Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think therapy can work, but you need the right therapist and possibly you need to set boundaries.
If your daughter keeps coming up with reasons for treating you poorly, perhaps ask the therapist what this might accomplish in terms of moving forward.
I agree with others in that therapists sometimes does not seem to recognize family obligations other than parent to child. Children have obligations to their parents as well, it's a two-way street.
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Sounds exactly like what an abusive parent would say. No, your kids do NOT have any obligations to you. You choose to have them!
I have a teen, and we’ve been in family therapy for a long time (he has special needs), and all relationships are a two way street. There aren’t obligations from child to parent in the same way there are from parent to child, but no relationship between 2 people is one directional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think therapy can work, but you need the right therapist and possibly you need to set boundaries.
If your daughter keeps coming up with reasons for treating you poorly, perhaps ask the therapist what this might accomplish in terms of moving forward.
I agree with others in that therapists sometimes does not seem to recognize family obligations other than parent to child. Children have obligations to their parents as well, it's a two-way street.
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Sounds exactly like what an abusive parent would say. No, your kids do NOT have any obligations to you. You choose to have them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think therapy can work, but you need the right therapist and possibly you need to set boundaries.
If your daughter keeps coming up with reasons for treating you poorly, perhaps ask the therapist what this might accomplish in terms of moving forward.
I agree with others in that therapists sometimes does not seem to recognize family obligations other than parent to child. Children have obligations to their parents as well, it's a two-way street.
![]()
![]()
![]()
Sounds exactly like what an abusive parent would say. No, your kids do NOT have any obligations to you. You choose to have them!
Anonymous wrote:I think therapy can work, but you need the right therapist and possibly you need to set boundaries.
If your daughter keeps coming up with reasons for treating you poorly, perhaps ask the therapist what this might accomplish in terms of moving forward.
I agree with others in that therapists sometimes does not seem to recognize family obligations other than parent to child. Children have obligations to their parents as well, it's a two-way street.
Anonymous wrote:If she is expressing concerns and you refuse to listen, no, it will never work. You denying everything and saying things were perfect is fine from your perspective but not hers.
Anonymous wrote:I have just started with my adult child. She keeps coming up with different reasons for her poor treatment of me. (I don’t mean different anecdotes, like myriad, new explantations.)
It is draining and discouraging. (She was a joy to raise, so this had all come out of left field.)
Anonymous wrote:It does. It takes a lot of patience. And maybe your own therapy to deal with what’s coming up for you so you can stay curious and present and not try and defend yourself.
You don’t have to agree with your daughter’s perspective to hold space for it. Many things can be and often are true at the same time. And that’s true for your daughter as well.