Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For all these people who tout the joys of estrangement it seems like a lot of people obsess about their supposedly evil parents and remain miserable.
If you can’t be in relationship with your parents why do you care who they speak to and what they say?
Because they’re still your parents and most estranged adult children have significant grief and trauma.
Anonymous wrote:They either lie and say everything is great, or lie and say you’ve cut them off and they have no idea why.
Which lie is irrelevant to your life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're spending a lot of time thinking about them for someone "NC." Like a lot of posters on DCUM who are NC or recommend it, you could still be in touch with your parents. When you really reach the point where NC is better for you than not, you won't want to be imagining this trivial things about them. Why don't you reach out and mend things, for your own benefit? FYI I imagine they say their DC is punitive and a bit on the ill side because that's what you sound like to a stranger.
There is a long grieving people for most people who go no contact. And grief often involves wondering about these kinds of things. That includes situations in which a parent was horrifically abusive and few, if any, would dispute that no contact was the right move.
Anonymous wrote:For all these people who tout the joys of estrangement it seems like a lot of people obsess about their supposedly evil parents and remain miserable.
If you can’t be in relationship with your parents why do you care who they speak to and what they say?
Anonymous wrote:For all these people who tout the joys of estrangement it seems like a lot of people obsess about their supposedly evil parents and remain miserable.
If you can’t be in relationship with your parents why do you care who they speak to and what they say?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been NC with my parents for a little over a year. Long history there, and most people in my life know the general dynamics, so when the topic comes up it’s not surprising to anyone that we’re not in contact.
What I sometimes find myself wondering about is the other side of it. My parents are very image-conscious people, one personality behind closed doors and another in public, so I can’t imagine they tell their acquaintances and friends “our child doesn’t speak to us.”
Meanwhile our lives have changed a lot in the last year. I recently got a promotion, one of my kids’ teams just won a state championship, etc. They wouldn’t know any of this.
So I’m curious: when people ask them “How are your child and the grandkids?” what do you think parents in that situation usually say? Do they just give vague answers? Pretend everything is normal? Change the subject?
Not looking to break NC, it’s been peaceful and the right decision for me. Just one of those things I occasionally wonder about.
Anonymous wrote:To wonder is to keep the drama alive
Anonymous wrote:Why do you care?