Read If You Had Controlling Parents Online
Authors: Dan Neuharth
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ertain issues can be especially challenging in balancing your relationship with controlling parents:
Facing Parental Mortality
Faced with the awareness of parents' aging, many feel a pressure to get problems with their parents worked out before it is “too late.” Such pressure can make setting new boundaries or reducing contact evoke feelings of disloyalty, even if it is the healthiest move.
It's important to avoid duplicating your role as a controlled childâthat of satisfying your parents' needs before your own in order to avoid their wrath. If you want contact with a parent and can figure out a way to do it so that you gain more than you lose, your path is clear. If you don't want contact with a parent, or if you want contact but can see no way to be in contact without losing more than you gain, hold your ground. If you cannot yet resolve the dilemma, your best choice may simply be to have an awareness of the dilemma and proceed with your life until clearer options evolve.
You can only make choices based on what you know and feel now. The key is to do or say what you must, regardless of the response. It can be upsetting if a parent dies before you've worked it out or had a chance to say your piece. But, even after they're gone, you can still say what you have to say in a letter, meditation, or poem to them.
I've found people who grew up controlled worry that if there is going to be a rapprochement, it's entirely up to them. This may be a disempowering double standard. There is no “have to” or “should” about your relationship with your parents. Few people die with finished relationships. If you act in your own best interests and later come to feel you acted mistakenly, you may be sad. Yet if you're not acting in your own best interests, you're probably already sad. Have compassion for yourself. It won't help to add self-blame to what is one of the most difficult issues of your life.
A handful of those I interviewed said they expect to feel relief when a parent dies but expressed guilt for these feelingsâa not uncommon dilemma. On the one hand, you may need time and distance from one or both of your parents or realize that reaching out would only invite further abuse. On the other hand, you may wish for more contact. Feeling unable to give up hopes of connection with parents but also feeling unwilling to return to a relationship where you will be hurt, you wait. In this situation, the prospect of a parent's eventual death can bring a sense of reliefâalong with grief, guilt, and lossâbecause it promises to end this state of limbo.
It was not until her parents diedâher father seven years ago and her mother four years agoâthat Patty, the fifty-three-year-old counselor, allowed herself to come to grips with her father's physical and verbal abuse: “When my father died, I felt relief. Yet he did love me as best he could. When he died, it was one less person on earth who loved me, and that was sad.”
Exercise for Facing a Parent's Mortality
Visualize giving your parent's eulogy or writing his or her obituary. For those who fear parents dying with “unfinished emotional business,” this exercise can crystallize your feelings. Say exactly what you feel about your parent and how she or he affected you. Tell your whole truth, good and bad, including what your parent did badly and what he or she did well. By writing or privately speaking what you'd like to say
or wish you had said at your parent's funeral, you can better clarify what you might want to say to your parent while she or he is still aliveâor find greater peace with your parent's memory if he or she is no longer living.
Financial Ties to Controlling Parents
Some controlling parents use money or gifts as a way to express approval and love. If you separate from your parents and their gifts stop, you will probably feel as if their approval and love has also stopped, and on some level it probably has.
You may have conflicting feelings about financial ties to your parents. One woman, for example, recounted her mixed feelings when she gets an occasional twenty or fifty dollars from her mother. She admits, “I want to send it back but I can use it.”
Another woman said of her Using mother, “She controls a substantial amount of money and I don't want to be disinherited. I've earned it. I figure I'm making her happy. I'm pretending to be a dutiful daughter by having dinner with her once a month. Even though I know I'm not a dutiful daughter, she's happy with it.”
At the other extreme are people who grew up controlled but get no financial help from their parents and expect none. Rather than strings-attached control, people with this experience may struggle with a sense of deprivation. For example, a woman whose parents lived lavishly but shared little of it with the children feels hurt each time her father visits. He expects her to pay for dinner even though he is well off and she's struggling financially: “His narcissism really hurts. It reminds me of all I didn't get growing up.” In some ways, her father's detachment has made it easier for her to separate emotionally, though the pain of deprivation is still great.
Family financial ties can be supercharged with guilt, secrecy, and anxiety, and everyone's situation is unique. Some people who grew up controlled may desire financial support from their parents or expect an inheritance and don't want to jeopardize it. Others may feel phony by disguising their true feelings about their parents in order to gain financially. Hiding your true feelings from parents in order to retain an inheritance isn't “wrong” any more than is refusing to take anything from parents to avoid feeling compromised. The key is to make a choice based on your values and find the solution that, however imperfect, honors your needs and standards.
Relationships with Siblings as Adults
As you emotionally separate from your parents, you may find that relations with brothers or sisters can be healing or upsettingâor both. If a sibling also felt controlled, you may be able to compare notes and validate each other's experiences. If a sibling loyal to your parents gets mad at you for “making trouble” or tries to convince you to deny your reality, it can exacerbate your wounding.
Your siblings cannot emotionally separate from the family before they are ready, just as you could not. Brothers or sisters may have had a different experience than you did while growing up. They may not want to give up illusions about the family. They may be afraid of one or both parents. They may fear validating your position because they would feel unbearable guilt about not having protected you. If you were the child most targeted by parents, your siblings may feel guilty for receiving less abuse than you did.
If you have broken or reduced contact with a parent, it may be hard to listen when a sibling talks about a birthday party or holiday visit to Mom or Dad. So remember, it's normal to feel left outâeven when you choose not to participate. If a sibling sees visiting a parent as a privilege, and you see it as a trauma, it's hard not to feel estranged.
You may be able to talk with a sibling about this. Ideally, you both can feel heard and “agree to disagree.” But this may not always be possible. Part of emotionally leaving home may include emotionally separating from a sibling.
Sometimes connecting with siblings can aid healing in surprising ways. One woman whose mother pitted her against her brother in childhood had no contact with him for twenty years. When she reestablished contact, she found him even more controlling than her mother: “That set to rest any doubts that I grew up in a dysfunctional family.”
By contrast, another woman was astounded when her younger sister told her how her emotional support had kept her alive years earlier when the younger sister had been a suicidal teenager. Until the revelation, the woman had never known the extent of her sister's pain or how supportive she herself had been. Since then, the two have become closer.
Holidays and Family Rituals
Holidays and family rituals are laden with emotional tugs. Parental birthdays and Mother's and Father's Days are supposed to honor par
ents, but how can you feel good about honoring someone who dishonored you? Year-end holidays may feel like a time for families to be festive, but how can you feel festive coming together in an environment of control, dishonesty, or manipulation?
Despite the roadblocks, holidays offer opportunities for you to observe your level of individuation and act in healthier ways. For example, deciding how much and what kind of contact you want with your parents at holidaysâbased on what is healthiest for you rather than on historical practiceâcan be an empowering step. One woman and her mother have agreed on a “Christmas truce” from Thanksgiving to mid-January, during which they don't talk about family issues or emotionally laden subjects.
It may help to
expect
that a visit to your parents will be stressful so you'll be less disappointed if you feel pressured. And if the visit isn't stressful, you're bound to be pleasantly surprised.
Exercise for Holiday Angst
Choosing cards for parental birthdays and holidays can be tough. It's hard to buy the ones that say “You were always there for me” if your parents weren't. Humorous cards might be misinterpreted. Buying a flowery, bland card may feel like selling out. You have so much you were never allowed to say, so why say something without any meaning?
One solution is to create and even send a more honest controlling-family card. Perhaps something like: “Even Though You Hurt Me, Thank You for What You Gave Me,” or “Overall, It Was Still Better Than Being in an Orphanage.”
Resources for Balancing
Bloomfield, Harold.
Making Peace with Your Parents
. New York: Ballantine Books, 1983.
Cocola, Nancy, and Arlene Matthews.
How to Manage Your Mother: Skills and Strategies to Improve Mother-Daughter Relationships
. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992.
Cohen, Susan, and Edward Cohen.
Mothers Who Drive Their Daughters Crazy: Ten Types of “Impossible” Moms and How to Deal with Them
. Rocklin, CA: Prima, 1997.
Engel, Beverly.
Divorcing a Parent
. New York: Ballantine Books, 1990.
Engel, Lewis, and Tom Ferguson.
Hidden Guilt: How to Stop Punishing Yourself and Enjoy the Happiness You Deserve
. New York: Pocket Books, 1990.
Farmer, Steven.
Adult Children of Abusive Parents
. New York: Ballantine Books, 1989.
Secunda, Victoria.
When You and Your Mother Can't Be Friends
. New York: Dell Publishing, 1990.
Be not afraid of going slowly; be only afraid of standing still
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motionally leaving home and balancing your relationship with your parents can help lay the groundwork for Step Three:
Redefining your life
in terms of who you are and where you want to go, not in terms of your parents or your past.
Here are nine paths to growth and healing that I have found particularly valuable for those who grew up controlled. They focus directly on undoing the distortions of power, size, feeling, thinking, relating, and identity that come with controlling territory. For each path, I offer exercises that my clients and I have found helpful, along with suggestions for further reading. You might test one or two paths and see if they benefit you. And, please, don't fall into the perfectionistic trap of thinking that you must do all nine or that you have to do them perfectly!
The nine paths:
1. Identify and Pursue Your Passions
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it
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We are fluid, not static, beings. At any given moment each of us is either growing, maintaining, or shrinking in terms of our sense of self and personal power. One helpful measuring tool is a simple self-assessment you can use anytime, anywhere, particularly when you are feeling confused, self-blaming, or under assault. Ask yourself, “Right now, am I growing or shrinking?” Notice what makes you grow. Growth generally comes from facing challenges; feeling seen and heard; giving to others in a balanced way; meeting or exceeding your expectations; being creative; and, perhaps more than anything, pursuing what you are passionate about. Notice what makes you shrink. Noticing can help you identify and alter constricting behavior or situations and open the door to growth-oriented behaviors.
Exercises
Resources
Anderson, Nancy.
Work with Passion: How to Do What You Love for a Living
. San Rafael, CA: New World, 1995.
Bolles, Richard Nelson.
What Color Is Your Parachute
? Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 1997.
Sher, Barbara, and Annie Gottlieb.
Wishcraft: How to Get What You Really Want
. New York: Ballantine Books, 1986.
2. Make a Place for Yourself in the World
Every society honors its live conformists and its dead troublemakers
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If you grew up controlled, you grew up without a Bill of Rights. Now's the time to assert your rights in the world.
If you felt small and powerless around your parents, you may feel small and powerless around others in your work or personal lifeâespecially authority figures or controlling people. Exercises one through five below can help you develop more assertiveness.
Making a place for yourself in the world also includes giving yourself permission to express yourself in new and different ways. Exercises six and seven give you ideas on how to do this.
Exercises
a. Confront it.
Say, “That sounded like an attack. Was it meant to be?” Another approach is to ask, “Would you repeat that?” After they do, say, “That's what I thought you said,” and then say no more. Your lack of reaction can knock critical people off their stride and silence them.
b. Play dumb,
asking questions endlessly so attackers have to repeat and clarify their criticisms. By putting the explanatory focus on them, you increase your own power and dilute their attacks.
c. Respond with a non sequitur.
For example, if someone critically asks why you did something, give a completely nonrelated answer such as, “My dog is due for her rabies shot.” Or distract by completely changing the subject. Or ask an attacker a question you know she or he wants to answer. Or simply agree with them and move on.
Resources
Butler, Pamela.
Self-Assertion for Women
. San Francisco: HarperSF, 1992.
Evans, Patricia.
The Verbally Abusive Relationship: How to Recognize It and How to Respond
. Holbrook, MA: Bob Evans, 1992.
Napier, Nancy.
Getting Through the Day: Strategies for Adults Hurt as Children
. New York: W. W. Norton, 1993.
Smith, Manuel.
When I Say No, I Feel Guilty
. New York: Bantam Books, 1985.
3. Use Your Feelings as Allies
Sometimes a scream is better than a thesis
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Since many controlled children had their physical needs better taken care of than their emotional ones, feelings can be one of the most important areas in which to seek balance. Your parents may have lopped off some of your emotional limbs. By letting your feelings branch out, you'll grow stronger.
Emotions give you physical clues as to their identity. You may feel a pulsing in your ears as you get angry; a tightness across your jaw or chest when you are afraid; quickened or slowed breathing when you are worried. Use these “hints” to alert you to oncoming feelings so that you can attend to them rather than shutting them off.
It's also important to honor your sensitivity, especially if it was squashed or ridiculed by a controlling family. Controllers tend to be uncomfortable with others' sensitivity and send messages that sensitivity is a flaw or a sin. Yet sensitivity to feelings, to others, and to yourself is truly a gift. Accepting and promoting your sensitivity can be healing after a lifetime of being shamed for it.
Exercises
Resources
Aron, Elaine.
The Highly Sensitive Person
. New York: Broadway Books, 1996.
Goleman, Daniel.
Emotional Intelligence
. New York: Bantam Books, 1997.
Lee, John, and Bill Stott.
Facing the Fire: Experiencing and Expressing Anger Appropriately
. New York: Bantam Books, 1995.
Lerner, Harriet.
The Dance of Anger
. New York: HarperPerennial, 1985.
Rubin, Theodore.
The Angry Book
. New York: Collier, 1993.
4. Deepen Connections with Others Without Losing Your Sense of Self
It is easier to live through someone else than to become complete yourself
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ETTY
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Intimate relationships can be difficult if you grew up controlled. Just as your parents' control strategies came one relationship too lateâthey controlled in response to how they were raised, not in response to youâyour strategies to avoid control may not be helpful with your friends and loved ones.
Growth lies through balance: keeping a healthy sense of self, reality-testing your fears and perceptions, and allowing yourself to recognize that your childhood was then and this is now. If you grew up in social isolation, even a single, corrective relationship based on trust and respectâwhether it is with a mate, friend, therapist, or coworkerâwill help you make great strides in undoing a lifetime of control.
Exercises one through five offer ways to maintain your sense of
self in relation to others. Exercises six through nine offer ways to reach out and touch others.
Exercises