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#101 |
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x'); DROP TABLE FFR;--
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 6,332
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mi40: If you've had a relatively good upbringing, it's going to be hard for you to understand or empathize with those who've had legitimately bad childhoods. This is because you can't do much more than project your own experiences onto others even though it's all invalid extrapolation (you literally just did this, too).
To be bitter is to be mired in perpetual agony, jealousy, pessimism, and cynicism -- to constantly dwell on things and allow them to taint your worldview even when it's not rational to do so. You can acknowledge that your childhood was horrible without being bitter. Many problems can be solved with ample discussion and lots of parsing/contextualizing, which is what good therapy can accomplish. "Either make amends to his family or completely cut them out" -- this is only half right. When you have parents like Dossar's, it's oftentimes not possible to make amends. Some people are toxic to the core and cannot be reasoned with. Most people don't understand this. At the end of the day, most people feel some kind of attachment to their parents. Even through all the disagreements, you're all still on the same side and see utility in repairing burned bridges. For toxic families, this is counterproductive, and such malignant individuals are not acting in your best interest. The best way to deal with these people is to cut them out completely. "Proactive indifference" is just a veiled way to say "get over it," which is useless advice. No shit -- it'd be great if it were that simple. Execution is a million times harder than simply stating an idealized goal. Here's a secret pathway to becoming a billionaire, don't tell anyone: Invent commercial flying hover-car technology. You're welcome. Last edited by Reincarnate; 08-20-2013 at 11:25 PM.. |
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#102 | |
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FFR Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,251
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I'm not a fan of rehashing my past. It's full of things that basically make me more of a cynical person. A lot of stuff where people lose my trust and I get stuck in the circle of not wanting to trust people in general. |
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#103 | |
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2 is poo
Join Date: Sep 2005
Age: 34
Posts: 6,687
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Then, the year before last, her appendix decided to rupture. She had to be hospitalized almost immediately, underwent routine surgery for appendicitis, etc. I waited for the doctors to bring her back to the room afterwards, and I brought her flowers and a teddy bear (the nurses thought that I, 19 at the time, was her husband). It took much longer for her parents to even step foot in the hospital. According to her, the majority of the visit revolved around her mother blaming her for that ruptured appendix because it made her seem like she was just an attention-seeking wimp, and when did her mother ever play that kind of "poor me" card when she was in serious pain, and maybe she should stop doing this that and the other thing, all of which were obvious contributing factors to her jeopardized health. Not once did her mother express concern for what had just happened, as if my friend had sought out appendicitis, and not once did her father interject to temper the nastiness. I think her mother finally called her an undeserving, unappreciative little cunt, and my friend called her a self-righteous, pompous cunt in return. Anyhow, from that point on, she essentially ceased all contact with them because of the endless stress associated with their toxicity. Sure, her parents may have given her the bare necessities for survival throughout childhood, but I think if you want to lead a psychologically and emotionally healthier lifestyle and get away from the constant rebukes and harsh criticisms, even from your biological family, and especially if it has been happening for a ridiculous period of time, you cannot just say "oh but I shot out of your vagina so it's not really that bad." Maybe you have to cut them out for a while, and hope for the unlikely event where they smarten up (probably too risky); or maybe you do have to cut them out completely, and start fresh. Last edited by smartdude1212; 08-20-2013 at 11:36 PM.. |
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#104 | ||
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x'); DROP TABLE FFR;--
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 6,332
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Last edited by Reincarnate; 08-20-2013 at 11:41 PM.. |
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#105 |
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2 is poo
Join Date: Sep 2005
Age: 34
Posts: 6,687
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I'd have to agree on that front. I know her father was fairly vocal about a lot of things that she did or the people with whom she chose to associate, but I suspect that some of those ideas were propagated from his wife's ramblings without so much as a second thought.
This is also why I harbour such cynicism toward relationships (perhaps I should preface that with "loving" or "committed" because I don't mean the standard, say, employer-employee relationship, since I feel as if that may not be so applicable here), because it often seems like one person is regularly silenced by another, and they subconsciously let it happen. Is this perhaps a result of not wanting to disagree for fear of being perceived as insignificant by one's significant other? I'm a huge proponent of openness -- despite my own personal shortcomings on the matter -- so it's almost unnerving when I see a couple agree on an issue yet I know that one of them does feel differently in some way. I suppose it's one way of weathering what could be a hell of an unpredictable storm. Last edited by smartdude1212; 08-20-2013 at 11:56 PM.. |
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#106 |
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Expect delays.
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Montreal, QC
Age: 33
Posts: 4,177
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All things considered, I think the majority of the people who have been posting in this thread had a shitty childhood. I am very lucky, mine was pretty calm. Just wondering, though, is there anyone else like me who experienced this destructive feeling of not having a "big enough pain" to complain about it? Again, it's fucking stupid, but I feel so isolated in my "perfect little life" that it makes me feel even worse about it.
Like, all the time. Or nvm, maybe I'm just sour because it's late again :< Still, I'm intrigued about this question. |
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#107 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,655
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i'm not saying everybody should stay silent about abuse, i was trying to tell dossar to rethink his relationship with his parents since he certainly seems to be pretty bitter (thinking about killing your family at some point is pretty serious) and he probably hasnt had a chance to seriously talk it over with his parents because they won't listen to him
if he can't change how your parents feel about him then it's best not to touch the subject or think about it.. nothing good comes out of feeling bitter towards parents who still gave enough of a shit to pay for their son's stuff what i'm telling dossar is, don't think about shit like revenge and just do well on your own while keeping a relatively stable relationship with your parents if they're still paying for your shit, after college you'll become independent
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#108 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,655
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i also lived with my mom alone who can't speak english and has serious anger management problems for a good 7-8 years and had a seriously rough relationship with her especially because of her and my religious & moral differences and i dealt with my mom by just thinking of her as a legal guardian who pays for my shit and yells at me worked for me so that's what i'm telling dossar, anecdotal evidence or not
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#109 | |
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2 is poo
Join Date: Sep 2005
Age: 34
Posts: 6,687
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I can understand the feeling of isolation though. As I said in response to Choof's story, I had never experienced thoughts of suicide or had any desire to hurt myself, so I couldn't relate to how he must feel after enduring that stuff and then encountering the happiest time of his life. I can, fortunately, relate to being happy, so I've chosen to connect and rejoice in the "I love life" sense -- no wishing for bigger, badder pains is necessary. |
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#110 |
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ddkdkd
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Vancouver Island
Posts: 792
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Well holy fuck man, it seems like you've been constantly attacked by parents who claim tough love all the time. I mean my parents attacked me but for you it just seems like they got a kick out of doing it. Seeing as making amends hasn't worked so well for you/probably won't because of how stubborn your family seems to be, I hope you can be successful enough to look back and say "I'm better than that". Anyways, if you ever have some family problems in the future, I'm always willing to help
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#111 | |
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x'); DROP TABLE FFR;--
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 6,332
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In abusive families, money can be used for all sorts of purposes -- usually a form of control or abuse-justification. |
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#112 | |
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[Nobody liked that.]
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 3,368
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A co-worker of mine, who is becoming a very good friend, has been having issues with his mother for years. She steals from him, forces him to pay the rent for the whole household because she wastes all her money gambling ect. But he won't tell her to fuck off because they're "family." That doesn't make any sense to me honestly and it sucks to sit back and watch it happen to him. But I can't help but kind of feel it's slightly misplaced sympathy because he's enabling her on his own by not doing anything. Like, the fact my mother had sex, became impregnated and gave birth to me doesn't feel like a reason to let her treat me like trash I guess is the way to phrase it. Maybe I'm just a heartless douche bag for this, but being related to me doesn't really mean all that much.
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Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun Dun beep |
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#113 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,655
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better than throwing your kid out to be homeless for sure
you wouldnt spend thousands of dollars over many years to a complete stranger you have absolutely zero fucks about, legal obligation or not
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#114 |
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Can't handle my ÆØÅ
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I'd share mine but I'd need help from someone I could talk to who could write for me, as putting my words/thoughts onto paper/type it out is ironically one of the reasons parts of my life has been miserable in the first place.
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#115 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,655
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how is it ignorance? i'm not allowed to voice my opinions just because my parents didn't smash a glass table?
how am i fucking wrong when i'm not arguing wrong or right i'm just trying to give a perspective get your head out of your ass dude
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#116 |
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,655
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this isn't a debate contest rubix, i just offered some opinions (personal anecdote included) and here you are saying everything i'm saying is apparently wrong, too bad you're not offering any actual advice to dossar (who i was making my posts to, not you by the way)
you can think what you want and i'll think what i want, but neither of us are genius psychologists and therapists and i'm just trying to give my own advice (which i've gotten from my peers some of who also had hard upbringings) so lay off the hostile "you're wrong and i'm 100% right" tone
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#117 | |
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x'); DROP TABLE FFR;--
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 6,332
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It's ignorance because you keep blindly asserting "But they spent money!" as if that's sufficient grounds to dismiss/discredit/marginalize the effects of abuse, because you don't understand that spending money doesn't always equate to implicit care/support/etc in the normal sense of the construct. I could give you countless examples (from a variety of upbringings -- not just my own) where parents spend money to control / uphold an external image for their own benefit / justify other abuses / keep victims dependent / etc. Yes, you're giving a perspective, but it's ridden with confirmation bias. You're ignoring all the possible situations in which your explanation clearly doesn't work, and yet you're offering that advice to Dossar when any cursory examination of the implications would reveal that it's profoundly counterproductive. You don't need to be a "genius psychologist/therapist" to understand why this is harmful advice in Dossar's situation. It's actually one of the very arguments that many abusers will tell their victims in order to keep standards low and maintain their abuse as the perceived norm. Understand that even if your intentions are good here, what you're saying is extremely harmful if someone takes it to heart because they don't know any better. Last edited by Reincarnate; 08-21-2013 at 01:01 AM.. |
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#118 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Dec 2008
Age: 35
Posts: 6,205
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Dads. Who needs em.
...... ;~;
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#119 | |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Dec 2008
Age: 35
Posts: 6,205
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Sometimes I think back and wonder if I had disappointed him or something. And then that causes me to evaluate my life as a whole and it's just general bad shit. Bleh.
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#120 | |
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Mr. Skeltal
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Lowell,MA
Age: 29
Posts: 1,506
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Well this thread was a great read, guess its time for my story. I'm tapping this out on my phone so please forgive the typos/autocorrect.
Lol looking at this now, this looks more like a summary of school than of my life, also left a couple of things I wanted to touch on out, oh well. I might come back and fix it up when I can get on my computer. Edit: oops forgot to say I moved back to public school freshman year
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Last edited by .Gazelle.; 08-22-2013 at 12:27 AM.. |
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