Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 28 year old sister is doing this with my parents right now. My parents were far from perfect, but this is more about her personal healing than it is about them. And they (and you) need to respect that. If you don't, you risk losing her forever.
OP here. Agreed, you can't argue with someone how they feel. This is her narrative. And one has to respect it. But it is still bizarre. Things definitely got worse after counseling.
FWIW.
I'm this PP. I'm sorry you're dealing with this. I see how much pain my parents are in without her in their lives. As a mother of young children, I know I would be heart broken if one of mine did this to me one day. FWIW, I also believe my sister's therapist (from what she tells me anyway) is hung up on exploring her past/childhood to the detriment of dealing with what she needs right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why most therapists are toxic, OP. Truly. I hear of so many stories like this. In the past, these young adults would be told by friends and relatives to snap out of it, and not throw out the baby with the bathwater. Nowadays, their therapists and friends egg them on without any regard for perspective or proportional response.
In my 20s, I deeply resented my mother, for having smothered me as a child and forced me into seclusion (she guilted me into it because she is handicapped and did not want to be alone in the house). But despite a legitimate grievance, I got over it, and I understand that her chronic disability affected her social life and pushed her into a very controlling and unhealthy sort of parenting. She loves me very much, and I forgive her.
There's nothing you can do except wait for her to come to her sense. I'm sorry you're going through this.
OP here. Very interesting. I also went through a difficult period with my mother, when I was in my 20s. As a child and teenager she parentified me, confided in me like I was her friend Vs daughter, and tried to turn me against my dad. In my 20s I started taking more control and shutting this type of talk down and not responding. Although our relationship wasn't always easy, I love her, she tried her best, and at the end if the day I know she lived me. I never cut her off. But when I would tell my adult daughter things my mother used to do (what I just described) my daughter told me she doesn't understand how I couldn't cut my mother off completely. My young adult daughter is very black and white and I think this is also part of the issue. She had very low tolerances when it comes to family relationships. She is also type A and likes order and predictable life. Not to the point of excessively. But I do see it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe you aren't as "good" as you think you are.
OP. We were definitely not perfect parents and made mistakes. But we weren't terrible parents.
Anonymous wrote:This is why most therapists are toxic, OP. Truly. I hear of so many stories like this. In the past, these young adults would be told by friends and relatives to snap out of it, and not throw out the baby with the bathwater. Nowadays, their therapists and friends egg them on without any regard for perspective or proportional response.
In my 20s, I deeply resented my mother, for having smothered me as a child and forced me into seclusion (she guilted me into it because she is handicapped and did not want to be alone in the house). But despite a legitimate grievance, I got over it, and I understand that her chronic disability affected her social life and pushed her into a very controlling and unhealthy sort of parenting. She loves me very much, and I forgive her.
There's nothing you can do except wait for her to come to her sense. I'm sorry you're going through this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 28 year old sister is doing this with my parents right now. My parents were far from perfect, but this is more about her personal healing than it is about them. And they (and you) need to respect that. If you don't, you risk losing her forever.
OP here. Agreed, you can't argue with someone how they feel. This is her narrative. And one has to respect it. But it is still bizarre. Things definitely got worse after counseling.
Anonymous wrote:That’s all you can do. We love you and the door is always open. Cut off the $$ too. She can’t have it both ways.
Anonymous wrote:My 28 year old sister is doing this with my parents right now. My parents were far from perfect, but this is more about her personal healing than it is about them. And they (and you) need to respect that. If you don't, you risk losing her forever.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you aren't as "good" as you think you are.