Anonymous wrote:You need therapy. Also, 2m is not that impressive here.
Anonymous wrote:You need therapy. Also, 2m is not that impressive here.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, OP. Childhood family dynamics are practically set in stone for life.
I'm not judging you, but in the families I know, even if the children grow up to be financially successful, if they had messy lives as children, they still have messy lives as adults, and perhaps this is what your siblings are commenting on.
Ex: my husband has ADHD. He had a volatile childhood and was definitely the headstrong, getting-into-trouble type. His siblings recount hair-raising stories of what he did. His parents punished him for being "the bad boy". Now he's wealthy, and still leads a messy life. I married him when he was a struggling guy, and now he's worth 20M. As his wife, I tolerate his inattention, habitual tardiness and mercurial character as best as I can. ADHD doesn't go away just because you become rich, have a nice house and a spouse and kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So we're meant to believe they are telling you to get it together for absolutely no reason?
Sure op.
Yea, OP, I’m skeptical too. You can’t be telling the whole story.
One of our kids had a terrible time in high school — drugs, bad boyfriends, terrible grades, mental health issues, treated us like shit, took 7 years to graduate from college with a 2.1 GPA, spent several years woefully underemployed, you name it — was in every way the black sheep. But she eventually got her act together and now in her mid 30s has a masters degree and a very good job.
There’s zero talk of her needing to get her act together because she HAS. It’s as if the past never happened. We will laugh about it together from time to time and that’s it.
There are two sides to every story. If your family is still telling you to get your act together, then your act isn’t together. What are you not telling us?
Anonymous wrote:So we're meant to believe they are telling you to get it together for absolutely no reason?
Sure op.