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Stuck in the middle

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  • #178361
    Brandy
    Participant

    Hi Franky,

    I had to smile while reading your post. Reads to me that you have a pretty nice family. Families go through changes and periods of “disequilibrium”, and it’s all normal. Significant changes in a family start to happen when children go through adolescence which started in your family many years ago, and again through emerging adulthood (ages 18-25) which you are also past now. Emerging adulthood is the age of identity explorations when people explore possibilities in love and work. It’s also the time when many people leave their families of origin and transform themselves – make independent decisions about what kind of people they wish to be and realize that they are not made only in the parents’ images. (Emerging adulthood doesn’t exist in all cultures, and I’m not sure what your culture is.) At the same time that all these changes are happening  for the adult children in a family,  parents are typically going through midlife which also impacts  the family system. Midlife can be difficult as it’s considered a time when people feel less energy, may have a decline in health, feel less attractive, less creative. It’s also a time when they may reexamine their lives and feel very dissatisfied. All of these changes create tension between parents and their adult children, and relationships between them typically improve once the young people leave the home. It’s all normal.

    You say, “I’m a point where I need some advice on how to handle my family and live my life however I want to live it and not through some complaints or unwanted help. Should I stand up for myself or should I let life find a way?” It may be time to start to think about leaving home, if possible. If this is not possible, talk to your parents about the way you feel, and listen to them when they tell you how they feel. Be aware and understanding of what each of you is going through. As far as your sister goes, if visiting her causes you distress, don’t visit her.

    Hang in there, Franky. It gets better.

    B

    #178387
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Franky:

    My comment is regarding the first five paragraphs of your post: you stated that both your father and your mother are “loving and supportive”.

    When your father goes on and on about topics that distress you, and you told him that it does, that is not loving and supporting. When you figured that he doesn’t stop to consider the consequences  of his actions on you, that means  he  is not supportive.

    A loving and supportive person pays attention: if the consequences of his actions cause distress on the supposed “loved  ones”- he stops those actions.

    When your mother uses you as a confidante even though it distresses you (it is not a healthy role for a child to be a parent’s confidante)- not loving or supportive. When s he snaps at you or is otherwise aggressive, repeatedly, then she is… not loving and supportive.

    Both are probably loving and supportive at times, in certain contexts. Most parents are by feeding their children. But if a parent is repeatedly unloving in some ways, as the ways you described, that causes distress that is not resolved by the few things that are loving and supportive. Somehow, a parent needs to  be consistently loving and supportive. Not perfectly, of course, but consistently, paying attention and correcting their behavior when needed.

    anita

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