GROWING
UP
THE DAY WE GREW UP
Most of us can remember
the day we grew up. It was the day our parents did us
the favor of being so unreasonable that we said good-bye
to our dependence on them forever and entered into the
adult world of choices.
Looking back we realize that the unreasonable thing our
parents did that day wasn’t quite as awful as it seemed.
After all, since they are only human, they had been at
least as unreasonable many times before. What was so
special about this day was that we were ready! we
had finally matured enough to know that we could take
better care of ourselves than they ever could.
Before that day, we had
always looked to our parents when we needed help. Since
that day, we have looked to ourselves first and to our
“family of choice” after that.
FAMILIES OF CHOICE
Adults choose the
people they count on for emotional support. We
look around and decide: “Who can I rely
on?” There are some relatives, some
friends, even some coworkers and professionals who
have been kind, helpful, and respectful and can be
counted on to treat us well. We may not call these
people “family,” but in an emotional sense they are.
This is our “family of choice.”
IF YOU DIDN’T GROW UP
Many
adults are still dependent
on their birth families.
They and their parents conspired
to continue their dependency
into adult life. If this
is your situation, the first
thing to ask yourself is: “What
do I think I still need from
them”? The second thing
to ask yourself is: “What
price am I paying for being
unable or unwilling to provide
this for myself”?
Get what you need on your
own. Then have
the best independent friendship you
can possibly have with your
parents.
WHO’S TAKING CARE OF WHOM?
Paradoxically,
people who never let go of
their parents are people
who never had “true parents”
in the first place.
A true parent
is someone who realizes it
is their job to take care
of their children, and it
is not a child’s job to take
care of their parents! If
you had parents who never
grew up themselves, they
probably Insisted that you
“behave” or “succeed” or
“stay out of trouble” just
like all parents do. But
you were supposed
to do these things for them,
not for yourself. It’s as
if you were their “parent,” and
they were desperately needy
children.
BRAIN-WASHING
“What
would the neighbors think
of me if they saw what you
did?” “If you loved me you
wouldn’t do things like that.”
“Mrs. Caruthers down the
street has a nice daughter.
She’s not like you.” “You
are going to make me lose
control”! “Come on, make
Mama happy. Put a big smile
on you face!”
After years of being treated
like this, it’s no wonder
many adults try to justify
their dependence by saying
they would grow
up “but my parents need me
too much now that they are
older.” (Their parents have
needed them too much since
they were born!)
It’s so much easier to believe
that you are being benevolent
than to face that you are
still craving the parent
you needed, never had, and
never will have.
BREAK THE CHAIN!
If
your grandparents never grew
up, your parents probably
never grew up. If your parents
never grew up, you probably
never grew up. If
you never grew up, your children
may never grow up!
Please break this chain!
Let your generation be the
one that says: “There have
been too many wasted lives.”
Don’t expect
your children to take care
of you in any way at all!
Do choose
your own new “family of choice.”
Within your new family of
choice, mutually take
care of each other.
Do get
professional help if you
need it. (Future generations
would thank you if they knew…..)
|