Read If You Had Controlling Parents Online
Authors: Dan Neuharth
One or both of my parents frequently tried to manipulate my:
The Dirty Dozen, Truth Abuse, and cultlike manipulations make fertile ground for the harsh inner critics who can control you for years after you leave home. The next chapter will help you uncover more about your inner critics' genealogy.
Things we can see through do not make us sick, although they may arouse our indignation, anger, sadness or feelings of impotence. What makes us sick are those things we cannot see through
.
âA
LICE
M
ILLER
T
he elements on the left-hand side of the chart below are ingredients for optimal development. The elements on the right are a prescription for slowed development and unfulfilled potential. You might notice where your family fell on each of these continuums:
Prescriptions for Optimal and Slowed Development
Rx For Optimal Development | Rx for Slowed Development |
Safety | Stress |
Autonomy | Dependency |
Love | Deprivation |
Respect | Attack |
Attention | Neglect |
Connections with Others | Social Isolation |
Learning Experiences | Neglect of Learning |
Avenues for Self-Expression | Blocked Self-Expression |
Accurate Self-Image | Distorted Self-Image |
Healthy Interpersonal Boundaries | Unhealthy Interpersonal Boundaries |
In human development, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. For example, if your upbringing swung to the left-hand side of this continuumâthe prescription for optimal developmentâthe effects were cumulative:
If you felt safe and nurtured, you were more likely to express yourself and connect with othersâ¦
â¦the more you could express yourself and connect with others, the more you could respect yourselfâ¦
â¦the greater your self-respect, the more likely you were to act with autonomy and initiativeâ¦
â¦acting with more autonomy helped you to foster healthy boundaries and an accurate self-image. And so on.
By the same token, if your upbringing swung to the right-hand side of the continuumâthe prescription for slowed developmentâthe effects were also cumulative:
If you grew up with attack, neglect, or deprivation, your self-image may have become distortedâ¦
â¦if your self-image was distorted, your willingness to express yourself may have sufferedâ¦
â¦with reduced self-expression, your social isolation may have increased, leaving you more dependent on your parentsâ¦
â¦with enhanced dependency, you may have been more vulnerable to relationships with unhealthy boundariesâ¦
â¦this greater vulnerability probably created more stress and dependency. And so on.
Controlling families exact a cumulative toll because the key avenues to mental healthâaccess to information, supportive others, emotional expression, and free speechâare generally missing. Children in controlling families tend to lack a sympathetic adult who believes in them. Controlling families also tend to disable children's healthy natural instincts and magnify the already unequal relationship between parent and child.
Despite the sense of mystery about their upbringing that many people who grew up controlled possess, in retrospect it's not so mysterious:
The people you depended on for your survivalâ¦
The people who had the ability to give you tremendous pain or pleasureâ¦
Controlled you in a dozen tangible waysâ¦
Thousands of timesâ¦
In your most impressionable years.
In essence, controlling parents brainwash with a one-two-three-four punch:
It wasn't fair.
It wasn't right.
And you do have the right to feel anger, sadness, dismay, and much more over what was done to you.
If you have doubts about the tremendous power and impact of controlling families, it can help to review their arsenal. Seeing it all together can be shockingâand freeing.
Controlling Parents' Arsenalâ¦and Cost to Children
Controlling Parents' Arsenal | Cost to Children |
Conditional love | One-down position |
Disrespect | Feel undeserving |
Labeling dissent as a sin | Eroded autonomy |
Long-standing family tension | Sapped energy |
Lack of praise | Negative self-image |
Harsh discipline | Focus on obedience, not learning |
Confusing communication | Rampant self-doubts |
Pervasive mistrust | Isolation |
Unhealthy boundaries | Distorted sense of self |
Excessive scrutiny | Increased second-guessing |
Social isolation | No sources of support |
Smothering uniformity | Hindered initiative |
Deprivation | Lowered expectations |
Perfectionistic pressure | Reduced self-acceptance |
Cultlike thinking | Curtailed curiosity |
Chaotic atmosphere | Diminished trust |
Using parenting | Impaired coping skills |
Abuse and intimidation | Crippled self-protective instincts |
Childlike parenting | Parental needs dominate |
Food control | Increased dependence |
Body control | Reduced pride |
Boundary control | Insecurity |
Social control | Heightened depression and anxiety |
Decision control | Lessened free will |
Speech control | Blocked self-expression |
Emotion control | Narrowed resources for coping with stress |
Thought control | Complicated inner life |
Truth Abuse | Parental denial prevails |
Mixed messages | Confusion and paralysis |
Two-faced behavior | Uncertainty and mistrust |
Scapegoating | Obscured parental responsibility |
Infantilizing | Prolonged dependency |
Parentifying | Children become caretakers |
Triangulating | Split loyalties and increased guilt |
Emotional dumping | Feelings of failure |
Assumptions of “owning” children | Children accept abuse and control |
Attacks on children's very nature | Shattered self-esteem |
Distorted models of relating | Warped expectations for relationships |
Black-and-white thinking | Warped intellectual development |
The net result of growing up under the guns of this arsenal:
To survive, children internalize the controlling voices of parents.
As I've said, it explains why parental control may affect you even today.
Why Your Internalized Parents Are So Powerful
There are three “givens” about parents and children:
In healthier families, parents take advantage of these three givens to socialize, teach, nurture, and love so that children will grow up emotionally stronger. In controlling families, however, parents take advantage of these givens to get more control.
Young children, not yet complex thinkers, aren't able to see the grays and the nuances in life. To them, Daddy and Mommy are big and good, whether they are or not. Children can be scrutinized at any time by parents: when eating, playing, sleeping, and on the potty, but few children see their parents sleeping, making love, or using the bathroom. Few see their parents at work or in the outside world, when the parents may not be as dominant or as in control. As a result, children grow up seeing their parents as larger than life.
In controlling families, the negative influences of parents are magnified. If a parent is chronically anxious, the childâself-centered, as children naturally areâmay conclude that there is something dangerous or wrong about themselves. If a parent cannot relax or gets tense even on happy occasions, a child may conclude that joy and happiness are not okay. If a parent is uncomfortable around anger, children may conclude that anger is to be feared or that their own anger will damage others. These conclusions go deep and can last a lifetime.
More than anything, children want love. When you are a helpless, tiny creature in a world of giants in which events happen that you don't understand and can't controlâa “blooming, buzzing confusion,” as William James called an infant's experienceâa parent who loves you and whom you can trust and love is the top priority for survival. Children need not only love but also all that goes with it: nurturing touch; acceptance; safety; belonging; being seen for who they are; and the freedom to laugh, cry, rage, and be afraid. Because they need love and acceptance so desperately, children will take them in any form they can get them. When they don't get love, they'll construe what
ever they do getâincluding unhealthy controlâas love. Therein lie the seeds of problems later in life.
The most unfortunate parallel between controlling families and destructive cults is that parental control becomes internalized in children, just as cult dogma becomes internalized in cult members. No parent can be present twenty-four hours a day. But controlling parents don't have to physically be there because the family system installs an omnipresent inner controller in the child. These twenty-four-hour internalized parents, with their nagging commentary, second-guessing, and criticism, can perpetuate deprivation, perfectionism, and speech-and-feeling control well into adult life. This inner control may surface in the form of poor interpersonal boundaries, feelings of unworthiness, lowered expectations, self-loathing, fear of closeness, or poor self-image.
Looking back, it may be alarming to see how controlled, even “brainwashed” you were as a child. Yet, like members of cults or prisoners of war, you had little choice. You didn't do anything wrong. Anybody in such a closed system would have suffered. Knowing this, you can assure yourself that:
You are not crazy
.
You didn't make it up
.
Overcontrol really happened
.
It was painful and destructive
.
You could not help but internalize controlling parental voices
.
These realizations open the door for a further realization that can pave the way for you to let go of much of the destructive legacy of childhood overcontrol:
Â
If you could not help but internalize controlling voices, then many of your self-criticisms, fears, and doubts are not yours, nor are they your true voice. They are merely messages from your internalized parents. They are relics from a controlled past. They are simply bad habits. And you can change them
.
Exercise for Understanding Overcontrol and the Internalized Parents
Recall an encounter with a parent or any controlling person and check off in the first column which of the Dirty Dozen control methods they used.
Then write down any self-critical thoughts you recall having during or after the encounter. These are messages from your internalized parents. In the second column, check off the kinds of control these messages from your internalized parents
represent
.
Parents used | Â Â Internalized parents use | |
Food control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Body control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Boundary control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Social control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Decision control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Speech control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Emotion control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Thought control |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Bullying |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Depriving |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Confusing |   ⢠|     ⢠|
Manipulating |   ⢠|     ⢠|