Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this happen? I have encountered several people like this. Very loving families, would themselves describe their parents and families as loving, supportive, and functional and also it looks that way via observation. No childhood trauma or evidence of abuse/neglect. Continued support into adulthood.
But then they are jerks. Or have the capacity to be jerks in certain circumstances where it's surprising to see it come out. I know several women with this background, for instance, who are total "mean girl" gossips -- spread nasty rumors about women they claim they are friends with, can be very selfish with their time, demand attention and can be petty or cruel if they don't feel they get it.
How does this happen? I thought good parenting was supposed to address behaviors like this. Were they too doted on? Favorite daughters whose behavior didn't get corrected? I always figured people who acted like this were acting out of insecurity and some kind of childhood wound, but perhaps I was wrong.
Asking partly out of curiosity, and partly because I want to avoid raising a person who behaves this way in adulthood.
So many assumptions, so little time, OP.
Truth is, you have zero idea what people are going through.
That's... not an answer. If it isn't family dysfunction or poor parenting that causes this behavior, what is it? What are people "going through" that causes people with good parents and happy childhoods to be unkind or even cruel?
Grief
Illness
Divorce
Addiction
Adultery
Financial troubles
Job instability
Or any other adverse condition that happens to adults over their lifetime
The people I'm talking about are not going through divorce, illness, job instability, or financial troubles. And they are protected from the last two because of comfortable backgrounds that helped ensure they started out life with the best possible education and a lot of financial stability.
Why would someone with loving, supportive family and no childhood trauma develop addiction issues? Does that actually happen? Everyone I know with addiction and mental health issues can trace it at least in part to childhood issues.
So that leaves grief and adultery. Which sure, can befall anyone. But shouldn't someone from a loving, supportive, UMC or UC home know of ways to handle those things that don't involve treating other people terribly?
I'm not trying to be argumentative, but these responses are still not explaining why someone who has the background we'd all like to give our children (presumably) would behave in ways that are unequivocally unkind.
Anonymous wrote:How does this happen? I have encountered several people like this. Very loving families, would themselves describe their parents and families as loving, supportive, and functional and also it looks that way via observation. No childhood trauma or evidence of abuse/neglect. Continued support into adulthood.
But then they are jerks. Or have the capacity to be jerks in certain circumstances where it's surprising to see it come out. I know several women with this background, for instance, who are total "mean girl" gossips -- spread nasty rumors about women they claim they are friends with, can be very selfish with their time, demand attention and can be petty or cruel if they don't feel they get it.
How does this happen? I thought good parenting was supposed to address behaviors like this. Were they too doted on? Favorite daughters whose behavior didn't get corrected? I always figured people who acted like this were acting out of insecurity and some kind of childhood wound, but perhaps I was wrong.
Asking partly out of curiosity, and partly because I want to avoid raising a person who behaves this way in adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:My neighbor meets your description. She’s not unkind, but just clueless about adversity of others. She was born UMC, worked three years for a friend of her parents, got married and never worked another day. She gets anxious about the tiniest little things because she’s never had a real problem in her life.
Anonymous wrote:Two things I take issue with in this premise:
1. People are “good” or “bad.” No, OP. People are people. Even the nicest people sometimes do mean things in times of stress or just because they aren’t sensitive to someone else’s situation. Mean people can be incredibly generous. Ordinary people have mean habits and nice ones.
2. Parents are “good parents” or “bad parents.” Again, no. Some parents are good with one type of kid but bad with another. Some parents are as good as they know how to be but it’s bad for the kids they have. Sometimes the parents’ personalities and interests and approach to life is just oil and water to the kid, even though the parent is trying their hardest. That can cause trauma/issues that wouldn’t necessarily look traumatic to an outsider.
About the specific example of queen bee lady who was loved and lucky all her life: this is what we call spoiled usually. My armchair psychologist assessment would be that she gossips and such because she’s never experienced real hardship and lacks the imagination to understand it and consequently doesn’t understand how hurtful her actions are since she’s had such a charmed life. Also since she has a strong and loving family circle, if/when her friends spread rumours about her it doesn’t really make a dent so again she fails to realize that others are more vulnerable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this happen? I have encountered several people like this. Very loving families, would themselves describe their parents and families as loving, supportive, and functional and also it looks that way via observation. No childhood trauma or evidence of abuse/neglect. Continued support into adulthood.
But then they are jerks. Or have the capacity to be jerks in certain circumstances where it's surprising to see it come out. I know several women with this background, for instance, who are total "mean girl" gossips -- spread nasty rumors about women they claim they are friends with, can be very selfish with their time, demand attention and can be petty or cruel if they don't feel they get it.
How does this happen? I thought good parenting was supposed to address behaviors like this. Were they too doted on? Favorite daughters whose behavior didn't get corrected? I always figured people who acted like this were acting out of insecurity and some kind of childhood wound, but perhaps I was wrong.
Asking partly out of curiosity, and partly because I want to avoid raising a person who behaves this way in adulthood.
So many assumptions, so little time, OP.
Truth is, you have zero idea what people are going through.
That's... not an answer. If it isn't family dysfunction or poor parenting that causes this behavior, what is it? What are people "going through" that causes people with good parents and happy childhoods to be unkind or even cruel?
Grief
Illness
Divorce
Addiction
Adultery
Financial troubles
Job instability
Or any other adverse condition that happens to adults over their lifetime
The people I'm talking about are not going through divorce, illness, job instability, or financial troubles. And they are protected from the last two because of comfortable backgrounds that helped ensure they started out life with the best possible education and a lot of financial stability.
Why would someone with loving, supportive family and no childhood trauma develop addiction issues? Does that actually happen? Everyone I know with addiction and mental health issues can trace it at least in part to childhood issues.
So that leaves grief and adultery. Which sure, can befall anyone. But shouldn't someone from a loving, supportive, UMC or UC home know of ways to handle those things that don't involve treating other people terribly?
I'm not trying to be argumentative, but these responses are still not explaining why someone who has the background we'd all like to give our children (presumably) would behave in ways that are unequivocally unkind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How does this happen? I have encountered several people like this. Very loving families, would themselves describe their parents and families as loving, supportive, and functional and also it looks that way via observation. No childhood trauma or evidence of abuse/neglect. Continued support into adulthood.
But then they are jerks. Or have the capacity to be jerks in certain circumstances where it's surprising to see it come out. I know several women with this background, for instance, who are total "mean girl" gossips -- spread nasty rumors about women they claim they are friends with, can be very selfish with their time, demand attention and can be petty or cruel if they don't feel they get it.
How does this happen? I thought good parenting was supposed to address behaviors like this. Were they too doted on? Favorite daughters whose behavior didn't get corrected? I always figured people who acted like this were acting out of insecurity and some kind of childhood wound, but perhaps I was wrong.
Asking partly out of curiosity, and partly because I want to avoid raising a person who behaves this way in adulthood.
So many assumptions, so little time, OP.
Truth is, you have zero idea what people are going through.
That's... not an answer. If it isn't family dysfunction or poor parenting that causes this behavior, what is it? What are people "going through" that causes people with good parents and happy childhoods to be unkind or even cruel?
Grief
Illness
Divorce
Addiction
Adultery
Financial troubles
Job instability
Or any other adverse condition that happens to adults over their lifetime
The people I'm talking about are not going through divorce, illness, job instability, or financial troubles. And they are protected from the last two because of comfortable backgrounds that helped ensure they started out life with the best possible education and a lot of financial stability.
Why would someone with loving, supportive family and no childhood trauma develop addiction issues? Does that actually happen? Everyone I know with addiction and mental health issues can trace it at least in part to childhood issues.
So that leaves grief and adultery. Which sure, can befall anyone. But shouldn't someone from a loving, supportive, UMC or UC home know of ways to handle those things that don't involve treating other people terribly?
I'm not trying to be argumentative, but these responses are still not explaining why someone who has the background we'd all like to give our children (presumably) would behave in ways that are unequivocally unkind.
I mean, I dated a woman who came from a really kind, supportive UMC family, and she had zero conflict resolution skills because her parents never modeled that for her. They always did the whisper arguments behind closed doors so their kids would never hear them "fighting". She assumed that if a couple argued that meant the relationship was over.
So, unless you modeled specific coping strategies for your kids for all scenarios (impossible) , they might struggle to react perfectly as adults to various adverse situations.