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Dear Cali Chica:
After writing to you yesterday I realized I made a mistake when I wrote to you that your parents (I see your mother as the dominant parent) communicated to you that they need you to survive. I think your mother communicated to you something like: I am suffering, I am drowning, I am weak, I may be dying.
The core belief: they need me to survive, without me they will drown, I must be super, be their lifeguard or else they will die, that was your conclusion and proposed solution to the situation. You took it upon yourself, as children so often do, to rescue the parents so that they will be able to survive so.. that you will be able to survive.
Point is, they, neither your mother nor your father saw the little girl Cali Chica as a lifeguard. Neither one saw you as their rescue. They still don’t.
You wrote: “the thesis is that no matter what I do or don’t do, what I say or don’t say… she will always be the same. She will continue to go up and down, curse me then cry to me, be happy, be miserable, feel like she’s losing her mind, be ecstatic with glee- all of which has nothing at all to do with my actions”-
I believe it is true, and will add to the last sentence above: … all of which has nothing at all to do with who Cali Chica is. They don’t value you as a person but as a mean to an end, the end being relieving themselves of distress when they are distressed, and providing moments of ecstasy and glee when in need of such.
The law of action means, again, that every time you avail yourself to being used and abused by your parents, you choose to use and abuse another, yourself and other people.
I remember hearing the following a long time ago: we are not born to our mother/parents, we are born through them, that is, we don’t belong to them, not their property to do with us as they please. It makes sense. After all, the mother has sex and gives birth, she did not design the fetus, oversaw the process of the zygote developing to a human being. She only had sex and well, then she had to give birth, the baby had to exit, she didn’t choose that part either. Who you are has a lot more to do with nature, evolution, something way, way bigger than this particular woman and that particular man.
Bottom line, your parents do not value you as a person. They value you as a thing to use and abuse: Distressed? Dump the distress into that thing. Miserable? Call the thing and share it, transfer it. Angry? Blame the thing, make the thing feel bad. Need a pick up, a moment of ecstasy and glee? Have the thing do this and that to bring that about.
If Bodhi’s mother in the shelter was a good mother, that is, did not use and abuse Bodhi, but showed him affection, Bodhi himself would have loved to visit her. He would have been motivated to spend time with her. And she would not have demanded that he visits.
As a child you don’t have any experience but the one you have. Imagine, now, an experience that you could have had but didn’t. That of having parents who were kind to you, who didn’t use you or abuse you, parents who valued you as a person. Think how that would have looked like, sounded like. If that was the case, you would have loved to check in with them, to share good experiences with them. You would have been motivated to do so, enjoying their company in person and on the phone as much as they would have enjoyed yours.
anita