fbpx
Menu

Resentment towards parents….

HomeForumsEmotional MasteryResentment towards parents….

New Reply
Viewing 10 posts - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #41471
    Sapnap3
    Participant

    Question for everyone
    My ma is not feeling well and I love her. She is not very sick but she is in pain and she can’t sleep. Since I have been on this journey of self discovery, I am discovering many of my adult behaviors have stem from childhood neglect. I was a very lonely kid growing up and never got attention from my parents. After my siblings got married off, I became the sole focus of my parents. Their lives revolve around me but I have never felt too close to them because I don’t remember them from my younger years. They feel more like an obligation than support system.

    My dad is very pessimistic. Everything bad will be worst, is his way of thinking. He is a great guy and a good dad but I can never cry on his shoulders. He lost all of his savings and mine when I was 18 and after that he gave up. He gave up being strong. I stepped up to the plate and since then, I do everything for them from reading their mail to paying their bill to talking to cable guy to hiring repair men. I moved away from them after I turned 25 but I am guilted into driving an hour every weekend to go see them cause they think I have to be around them to be OK being a single woman and all. They were backing off of me when I was dating my ex. It was like suddenly all of the worries went away. I was rescued so they didn’t need to cling to me. I held on to my ex like my life dependent on it because finally I had relief.

    The other day after a pessimistic, guilt full talk with my dad, I got really sad cause my mind automatically went to my ex and happy memories of us. I cried so much…in public.

    The point of this forum is to get insight on how to be kinder to my parents. I know that they both have had difficult childhoods. They have both struggled and done everything they can do to make a good life for me and my sisters. They do love me in their own ways but I don’t feel like its unconditional love. They constantly compare me to kids who have achieved better or gotten arranged married and are happy (on the outside) or have had kids or the ones who still live with their parents. The way I make them look in public is more important than my happiness. All these things make me angry at them. I keep arguing with them and making them sad. I don’t like that at all. I am a kind and emphatic person. Why cant I be that way towards my folks? Why can’t I forgive them?
    Thank you for reading…I appreciate all of you
    S

    #41475
    Matt
    Participant

    Sapna,

    What a blessing our parents are! Do you see how as you yearned for unconditional acceptance and warmth from your dad, your mind turned toward your ex? Now you’re really cooking with heat!

    When we were little kids, daddy kept us safe and protected from nature. Before we confront and overcome our fear of nature, sometimes we get sucked into thinking its daddy who holds the keys to our security. Sometimes we grabbed onto other males, sometime we masculinized the divine into God, sometimes we just feel helpless without a man… its just old junk, ready for releasing. You don’t need a man, you’re strong and radiant with divine light and love, and a blessing to the world. Sure, you still beat up sapna for being sapna, but most of us have a part of ourselves we don’t like. I’ve read your compassionate art, and you are far more attuned to your divine nature than you give yourself credit. You have so much unconditional love for most people (a few problematic folks aside, such as sapna, parents, ex etc) that its absence strikes you, and you’re looking for how to develop it.

    For our parents its both simple and difficult. As kids, we were rightfully selfish. Our parents were our parents first, and people second. As we grow up, we have to switch it back. They are people first, and have the role of being parents. They’re still people. One of my teachers said “if only our parents were perfect, eh?” We both got a laugh.

    Your parents, as people, are caught in patterns of suffering just like you and me. They rise and fall, have spin cycles that arise. We are the same, all of us. You suffer and spin and cry when men don’t unconditionally accept you… ie fear you are unlovable to men. He suffers and spins and pessimisms when he sees you single… is fears you are in danger without a man or daddy to protect you. It is very painful for him, just as yours is painful for you. It would be nice if he could just hold you in his arms and tell you you’re beautiful. That warmth is there in all of us, but his is just under layers of spin cycles. Just like it would be nice if you could hold Sapna in your arms and tell her she’s beautiful. But even when you try, you don’t believe her because the warmth is under spin cycles.

    As we see that our parents are just people, and that they suffer just like us, and that suffering clouds their mind and heart, there is no need to forgive them. There is no need, because there is no trespass. The need to forgive them only arises when we see them as parents before people, which doesn’t make sense anymore. You see how he is confused about what brings Sapna joy. You see how he is caught in cycles of fear that turn him toward envisioning the worst. Why blame Sapna or her parents for suffering? 99.99999% of people suffer.

    You’re really doing great Sapna. As you continue to pray for guidance and healing, the cleansing goes deeper and deeper. Be patient, the answers are coming! Just keep breathing and engage your life curiously, mindfully, and the chunks inside your mind will become noticeable, just like this. Then the dreamer will have better dreams. Said differently, as you confront and explore the world, you’re boldly moving your momentum toward joy. It takes time, because nature has to arrange a whole symphony to help you settle your attachments, but its happening all around you already. Namaste, sister. You matter!

    With warmth,
    Matt

    #41485
    Branka
    Participant

    Hi,
    Thanks Sapna for sharing your feelings and thoughts with us, and thanks Matt for your idea to see our own parents as ordinary people. You actually put into practice a lovely thought “if you can’t change the circumstances, change your perception”…As I see it, a lot of problems are the result of forgetting the fact that our parents “are still people”. And the perfection Matt’s teacher was referring to are actually our own expectations from our parents that we nurture and polish and stubbornly keep alive all along. Look, I’m almost 70 and still expect my mother who is 94 to turn into a kind, gentle, honest, loving mother. My head knows that it only happens in fairy tales and that my expectations are unrealistic; but my heart and my soul still believe in miracles… As I still expect a right guy to appear around the corner, one day (not necessarily on the horse!).
    We have to turn to ourselves and answer important question: what can be the possible reason that we are STILL expecting certain things that we cannot get from our parents? It is as we are knocking on the wrong door!!! I can understand why kids are doing this, since they are in all possible ways dependent on parents. But what about us, adults and even senior citizens?! WE have choices! We know people who are gentle, kind, loving…we know the door(s) that will be open with smiles and hugs and “It’s nice to see you”. So, we choose to collect a big, black stamp in our negative self-image album whenever we knock on the wrong door. It is similar to the type of medical help needed; nobody will refer you to urologist for broken arm. Deep down we know where we can get acceptance, approval, respect and all the things we need. Problem is what prevents us of going there?
    Take care,
    Branka

    #41504
    Sapnap3
    Participant

    Thank you Matt and Branka.
    Matt,
    I know that if I think of my parents as people, I can forget the expectation I have of them but what I struggle with is the expectation they have of me. I am suppose to support them emotionally and financially. For instant, I really want to take a solo trip to Ireland this year. The last amazing trip I took was with my ex and I want to show myself that I can have an amazing journey by myself. My parents have a lot of financial issues and they don’t have a retirement fund like other Americans as we are immigrants. I am suppose to pay off about $5000 Of their mortgage so that my mother can feel less stressed. I am happy to do it but because they have no money saved. I have to think of their medical bills and everything else till they are here. My sisters are willing to help but my parents don’t like to get help from them as they are married with children.
    This leaves me being guilted into paying for anything they need. I have a good job and I do make money but I hate that the only reason I was born was to take care of them. I am their retirement fund, in my mother’s words.
    Any amazing insight on this?
    Sapna

    #41532
    Matt
    Participant

    Sapna,

    How interesting and discouraging to be considered a bank to your parents. Their baggage must be thick indeed to call you their retirement fund. Would you accept being called an “on call vagina” to your romantic partner? Your parents dishonor themselves and you by holding such a callous view.

    As you continue to self nurture, it is up to you how to approach your finances. Consider that if they feel they “self sacrificed” to give to you, they setup the conditions for you to “self sacrifice” for loved ones. This is not healthy for anyone. Said differently, if you pay their bills out of guilt, then you harm them and you. Them, because the intimacy with their daughter erodes, which is inherently more important (even if they don’t accept that on the surface). For you, because not only will you fall into more habitual self sacrifice, but as you don’t reap the joy of your efforts the love you give to the world will weaken. Its a lose lose.

    We’re adults, and all need to find a way to self nurture. It would be one thing if they were your kids and you were helping them through school, or get setup in a job or something, but they are not your children. Consider that if they called me on the phone and said “Matt, we’ve decided that you are going to pay our bills” what might I say?

    Remember that the path to healing is about self nurturing first, which is NOT selfish. Its the only way. Then, if you have the energy, money, and desire, help others. Any other road just harms us all… because what you give is not from love, and is therefore no gift at all.

    With warmth,
    Matt

    #41559
    Branka
    Participant

    Thanks, Matt, for your words of wisdom. They are very comforting.
    My personal problem is how to apply it so that they have long lasting effect? It’s very similar to a hypochondriac going to a doctor who would say to the frightened client that lab. results and everything else is OK, so, you are OK, don’t worry, be happy….and the client is happy for a while, but on the way out of the clinic the first thought in the series of “What if….” appears, followed by many others (what if they made a mistake in Lab?; What if doctor is without much experience; What if Badanga attacs Madanga?; and so on).
    WE have to learn skills to allow wisdom to stay. It means that Sapna learns to say “NO”, since I assume (maybe I’m wrong) that Sapna has the problem to say NO to friends, neighbours, colleagues, not parents only.
    For example, it is so difficult for me to follow the path of self-nurturing. I’ll have breakfast two days and skip it five days; I’ll slow down one afternoon, and keep myself totally exhausted for the rest of the week. Not to mention emotional torturing!
    Thanks Matt and Sapna for being there…
    Branka

    #41560
    Matt
    Participant

    Branka,

    The doctor cannot provide wisdom, only medication. Only diagnoses. Wisdom comes from experiencing reality. For instance, as you go days without eating breakfast, your body sends you signals that it is unhappy. You might ignore those, and fill your morning with newspapers or Twitter or whatnot… fueling the mind and not the body. Usually, something icky has to poke you a few times before you wake up and realize that if you don’t have breakfast, you over eat later, feel energetically sluggish all day. So the wisdom naturally grows as you recognize the small investment now produces a better lasting result.

    The same is true of meditation. We get so busy that we neglect our practice, and the stability and mindfulness that it provides dissipates. This makes our head so chaotic and painful in comparison, that we naturally move back toward the cushion. The way to cultivate wisdom is just in the looking at where we are, what is going on. The heart will inspire us toward health when we do, and so we jump. When the computer or the cereal bowl come up as an either/or, we choose the breakfast because the momentary loss of the happiness from seeing the latest tweets on the computer is naturally less pulling than the stable buoyancy of the entire day.

    As far as the “what its” and so forth… that is fear of the unknown. As we continue self nurturing, consistently, the unknown becomes less scary… we know that if stuff happens, we’ll do our best to love ourselves through it. Why bother fearing? Life isn’t a game you survive.

    With warmth,
    Matt

    #41658
    Alexey Sunly
    Participant

    Your parents are doing the best they can based on the skills they were taught. You need to learn and acquire much better skills and then try to either teach them to your folks, or simply use them to do your best to accept your parents as they are. In the end, if you are not willing to commit to a healthy lifestyle and everyday mediation practice, no advice will help you, unfortunately.

    • This reply was modified 11 years, 3 months ago by Alexey Sunly.
    #41743
    Branka
    Participant

    Matt, you took my point with a doctor in a wrong way. The majority of us know what is good for us; we know by heart so many wise guidelines and sayings…but still do not follow what we preach! How come that people repeatedly end up in a dysfunctional relationships; stick to unhealthy habits; repeat the same “mistakes”…despite the desire/wish/motivation to change!!!
    The wisdom is sometimes not enough, and, as Alexey put it, “we need to learn and acquire much better skills”. A agree that our parents are doing the best they can, and that can be the reason that unhappiness is transferred from one generation to another. Sometimes we need to say (or learn to say) “NO!”
    Best wishes from me

    #41768
    Matt
    Participant

    Branka,

    I think you took the metaphor of the doctor in a direction I did not intend. The doctor is the knowledge of what to do, the meds the skills. The growth happens from the wisdom that arises as we move through experiences with awareness. For example, we might know it is good to eat healthy. We know what eating healthy looks like. Wisdom is the stability of mind that allows us to set aside the small joy (sense pleasure of eating) for the larger joy (buoyancy of a healthy body)… which develops over time and looking at what is there. Said differently, it is in being mindful of the way our choices produce results that stabilizes our growth… skills and knowledge stay unused otherwise.

    With warmth,
    Matt

Viewing 10 posts - 1 through 10 (of 10 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. Please log in OR register.