Quote:
Originally Posted by ListenMoreTalkLess
I have two things to say to you, having been in a situation similar to yours at your age, and both of them are probably very hard to hear.
The first is that you made a choice to be there NOW. You didn't have a choice when you were a child, you get who you get for parents, but once we become adults and choose to go back to an abusive environment or where our abusive parents are, we need to look at why we made that choice. I imagine that you will say that your other choice would to be homeless, but that is your feeling, not the reality. You have other options: there are domestic violence shelters that you would be eligible for services from, there are temporary living situations that can often be found on message boards for sublets, roommates, house sitting, pet sitting, etc. There are emergency loans available and many people ask others, friends or family, to offer them temporary shelter. I know that you are working towards your independence, but the point is, that you made a choice to be where you are. That is not to say you "deserve" to feel bad or that you should be blamed or shamed for making that choice, but I think it would move you forward to acknowledge that it is your own agency that put you in this position. I don't look down on you for choosing physical comfort over staying someplace that is not your home. I don't look down on you for not making the effort to find another place to stay, I would imagine you had limited energy for doing so. But it may be worth examining why you did not make other choices, why you cannot walk away from the economic advantages that your parents offer you, from the privilege of their wealth. Because I think until you answer that question for yourself, you're always going to be hooked into them for a little bit longer.
I am not the only person who walked away from his family of origin. I have since met many people who did it far younger than I. I read recently that Wolfgang Puck was 14 when he left home because his father constantly told him he would never amount to anything. I was a couple of years older than you, in graduate school, that my parents were paying for. I went to the financial office and said that I needed to pay for school myself because it was dangerous for me to continue to allow my parents to pay, and what did I need to do to make that happen. I did not want to end up with the large student loans that I did or work as hard as I had to to support myself, but I put my own emotional security, my own emotional health and the integrity of living my life with respect for myself first and foremost, above and beyond anything my parents could financially provide for me. And living without fear, whether I was in their home visiting or just being aware that they could theoretically come visit me at any time, was also well worth it. I could not begin to really heal until I cut the cord with them. I doubt that you can either. As long as you use them to support you financially, you create a dissonance in your mind about what and who is right for you. It fosters hate and it will poison your other social relationships.
Second, many trauma victims return to the same bad scene over and over because they are "re-enacting" the trauma and trying to make it turn out differently. It seems to me that you might be looking for someone to rescue you from the hellhole of your parents' house, so you keep going back hoping that will somehow happen this time. But your T can't rescue you, and it seems like you isolate yourself from others who might be able to assist you in getting away. Again, I think that examining your reasons for returning, and not just brushing off the question with "I have to, or I'll be homeless" is useful.
The other thing that occurs to me-- I would rather be homeless, no question about it, rather than subject myself to my abusive parents' home and control. I suspect that would be true for other people as well. Some things are worth being homeless for, and for me it is far worse to subject myself to emotional abuse, fear, and increased PTSD symptoms than *risk* that I'd be homeless. But I'm a fighter, and I would not be homeless for very long. I would do whatever I needed to do to take care of myself without depending on others to rescue or support me.
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I made this choice because
1) I originally was under the impression that I would still be residential throughout break
2) My parents completely blind sided me with this and then used my lack of knowledge about financial stuff (stuff they should have taught me) and forced me into a corner of homelessness or putting up with them for three weeks because I can't get emergency loans. I don't have a credit score.
3) Sometimes, I think being homeless might be better. But then again, no it wouldn't because I'd be homeless in the New England weather, I can't guarantee finding a homeless shelter, and despite what my parents did to me in the past, I am over 6 feet tall and rather strong. They would never put their hands on me now because they know I would fight back. Even if they were able to overpower me, I would get concrete evidence (such as photos or going to the hospital without showering first) and prosecute them to the fullest of my ability in hopes of getting them out of my life and me into their money. So they wouldn't go there. On the city streets, my odds of being raped or killed is significantly higher.
4) I am paranoid that if I cut myself off from my parents, my mother will come after my trumpets because technically, I wasn't the one who purchased then. I'm not sure if they are valuable enough that any claims could be made on them and I don't know if they have any evidence of ownership, but I do not want to risk it at all. That is all I have in my life to keep myself going. My ability to play them is my really my only way of making money right now and if I were to suddenly be homeless, I'd need them to play on the streets for a little cash and to continue playing freelance gigs once I have put together enough money to get myself some way to contact others. I would need to have enough money saved up to buy my trumpets off of them if they want to press theft charges.
I actually live throughout the year over 700 miles from my parents. This situation isn't ideal at all. When I was still thinking I could be residential right now I was hoping to get some Christmas gigs and earn easily $900 through playing a bunch and saving that towards my eventual independence. Obviously, that didn't work out. My plan right now is to get through the next 9 days all the while applying for jobs, get some job experience next semester while also getting some free training to do something slightly more skilled than minimum wage (while still working on music), figure out how to start getting a credit score, and continue to use my connections to play as many weddings, services, and odd jobs as possible. I wouldn't be able to be financially independent by the summer, but I would have a very strong and viable argument to stay in Boston throughout the summer before and after I play in a summer festival.
I agree with you that I need to cut them out ASAP, but I'm not going to do that right now considering that I'm in the wrong state completely. If I did cut them off today, I would be freezing on the streets of Detroit with no one local to let me use their shower to clean up for a job interview and no way to get back to Boston where I have connections, the city is A LOT safer, and the unemployment rate is much lower. This is the situation I chose to be in for right now, I can't undo it, and I'm just looking for ways to survive my own decision.