Home→Forums→Tough Times→I haven't spoken to my parents since Feb
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October 5, 2017 at 6:39 am #171669LeafParticipant
I am a 29 years old woman, turning 30 this year.
I’ve being avoiding talking to my parents because I got a divorce and I don’t have the courage to tell my parents. It’s been 7 months now. My mom and I texted each other couple of times during this period of time but have not talked for longer than 5 mins.
My ex and I separated because of my infidelity. I never had the courage to tell my parents that we divorced and why. I feel this huge amount of shame and disappointment in myself because I feel like I’ve failed my parents.
Growing up I was raised as an overachiever. My dad is a verbal abuser and rarely shows his emotions except anger. My mom doesn’t love my dad and has been secretly dating another man. When I was young, my mom put all of her effort on me. I was doing really well in school and at work. I got a really nice job after graduation making more than most of my peers. When I as 25, I moved to a foreign country for my ex dreaming to marry him one day.
The life in a completely foreign country&culture started to have mixed impacts on me. I realised that my ex and I started to grow apart, mainly that we wanted different things in life at that time. I found myself having this resentment towards him because I gave up an insanely well-paid &promising job that I really loved due to moving, and I couldn’t find an equally satisfying one in the new city. I mostly hung out with him and his friends and I felt as if I was losing my own identity.
I also had resentment towards my parents. I hated when my mom compared me with other kids. I hated the way they showed their care through asking me if I have a secure job and how much money I make. I hated that she badmouth some of the relatives that I actually respect. I hated that she ruined my father’s image in my head But I still wanted to move my parents closer to me. My mom always rejected the idea but then also complained to me that I went away from home too far and joked that I was abandoning them. She also often told me “Never move your father close to you once you have a family. He’d ruin your beautiful life.”
I now live abroad far from my parents. I am trying to have a new life with a new job and my own friends. But I still couldn’t answer their calls or texts because it’s too painful to face them. On the other hand I know they’re suffering as well not knowing how am I doing or what’s going on with my life and that creates huge amount of anxiety for me.
I really want to just get rid of all these anxiety and fear, to face my parents with truth but I don’t know which one would hurt more.
October 5, 2017 at 9:06 am #171711AnonymousGuestDear Leaf:
As children, and adult children, we often believe what is not true about our parents. The reason is the child’s need to feel safety with the parents, a motivation we often don’t outgrow. So when you wrote: “I know they’re (your parents) suffering as well not knowing how am I doing or what’s going on with my life”- you may very well be wrong and they are not suffering.
What is certain is that it is you who are suffering believing your parents are suffering. It is certain because you wrote: “I know they’re suffering as well… and that creates huge amount of anxiety for me”.
You wrote: ” I feel this huge amount of shame and disappointment in myself because I feel like I’ve failed my parents” – when you really see your parents for who they are, when you truly eliminate the motivation to see them as all loving and good in spite of everything, then you realize that … well, your failures are small in comparison. I mean, your mother is secretly dating another man, for one.
I hope you post again with your thoughts and feelings.
anita
October 5, 2017 at 9:24 am #171715i_like_adviceParticipantHi Leaf,
You definitely have a lot going on and a lot to deal with.
To start–just tell your parents that you got a divorce. I know it’s hard, but imagine they live another 20 years–you’re going to have to tell them at some point. You’re also creating a great deal of anxiety around the fact that you haven’t told them.
I also really recommend counseling if you can get it in your country. There’s clearly a lot of cross-generational issues going on here–I mean, your mother has cheated and now you have cheated as well. It will be incredibly helpful to explore the emotions associated with all of that in the presence of a licensed professional.
October 5, 2017 at 9:53 am #171721LeafParticipantHi Anita,
I don’t know if it’s gonna make me feel better if I think less of my parents. I don’t think they’re perfectly loving ones and I think I know their flaws and their weaknesses.
My anxiety mostly comes from the fear of their disappointment and judgement of me. I don’t know how to face it without a breakdown.
October 5, 2017 at 11:45 am #171747AnonymousGuestDear Leaf:
You fear their disappointment and judgment of you because you already experienced it, correct? Your father’s anger for one, that is scary, especially for a child.
What we are afraid most of is what we already experienced. It felt so badly then, when we experienced it, that we don’t want to experience it again.
I think it is perfectly fine that you don’t tell them that you are divorced or why you are divorced. If you agree with my understanding, that is, that you already experienced their disappointment and judgment and therefore you are afraid of encountering it again, perhaps it is the right time to attend quality psychotherapy.
I don’t think that the main issue is telling-them. I think it is the hurt you already felt by their disapproval that you are scared of feeling again.
anita
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