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Elder Harridan x-hankster
Member Since Jun 2011
Location: Milan/Michigan
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#21
I think your niece has a good point there. My politics are like hers. I have a cousin whose politics are like yours. I had to ask my cousin to remove me from her mailing list because i didnt like getting anti-obama jokes. I suppose we both think we are superior to each other (my cousin and i), but so what? We just know not to talk politics with each other.
Thats why they call it "friends and family". Dont let mark zuckerberg dictate your life! |
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katydid777
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#22
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I know the family rift would have happened over any stupid thing eventually. It’s just a reflection of the bad dynamics in my family. I am disordered, they are disordered, we all are disordered! __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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unaluna
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#23
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One of the things that makes me take more medication is because I know I can't help my son unless I can be consistently patient with him and more clearly see what I need to do when an opportunity presents. We can only try to make less mistakes in our relationships but cannot make others be a certain way. No one won. I am sorry. Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood YouTube |
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Legendary
Member Since Dec 2014
Location: USA
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#24
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There are no psychological articles I can find about family relationships where two or more have disorders. For you, both you and your son are having individual issues. For me, my mother, both sisters, and me all have some issues going on. I’m not sure who’d be diagnosed, but c’mon, we’re so dysfunctional! Dealing with this is exponentially more difficult than with only one disordered person. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jun 2012
Location: USA
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#25
To me, it's more like "narcissistic dysfunction" than just one person with a "diagnosed" disorder. People can't/don't develop a strong, realistic sense of self (ego) in the kinds of family environment that you describe, and that I had, too.
But I've not found anything on the internet or the psychology/psychotherapy literature that I have accesss to that offers any real "solution" or path to "health" that makes sense to me. Intellectually, it seems to me the challenge is to develop a "healthy ego" somewhere else. I was too damaged, maybe, for therapy as it exists currently and over the last 50 years to help much. Instead, due to its limitations, it introduced other dsyfunction IMO. So, intellectually, it seems to me that ego develops in a social environment that includes not only (relationships with) parents but an entire -- well, tribe, community, extended family. And when that whole thing is toxic -- well, the results can be. . .not so good. What is a "healthy" ego or sense of self? And how does it develop? Currently, the main thing therapists have been focusing on is attachment, and I think that is way too limited. If therapists can't help us, what can? My focus currently, for me, is support groups. I'm finding what works for me and what doesn't. And in one group I'm in right now, if I make a faux pas I'm not automatically looked on as a "bad guy". That's a real different experience for me. If I can get "OK" -- even at my advanced age -- then maybe I have a chance to deal with the still-disordered people in ways that I don't get triggered myself. But that may be just a pipe dream. |
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TishaBuv
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#26
I sent them all token holiday gifts. They never send us anything anyway. I figured I’d not stop my being nice just because they aren’t. But I’m not calling anyone. If they call, I’ll be polite and not bring up anything.
I’m completely weaned off my Cymbalta, depressed as hell, weepy, and self medicating with Benadryl. Not ODing. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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here today
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Wise Elder
Member Since Oct 2017
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#27
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Legendary
Member Since Dec 2014
Location: USA
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#28
Thanks, Buffy. I’m sorry too.
Why didn’t I get kindness and empathy from any of them? They don’t really like me. I’m really not important to them. Am I just a worthless person? I don’t have perceived abandonment issues. I have real abandonment. Unless I can give in to their ways they won’t speak to me again. I was really bullied by my family. One sister who gave me what my kids called a ‘sick burn’, ignoring me and saying she had to go get her oil changed never called again. The only other one said she did nothing wrong. She probably won’t call again either. Even if she does, I’ll never feel the same about her now. My mother ordered me to not go no contact with her. She said ‘that would be a sin’. What crap. She uses words to her advantage and means nothing, just manipulation. My step father proved himself to be a creep who cares nothing for me. He’s just my mother’s husband. My own father never loved me either. He cut out from this world when I was small. I was only born to trap him. My mom actually told this to me. I am a survivor of abuse and I don’t care for how much longer that life lasts. I’ve been really emotionally ill for such a long time now. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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here today
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jun 2012
Location: USA
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#29
I totally get it. It really sucks. I'm so sorry, I feel like I'm in the same boat. One foot in front of the other, one day at a time.
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TishaBuv
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#30
The father abandonment thing set me off last night. I have this aching desire to be defended and protected and I’ve barely ever had that from anyone.
My husband was acting compassionate because I was crying. I had the unhealthy reaction I have been having toward him because he is totally passive in the situation. If it were reversed, I’d be calling up those shythead relatives and discussing why they are callously stonewalling my spouse who is severely depressed. But he does not have these thoughts in his head. I did not say anything except that I have issues with the defense thing but don’t want anything from him that he is not. I said “I don’t want to try to make you my flying monkey”. He watched tv in one room. I cried in another. When we went to sleep, I said, “Tonight actually went well between us.” He said, “It did?” (Lol). I said, “yes. I didn’t fight with you. I didn’t try to get you involved to defend me. I cried and that’s it. I’ll just keep moving forward and get over this eventually. Plus, I know it is really petty, but I canceled the order for their token holiday gifts. Screw them. They don’t deserve anything. And it actually made me stop crying and feel a little more empowered. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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Anonymous55879, here today
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jun 2012
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#31
I don't even send Christmas cards anymore. I love them, but. . .it just doesn't seem real if they can't accept the real me. It wouldn't be real of them, where they are at, to accept the real me, either, apparently. Like I said, maybe someday. . . (if I and they should live so long).
Congrats to you -- and your H -- for doing well together. Celebrate what we can celebrate!! I don't usually read things in this forum and hadn't kept up with that part of the story. So I was very glad to read about it. Good news is good news is good news!! Maybe not much of it around, but sometimes. . . |
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TishaBuv
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#32
Families tend to set up casting roles Tisha, it's like suddenly expecting Archie Bunker to suddenly change and no longer be Archie Bunker because the rest of the characters typically function around his character. You have been handed a role to play in your family and they will treat you like they have always treated you even if you stop playing along. There is no winning in this set up either, that would be asking for everyone to change their role and people tend to function on automatic so they don't have to think as much. So basically, what you are going to keep running into is being treated badly every time you try to push anyone in your family out of their personal role with you.
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BettysGranddaughter, here today, TishaBuv
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#33
I’ve learned I can’t change the dynamics and I don’t matter to them. I’ll try to maintain the most minimal involvement. No calling to play the Game of Phones. No calls to my sisters. If I am contacted I’ll be brief and cool.
After all the information I’ve read and learned from others here, this really was textbook stuff. Thanks again to all here. You are angels to me. __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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here today, Open Eyes, ShaneG
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#34
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Often the decision to do the no contact thing with people or family isn't really about choosing to disengage because of how toxic it is to engage but instead its simply a form of punishment to get attention or control or sense of "power" instead. When we are children and don't follow the rules and behave, our parents choose to punish us by sending us to our room and basically to disconnect from us so we give in to their control and power and rules. Without realizing it, children end up learning that in order to get control and power over others this is how you have to handle them, shut them out and don't talk to them until they apologize and behave. The other thing children learn to punish others is to get a few to join them against the person they want to gain power over. We learn that narcissists practice this by using a method called triangulation where they recruit a third party to side with them against the person they want to have power over. Also, these individuals cultivate a group or click to groom to follow them and this is meant to develop "power" too. After a while, the desire to have some kind of power by being part of a group becomes more important than "truth" or even actually being nice or CARING about how the group acts in ways that actually hurt whatever person is being targeted. Unfortunately, this is part of our basic human primate design, this is part of how we are designed that is a big part of our survival and yet it's a part of us that is also the most destructive too. You did not "invent" shunning as punishment either. Shunning is very much a part of how human beings behave in order to get other human beings to follow a certain pattern of behaviors and beliefs. By the nature of our design Tisha, when we are shunned we feel more vulnerable because we are designed to feel safer if we are part of a group. So, when you go no contact with your family because of how toxic they can get, you will feel more vulnerable and that's based more on basic instinct which contributes to your not really feeling empowered when you go no contact. What you end up "feeling" when you go no contact is "abandoned and Quote:
When a person grows up in a dysfunctional family, the one thing that person struggles with is their personal sense of self worth. And because there is dysfunction, the individual doesn't learn actual healthy ways of interacting with others that maintains and protects their personal sense of self worth. Unfortunately, we are designed to observe and copy. This is THE MOST marketable part of human beings too. We tend to focus WAY TOO MUCH on the idea of WINNING and somehow being better than and because of that we can be prone to interacting in unhealthy and unproductive ways where winning becomes more important then anything else and can most definitely bring out the worst in human nature. Last edited by Open Eyes; Dec 01, 2018 at 11:11 AM.. |
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Legendary
Member Since Dec 2014
Location: USA
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#35
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I sense the constructive criticism of your thoughtful comment. I’m not sure what you are insinuating and I really don’t want another jab from anyone. I said I didn’t go no contact. I’m just never going to be myself with them anymore. It’s irreparably damaged. It will be polite and minimal. ——- __________________ "And don't say it hasn't been a little slice of heaven, 'cause it hasn't!" . About Me--T |
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Anonymous55879, Open Eyes
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#36
I am sorry you are feeling so wounded. Please take care of yourself and keep trying to find pleasant distractions.
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TishaBuv
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#37
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I have a very long thread of my own where I face some very toxic challenges of my own with my own family of origin in a more private forum. There have been many times where I too wish my husband would stand up for me too. My husband has seen my sister be terrible to me and he cowers and I wish he would just stand up and tell her to stop acting like such a bossy jerk. |
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TishaBuv
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#38
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ShaneG
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