Home→Forums→Tough Times→Deep Routed Resentment
- This topic has 5 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 8 years, 8 months ago by Anonymous.
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March 11, 2016 at 7:05 am #98665SparkieParticipant
I have deep routed resentment towards my parents (Mother in particular) that try as I might, I just can’t seem to shake.
I had a pretty good childhood, although there was a nagging feeling from around the age of 5 that something wasn’t right. I was adamant for years that I was adopted. With a bee in my bonnet the questions swirled around my head for years. I have two younger sisters, and I always felt on the outside.
Aged 11 I sneaked into my parents room and read my mums diary (terrible I know, but I was 11!), I discovered that the man brining me up, the person I called Dad, wasn’t actually my Dad.
It destroyed me, and from them until my early 20’s I got involved in a lot of bad things. I resented my parents so much from keeping the secret from me. From stealing to taking drugs, staying out to all hours, any way I could hurt my parents I did. Almost felt like pay back (as terrible as that sounds).
I fell pregnant at 16, and two months after my 17th birthday I had a daughter (she’s 18 now, and I’m so very proud of her). My parents decided that ‘you’ve made your bed, you lie in it!’ I was told there was no room at home and I had to move out. So I did, I moved into a little flat, on my own (my daughters father was long gone).
I found it so very hard on my own. Friends quickly disappeared once the novelty had worn off, so it was me and my baby.
Aside from all of this, aged around 4 my uncle (mothers brother), made me touch him in a sexual way. I’ve NEVER breathed a word of this to anyone, your guys are the first. I’ve not even told my husband!
I often cry in the bath, this tends to be the time that the thoughts enter my head.
I resent my Mum for lying to me and still to this day wont tell me know my real dad is (I’m 35), I feel I don’t know who I am. My step-dad (an amazing man), gets very upset when any conversations regarding him not being my biological father.
I feel I cannot raise the questions I have with my parents for fear of upsetting them.
I just feel stuck. I carry shame of past actions from my teenage years, resentment of my parents and uncle. I know deep down I need to ‘man up’ and sit down and talk to my parents but at this point I really don’t feel I can.
As for my uncle, he is still around, but I don’t have any contact. I don’t think I will ever tell anyone in my family what he did. I worry no-one will believe me and call me a liar.
I have my own family now and just want to move on and be happy………………..March 11, 2016 at 8:29 am #98677GeorgeParticipantHello Sparkie
You have been through very hurtfull situations and it seems to me you are carrying the pain with you, alone, for a very long time. Since this is the first time you are sharing your memories i want to tell you that the pain can stop and you can move on and be happy.
I was adamant for years that I was adopted. With a bee in my bonnet the questions swirled around my head for years
Aged 11 I sneaked into my parents room and read my mums diary (terrible I know, but I was 11!)
It seems to me after all that what you did was not so terrible. You had a question and you were looking for answers. Is it terrible for an archaelogist to search for clues of his/her hypothesis in “secret” tombs or for the historian in lost documents? Of course not. In the same spirit, you as a child, was interested in a question deeply personal. It was the natural thing to do. Maybe the guilt you are feeling has something to do with the reaction from your parents? Or from their prohibitions(and don’t we all know, parents can be a bit too strict)?Aside from all of this, aged around 4 my uncle (mothers brother), made me touch him in a sexual way. I’ve NEVER breathed a word of this to anyone, your guys are the first. I’ve not even told my husband! This sounds terrible and painfull to bear. I have similar experiences as a child, of sexual nature, that i still try to resolve through psychoanalysis. I sympathise with your pain and i can only tell you this:
Honestly, i believe a therapeutical relationship with another person will heal your wounds so you can free your self from torment. It does not matter so much the nature of the therapeutical relationship. I chose psychoanalysis for example because my pain was of past traumatic events and psychoanalysis was said that it could cure them. What matters is your resurfaced will to share your experiences and the fact that people are willing to help you be relieved of your burden. Human contact, in other words, is what important.If you have financial difficulties please try to find an economical way through healthcare or an mutual agreement with a therapist to begin the path of self-recovery. Also, please share any more information you want through this post. I will try to answer and give information or advice to anything you want, as well as, other tinybuddits.
Take care Sparkie
GeorgeMarch 11, 2016 at 9:57 am #98691AnonymousGuestDear Sparkie:
You wrote: “there was a nagging feeling from around the age of 5 that something wasn’t right.” Then you found out at 11 that your father was not your biological father. It seems to me that you locked into this fact as what “wasn’t right.”
You also remember your uncle touching you in a sexual way when you were 4 and although this was definitely wrong in any and every sense of wrong, it was not all that was wrong in your childhood, far from it.
The fact that you didn’t tell your mother or father about the sexual touching for fear you will be called a liar and not believed means to me that you were not believed previously and outside the molestation, that you were already called a liar or such was communicated to you. You feared to not be believed because you were already not believed, not validated, and alone.
Am I correct? Partly correct? Please let me know.
anita
March 11, 2016 at 10:11 am #98693HippieChickParticipantI think you need to discuss the inappropriate touching with someone you can trust. Even if that means a therapist as it is obviously still affecting you greatly. There needs to be healthy coping put into place to deal with this in order to start getting anything else sorted.
As far as your father, I understand the desire to know who your biological father may be. However, please realize that you have a man that was willing to step in and claim you as his own for all those years. He was trying to do a good thing and is understandably upset that you’re now calling him “not your father”. There are many children out there raised by non biological parents.
The issues from after you got pregnant are something else that a good counselor or therapist could help you deal with. I think you’d benefit greatly and be much happier in general if you’d deal with these past issues head on in a healthy setting.
March 11, 2016 at 10:33 am #98694SparkieParticipantThank you all for taking the time to read and reply. Hearing different opinions has certainly made me look at things from a different point of view. I feel I should clarify as I didn’t come across very well. I adore my dad. He has been with my mother since I was two. The fact he chose us is very special, he really is a wonderful man. Unfortunately my love for him stops me from asking questions through fear of hurting him. I don’t know that I would want any relationship with by biological father but I have so many questions. Do I have any of his features etc. I suppose I would just like to close that chapter of my life. I shall heed your advice and seek guidance. I definitely feel speaking to someone and working through my issues would help! Thank you all again, you’ve opened my eyes from my tunnel vision!
March 12, 2016 at 12:29 am #98787AnonymousInactiveSparkie,
Thank you for sharing your personal story with us on here. My heart goes out to you.
You being violated as a child is something you should discuss with someone you feel comfortable with. Do whatever you feel is right for you to heal from that. Whether it’s seeking a counselor who specializes with things like that, a family member, a friend, someone you love or all of the above. You are not alone in this, as many women have been victims of molestation when they were a child/teen. You are supported in this and not alone.
It is probably best that you continue to stay away from your uncle and cut him out of your life for good. As what he did was criminal and you don’t need to be reminded of that, so I would act like he’s deceased so that you’re not reminded of the heinous act he committed towards you.
You have the right to ask questions about you biological father all you want. As those types of questions should be respected by the person who needs to give you those answers. Both Mom and step-dad are old and grown enough to be able to answer you honestly without hesitation. There’s nothing you need to fear for wanting to know the facts about your biological identity. There’s nothing abnormal about it at all actually. You’re grown and deserve answers when it comes to your biological identity, always.
Sending you lots of love, positivity and light you way. 🙂
M
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