  • —— If I told my parents the truth about (my divorce, my abortion, my being gay, my fiancée being an atheist, etc.), it would kill them.
  • —— If I stand up to my parents, I’ll lose them forever.
  • —— If I tell them how much they hurt me, they’ll cut me out of their lives.
  • —— I shouldn’t do or say anything that would hurt my parents’ feelings.
  • —— My parents’ feelings are more important than mine.
  • —— There’s no point in talking to my parents because it wouldn’t do any good.
  • —— If my parents would only change, I would feel better about myself.
  • —— I have to make it up to my parents for being such a bad person.
  • —— If I could just get them to see how much they’re hurting me, I know they’d be different.
  • —— No matter what they did, they are my parents and I have to honor them.
  • —— My parents don’t have any control over my life. I fight with them all the time.

If four or more of these beliefs apply to you, you are still very enmeshed with your parents. As hard as it may be to accept, all of these beliefs are self-defeating. They prevent you from being a separate and independent person. They increase dependency and rob you of your adult power.

Several of these beliefs put full responsibility on your shoulders
for how your parents feel. When toxic parents feel bad, they often look for others to blame, and those others are usually their children. If you were made to believe that your parents’ feelings were your responsibility, you probably still believe that it’s within your power to “make” them—and often everyone else—either happy or sad.

Many experts on human behavior contend that you can’t “make” anyone feel anything—that each person is totally responsible for how he “chooses” to feel. I don’t think that’s true. I believe we
do
have an effect on the feelings of everyone we are connected to. But having an effect is not the same thing as being responsible for fixing those feelings. Just as you are responsible for finding ways to make yourself feel better when someone hurts you, your parents are responsible for finding their own ways to feel better when someone hurts them.

For example, if you do something that is neither cruel nor abusive but nevertheless makes your mother feel sad—such as marrying someone she disapproves of or taking a job out of town—it is up to your mother to find ways to feel better. It’s perfectly appropriate for you to say something like, “I’m sorry you’re upset,” but it is not your responsibility to change your plans for the sole purpose of taking care of your mother’s feelings. When you ignore your needs for the sake of your mother’s feelings, you are doing a disservice not only to yourself but to your mother, as well. The anger and resentment that you will inevitably feel cannot help but affect your relationship. And if your efforts to make your mother happy fail, you will feel guilty and inadequate.

When you base the majority of your life decisions on how they will make your parents feel, you are relinquishing free choice. If their feelings
always
come first,
they
are in the driver’s seat of
your life.

Think about what other beliefs you may have that keep you from feeling like an effective adult with your parents. Add them to the list. This list will become part of a short exercise I’ll ask you to do later.

False Beliefs, Painful Feelings

Self-defeating beliefs always lead to painful feelings. By examining your feelings, you can begin to understand both the beliefs that spawned them and the behaviors that result.

Most of us think our feelings are reactions to things that happen to us, things that come from outside of ourselves. But in reality, even the most extreme fear, pleasure, or pain grows out of some kind of belief.

For example, you get very brave one day and tell your alcoholic father that you are no longer willing to be with him when he’s drunk. He starts screaming about how ungrateful and disrespectful you are. You feel guilty. You may think your guilt is a result of your father’s behavior, but that’s only half the story. Before your feelings washed through you, certain beliefs were triggered in your mind—beliefs you probably weren’t aware of. In this case, these beliefs might have been: “children should never talk back to their parents,” or, “my father has an illness and it’s up to me to take care of him.” Because you have not been true to these deep-seated beliefs, you react with guilt.

When you are faced with a situation that calls for an emotional response, family beliefs run through your mind like an unconscious patter. Understanding that these beliefs almost always precede your feelings is more than an interesting psychological exercise.

Understanding the relationship between your beliefs and your feelings is an essential step toward putting a stop to self-defeating behavior!

“B
UT
I D
ON’T
F
EEL
A
NYTHING

We all have strong emotional reactions to our parents. Some of us are in touch with these feelings, but others protect themselves from the intensity of their emotions by burying them.

You may have gotten strong messages in your childhood that it wasn’t safe to feel. Perhaps you were punished for expressing feelings, or perhaps your feelings were so painful that you pushed them deep into your unconscious in order to survive. Perhaps you had to convince yourself that you just didn’t care, or perhaps you needed to prove to your parents that they couldn’t get to you.

As an adult it may be very difficult for you to turn your emotional faucets back on. The connection between powerful feelings and your past and current relationship with your parents may be especially difficult for you to see. The feelings I’m discussing throughout this book may seem foreign to you. Perhaps you describe yourself as cold or numb, or you believe that you don’t have any feelings—that you don’t have much to offer in the way of love or caring. If so, your childhood feelings were probably very intense, and you required a great deal of protective defenses to make it into adulthood.

If your feelings are deeply buried, you can use these checklists as a starting point to get in touch with them. You can also try to imagine what the feelings might be of someone else who has the same relationship to his parents as you have. Many people find that they simply cannot reach their feelings without therapy. Your feelings are not lost, they are just misplaced, and sometimes it takes professional help to reclaim them. But whatever it takes, you cannot do this work without connecting with your feelings.

It’s important that you take it easy as you begin to allow some of your blocked feelings to surface. You may feel very upset for a period of time as your feelings come to life. Many people enter therapy expecting to feel better immediately. They are dismayed when they discover that usually they have to feel worse before they can feel better. This is emotional surgery, and as with any surgery, the wounds must be cleaned out before they heal, and it takes time for the pain to go away. But the pain is a sign that the healing process has started.

To help you bring your feelings into focus, I have divided them
into four groups: guilt, fear, sadness, and anger. We are concerned here with these automatic, predictable, negative feelings—the ones that usually cause you trouble.

Check the statements in this list that most closely describe how you feel.

In My Relationship with My Parents, This Is What I Feel:

 
  • —— I feel guilty when I don’t live up to my parents’ expectations.
  • —— I feel guilty when I do something that upsets them.
  • —— I feel guilty when I go against their advice.
  • —— I feel guilty when I argue with them.
  • —— I feel guilty when I get angry with them.
  • —— I feel guilty when I disappoint my parents or hurt their feelings.
  • —— I feel guilty when I don’t do enough for them.
  • —— I feel guilty when I don’t do everything they ask me to do.
  • —— I feel guilty when I say no to them.
  • —— I feel scared when my parents yell at me.
  • —— I feel scared when they’re angry at me.
  • —— I feel scared when I’m angry at them.
  • —— I feel scared when I have to tell them something they may not want to hear.
  • —— I feel scared when they threaten to withdraw their love.
  • —— I feel scared when I disagree with them.
  • —— I feel scared when I try to stand up to them.
  • —— I feel sad when my parents are unhappy.
  • —— I feel sad when I know I’ve let my parents down.
  • —— I feel sad when I can’t make their lives better for them.
  • —— I feel sad when my parents tell me I’ve ruined their lives.
  • —— I feel sad when I do something that I want to do and it hurts my parents.
  • —— I feel sad when my parents don’t like my (husband, wife, lover, friends).
  • —— I feel angry when my parents criticize me.
  • —— I feel angry when my parents try to control me.
  • —— I feel angry when they tell me how to live my life.
  • —— I feel angry when they tell me how I should think, feel, or behave.
  • —— I feel angry when they tell me what I should or shouldn’t do.
  • —— I feel angry when they make demands on me.
  • —— I feel angry when they try to live their lives through me.
  • —— I feel angry when they expect me to take care of them.
  • —— I feel angry when they reject me.

Please add any feelings you have that aren’t covered. These may include physical reactions to your parents. Physical reactions are often the language through which we express painful feelings, especially when it isn’t safe to say them to the people we’re upset with. We often say with our bodies what we can’t or won’t say with our mouths. The particular physical symptoms are influenced by such things as family medical history, predispositions or vulnerabilities in certain parts of your body, and your unique personality and emotional setup. It’s not unusual for adult children of toxic parents to suffer headaches, stomachaches, muscle tension, fatigue, loss of appetite or compulsion to eat, sleep problems, and nausea. These reactions should never be discounted, and if they intensify to stress-related diseases such as cardiovascular or gastrointestinal disorders, they can be lethal. Therefore, it is essential that you seek medical help for any physical condition that persists, even if you are convinced that it is emotional in origin.

If you checked more than one-third of the statements on the lists, you are still closely enmeshed with your parents and your emotional world is largely controlled by them.

S
EEING THE
C
ONNECTION

Try putting a “because” after each of the feelings that applies to you, and follow the “because” with a belief from your first list. This piggyback technique can help you make a lot more sense out of some of your reactions. For example, “I feel guilty when I do something that upsets them
because
I shouldn’t do or say anything that will hurt my parents’ feelings”; “I feel sad when I know I’ve let my parents down
because
it’s up to me to make my parents happy”; “I feel scared when I’m angry with them
because
if I stand up to my parents, I’ll lose them forever.”

Once you begin to make these all-important connections, you will probably be surprised at how many of your feelings have their roots in your beliefs. This exercise is tremendously important because once you understand the source of your feelings, you can start to take control of them.

What Are You Doing?

Beliefs lead to rules, feelings make you obey them, and that’s what leads to behavior. If you want to change your behavior, you’ve got to work all the way through the equation, changing your beliefs and feelings in order to change your rules.

When you recognize that behavior is the end product of beliefs and feelings, some of your behaviors start to make more sense.

Here’s a list of some behaviors that might grow out of the beliefs and feelings I have already listed. These behaviors fall into two basic categories: compliant and aggressive. Check the ones that apply to you. Again, if you identify any of your destructive behaviors that I have not listed, add them to the list.

In My Relationship with My Parents, This Is How I Behave:

Other books

Miracle Jones by Nancy Bush
Compliments by Mari K. Cicero
Forgotten Boxes by Becki Willis
The Road of Danger-ARC by David Drake
Under A Living Sky by Joseph Simons
Trust Me by Melanie Walker
Six-Gun Snow White by Catherynne M. Valente
Dying of the Light by Gillian Galbraith
The Truth Collector by Corey Pemberton
The Five Kisses by Karla Darcy