Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Family Relationships
Reply to "Estrangement Doesn't Just Happen to "Bad" Moms—It Happened to Me Too"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’m part of the Raised by Borderlines group on Reddit. That group is enormously helpful. I remember reading this article when it came out, and recognized the personality-disordered parent language/thinking immediately. [/quote] Yeah, the grocery store incident and the sports comment read very borderline to me.[/quote] Yep. The author straight up mentioned abandonment. Classic borderline. [/quote] Buzz words with zero context. Everyone loves to use the borderline catch all term. It's an epidemic in usage, but not in practice. No one uses the immaturity term, and most of the time that is what it is, on the part of the adult child. [/quote] Yeah but this lady wrote a book about the estrangement and took her show on the road, from the sound of it. Magazine interviews, a Facebook group, etc…this isn’t a normal way to act if you value the relationship with your estranged child. This is desperate attention-seeking behavior and a cry for validation.[/quote] No, actually child estrangement is one of the deep dark secrets in families. Parents don't often talk about it because they don't want to further exacerbate the problem, they are embarrassed, they need to talk about personal things. Generational soft rules about not airing family laundry, feae of being judged, etc. Just like other things that have come to light in this generation, out of the cloak of stigma- mental illness,disability, relationship issues, addiction, adoption, there are people who helped move this into the arena by writing, listeserves, Reddit type platforms, support groups. Just like everything, there's a platform for it. You can't now decide it proves that either party is the narcissist if you don't do that for any other airing of closeted issues. It's almost counter intuitive. You also can't be tribal because you have an experience on either side. It doesn't help your cause to cherry pick out of context examples to prove something you know nothing about just because it fuels your agenda with your parent or your child. All you do is dilute the experience. This family really isn't an example of any one thing. She was honest. She behaved in a very typical way, yes, including the grocery store, out of fear. It's probably very frightening to be afraid if saying or doing anything that could make it worse. You will see the kid found a way back- he found some testifies, and it's pretty clear where the issue was. I have a friend who lost contact with her daughter due to a very mentally ill son in law. It was the most painful thing all of us ever saw and she and her husband were in enormous pain and in therapy for years. It affected their health.12 years later, the daughter left what she calls an abusive marriage ( which we all saw) and claims she was in a trauma bond. She's in therapy working out how to deal which a controlling narcissistic co parent and it consumes her life and wallet...lawyers cost $$. Therapist and lawyers both have questioned her reasons for ever being with him to begin with, the stories are mind boggling and frightening. Worse than anyone saw on the surface, and that surface was pretty bad. Estrangement, isolation from her friends and family...he was at work right from the wedding. No, it's not always the parent. [/quote] Of course it’s not always the parent but in this specific example, even if the mother didn’t start it, she has finished it. They can never reconcile because of her actions. Maybe that’s what she wants and this book was her way of closure. But once you put something like this about your child out for public consumption, it’s probably over. Perhaps it already was so my point doesn’t matter. [/quote] She has as much right to air her side of a grievance as DIL does. Somehow if it's the Mom, she's a narcissist, but if it's the DIL, she's the victim. In this article, I found myself on Team Mom. The daughters behavior, objectively listed raised many red flags. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics