Learn to Hold the Tension
Learn to Hold the Tension
Daily Inspiration
Daily Inspiration
By Kate Spreckley
Kate
- spirit-pathways.com
- © 2024 Kate Spreckley http://www.spirit-pathways.com
The Inner Voice Gide Us Into Strength and Self-Trust
Posted on May 3, 2023
As children, our first interaction is with our family. It is from our interaction with them, that helps us determine if the world is a “good” place (safe) or a “bad” one (unsafe).
We tend to carry this first experiences throughout most of our formative years and into adulthood; for regardless of the fact, we may not have been able to cognitively understand what was taking place, instinctively we did…. this is what is called cellular memory, where the body remembers what felt pleasant or unpleasant.
Each family is unique in the way its members interact. While some families provide children with love, affection and a safe environment, many others maintain unhelpful dynamics that negatively affect the growing child’s personality.
Healthy families are those in which the child feels safe, secure, and free. Each person’s boundaries are respected, uniqueness is appreciated, the right to an opinion is valued and needs are met. Dysfunctional families have dynamics in which parents repeatedly and consistently neglect children. They silence them, bully them, emotionally blackmail them, traumatize them physically and/or emotionally, and treat them disrespectfully.
There is no such thing as a perfect childhood, but what is it like for the children who grew up in dysfunctional, perhaps even abusive settings, and what are the consequences? Let’s find out more:
Growing up in a dysfunctional family can cause wounds so deep that they affect you for the rest of your life. Growing up in a dysfunctional family can mean many things; there is no one rule that fits all — in psychology we say, every family is dysfunctional as per the “ideal”, due to the fact that every human being is so complex and different. But that is not the type of dysfunctionality I am referring to here, this article focuses more on abnormal dysfunctionality…. a type of dysfunctionality that scars a child for life. I needed to make that very clear, as within modern society, too many new parenting approaches are leading to what I call “the bubble wrapped” child– which is a child who is overprotected, over indulged, often overwhelming their senses…children who develop no resilience, which in time will lead to adults incapable of facing the natural hardships of life……no extreme is ever good.
In most cases, when I refer to children who have been scarred for life due to the dysfunctionality of their surroundings, I am referring to a home full of instability and full of conflicts. Commonly, there is abuse, neglect, dependence on drugs or alcohol, other type of addictions, psychological issues, or atmospheres where the child was never wanted but came to be due to family expectations or a “moral social” code…. the result: children who suffer every day.
Dysfunctional families create an environment that tends to be experienced as chaotic and unsafe, as one parent or both often behave in unpredictable and inappropriate ways. Children growing up in dysfunctional families have no control over their toxic home environment. Most dysfunctional homes are a combination of two or more of the following unhealthy dynamics:
Chaotic homes: In these families, parents are often absent and behave inappropriately. They are busy leading their own lives and neglect the needs of the children. Often these children are raised by others or more or less raise themselves.
High Conflict Families: There is conflict between the parents, or the parents and other relatives who may live in the same home, or between a child and the parent. Children in such families grow up with insecurity, constant stress, and an inability to bond.
Households with pathological parents: In homes such as these, one or both parents are pathological, that is, they have a personality or mood disorder that is severe, often only showcasing two settings– happy or angry–and in other cases, the parent is affected by alcohol, drug abuse or other addictions.
Households with a dominant father or mother: In many dysfunctional families, there is a father or mother, who is dominant and overly controlling, ignoring the needs and feelings of his partner and children. The submissive spouse and children develop repress negative and angry emotions. It is important to note, the term “dominant” here being used, does not only apply to openly controlling or emotionally ill-humored, but also to the parent who dominates by secluding the children from the other parent by playing the role of overprotective doting parent. This type of parent hijacks the emotional bonding which should be taking place between the other spouse and the children. Children of the later often tend to grow to become experts at emotional blackmail while maintaining a mask of goodness.
Households with Emotionally Distant Parents: In many families, parents do not know how to deliberately express or repress any expression of emotions. This is often seen in certain cultural backgrounds that are predominantly patriarchal. Children in such families grow up with low self-esteem and are equally or more inexpressive.
Some of the consequences of having lived in such dysfunctional surroundings are:
The pains of abuse radiate over the decades and can alter a person for lifetime. If you were a victim of an unstable toxic dysfunctionality, the best you can do is to seek help. The more you heal old wounds, the better chances future generations will have. More importantly…healing and walking away from toxic circles, is the gift you can give yourself, for you are deserving of love and have the power in you to rewrite your story….one step at a time.
Sofia Falcone