| Sounds like you have always swooped in to fix things in their lives. As they get older it will become worse. They don't know responsibility nor kindness because they never have felt the hardships from their poor choices. I lose my job and there is nobody I can fall back on. Your kids lose their jobs and they fall back on you and live the life they want. Stop letting them use and disrespect you. Stand up for yourself. It will be hard to see them suffer from their bad choices, but like I said, it gets worse as they age. |
You have assholes as children |
This is fantastic advice. There is no downside to this. Everybody needs unconditional love from their parents (not financial ). It will keep your children out of the therapists office. |
+ 1 Calling them kids and treating them as such (meaning sweeping bad behavior under the rug and giving them endless second chances) is probably why you're in this spot OP. |
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What does "spoke harshly to them" mean?
I could be completely wrong because I don't know you and this the internet, but your posts make me think you fit this description (I've known people like this): Martyr mom in a household where there was significant yelling, but martyr mom doesn't really think of it as "yelling" per se and kind of glosses over it in retrospect. Meanwhile, the entire narrative she held as her kids were growing up was that she was sacrificing everything for them. Martyr mom repeats that narrative along with the yelling to simultaneously make her kids feel somewhat dependent on her and also resent her. Martyr mom carries this into her children's adulthood by offering to do things, but using those things as a way of continuing the "I sacrifice for my kids; my kids owe me" narrative. So now grown kids failed to launch, feel dependent on their mother, but also resent her. It's a horrible dynamic and leads to a cycle of crummy behavior on both the mother's part and the adult children's part. It's sort of a dysfunctional codependency. |
This. Your kids should not be treating you this way but they are young. Give them emotional support , but also call them on their attitudes. Sometimes kids forget all their parents have done for them. |