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Old Apr 13, 2016, 02:41 PM
VixenTalks VixenTalks is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2016
Location: Arizona
Posts: 7
Quote:
Originally Posted by Anonymous100151 View Post
I just stumbled onto the concept of "childhood emotional neglect" and it was as though a lightbulb came on.
I have been struggling to understand possible reasons why I developed into a very depressed, anxiety filled and isolated young adult out of a perfectly normal happy childhood...
I also have been having difficulty understanding why a lot of my resentment lands on my mom, who has actively done little to warrant such angry feelings.
Prior to my parents divorce, I was already sad, self-isolating, and growing apart from my mother.
I think emotional neglect is the key! I grew up with everything, except validation when I really needed it. I remember these key moments when I would go to my mother and try to receive some understanding or comfort, but I would either be hushed and hugged when I wanted advice (and thus dismissed) or given advice when I wanted to be held (and thus rebuked).
Two moments stand out: The first was going to mom to get advice about a boy I liked. I only remember talking to her about it once, and she didn't cheer me on and encourage me excitedly to go after him, she just said some lukewarm 'oh that's great'. The second was middle school, I got one B on a nearly straight As report card, but my older brother got all straight As. I was very upset, but my parents brushed it off. They didn't care about my grades. I remember after that point having a very laissez faire attitude towards school and grades (which boiled down to not studying and not doing homework on time throughout high school and into college)
As an adult I have already come to realize that my mother doesn't seem to recognize certain emotional needs of others, particularly her kids. Only recently did I get up the courage to ask her to just hug me when I'm really depressed and crying buckets. It seemed like a no brainer to me: why didn't she just know right away to hug me? I have had these dark pointless crying jags many times before, and she'd sit coldly across the room and try to give advice... as I cried alone!
I always thought that was so weird because she seems like a really sensitive warm person. Except that she doesn't give away hugs freely. I think this is because she was emotionally neglected as a child.
When she was a preteen, her brother died and her parents must have just pulled away in their grief. I think they probably didn't talk about it much. Her parents are very religious, charitable and giving, but emotionally there's some formality. I used to think it was just old-fashioned behavior, but now I'm convinced it has to do with their son.
I'm relieved that I found this out. I think it might help me to understand and reduce some of my anger towards mom. After all, it's not entirely her fault if she can't notice when I'm depressed. Also, I'm an adult and she never hit me or anything. I am glad though that I can understand why my "perfect childhood" didn't turn me out so great... and now I know that it isn't my fault that I feel flawed and unworthy.
Do any of you have similar experiences? And just to be clear, I'm talking rosy cheerful childhoods with just an odd feeling that something was missing...
My parents did it because of autism. My father is probably the best father any girl could ever ask for and more, he's just unable to empathise, identify small emotions, or react to them properly. This is because of his Autism, and he was born that way. My mother, I'm not exactly sure. She's not exactly a champ, but she has her moments of being an actual mother. I believe her case is more like Narcissistic Personality Disorder. Unless you put her first under any circumstances, she will complain. Very very loudly. By first, I mean make sure she doesn't have to go to work that day, take care of the kids for her, do the dishes for her, cook dinner for her, clean the house for her (which she doesn't do), and make sure everything is perfect so she can turn around and say you do nothing always.

Basically, both my parents are unable to recognise, react to, and relate to emotional discomfort. Due to this, I was given a lot of things other kids weren't; a choice of food, patched up when I got hurt, brought to the park to play, given plenty of a social life (which never worked out). However, when I would cry my parents would see to my psysical needs and comfort me only enough to stop burdening them. Eventually to get attention I tried to feign illness, because if I burdened my parents so much something must be wrong with me! That was my explanation for it now, but I couldn't complain at the time, because I was a child, and I couldn't calculate what was wrong. As a teenager, I developed eating disorders, depression, anxiety, self esteem issues, and self harming issues. Because without that crucial emotional foundation at the slightest touch everything came tumbling down on top of me.

So similar experiences. It's similar to physical neglect, but it's still an inability or refusal to act on a child's emotional needs.