Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if divorce, the child is then alone with the angry parent and without all the grown-up skills to protect themselves.
I think same question for those that went through, if only 1 parent was angry but not physically, do you have thoughts on parents together v. divorced?
Anonymous wrote:How did it affect you? Spouse is constantly angry. Feels like we (children and I) are walking on eggshells at home and don’t know what will set spouse off. When spouse is upset, spouse will yell and throw stuff (not at us). Spouse was not always like this, it’s related to the pandemic and a stressful job. We have young children and I’m worried about how this is affecting them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But if divorce, the child is then alone with the angry parent and without all the grown-up skills to protect themselves.
I think same question for those that went through, if only 1 parent was angry but not physically, do you have thoughts on parents together v. divorced?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up with an angry parent and an enabling parent and the combination of toxic role modeling screwed up my head so badly that I have struggled in relationships my entire adulthood. Very high achieving, professionally accomplished until the toxic perfectionism, workaholism and intimacy issues manifested into serious chronic illness.
If you’re not already familiar with the ACE score, I’d suggest you read up on it and then do as brutally honest an assessment as possible about what your children’s scores might be considering the behavior they’re being exposed to. After decades working with people in toxic home environments and having endured one in my own childhood, I can attest that very few emerge psychologically unscathed. My mother’s failure to protect us is something I resent even more than my father’s emotional abuse, but I’ve seen in my advocacy work that her willingness to turn a blind eye to the damage being done to her children is sadly common. The mother who has the courage to endure whatever hardship arises in order to get her children into a healthy environment is a hero in my book.
Please demand that your husband get help, and family therapy too when safe. Your kids need to know this isn’t their fault.
I should add that I’ve never married or had my own children, something which is a huge source of grief in my life. Many of the folks I know in the same boat (unmarried, childless) are there because the horror show of domestic relations in their childhood left them terrified to take the risk. Toxic marriages cripple many children for life, no question about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was terrible, and I still have a hard time not believing that I’m responsible for others’ behavior. Plus I think I have kind of perpetuated the cycle. DH says he feels like there is a lot he can’t say because he doesn’t know how I will react to it; he feels like he has to walk on eggshells around me.
But I have worked a lot on my anxiety and I am on meds, so I think it’s getting better. We have a good relationship and I’m a decent parent because he is patient with me and I have committed to be calm around my kids. I don’t yell but I do get irritated, and they feel like they are responsible for my irritation. I have tried to explain that they aren’t and have pointed out that my reactions depend on my mood, not their behavior, so hopefully that will sink in.
But I still feel like I have a better relationship with DH and my kids than a lot of posters here. I never yell and I cultivate emotional closeness with my family. I work hard on it, maybe in part because I know how awful it was living with my mom who yelled and just seemed too caught up in her own emotions to be there as a good parent.
Also I would consider divorcing your husband, honestly. I know that it’s soooo complicated and I don’t know what the right decision is or what your circumstances are, but his behavior is emotionally abusive to your kids. My parents divorced and the time spent with my dad was a good respite from my mom. And he was careful not to say anything bad about her, so it was easy to still love her despite everything.
But if divorce, the child is then alone with the angry parent and without all the grown-up skills to protect themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I recently had a memory of my sister doing something and of me being worried that it would set my dad off. I was 3! I realize that I was able to monitor my dads moods and plan my behavior accordingly while in preschool. As an adult I am hyper vigilant, startle easily. I also have a really hard time identifying my own emotions and struggle with being aware of when I am stressed or even physically in pain. It's almost like growing up monitoring someone else's emotions left me little time to reveal my own. Trust issues in relationships and really bad at handling conflict or standing up for myself.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up with an angry parent and an enabling parent and the combination of toxic role modeling screwed up my head so badly that I have struggled in relationships my entire adulthood. Very high achieving, professionally accomplished until the toxic perfectionism, workaholism and intimacy issues manifested into serious chronic illness.
If you’re not already familiar with the ACE score, I’d suggest you read up on it and then do as brutally honest an assessment as possible about what your children’s scores might be considering the behavior they’re being exposed to. After decades working with people in toxic home environments and having endured one in my own childhood, I can attest that very few emerge psychologically unscathed. My mother’s failure to protect us is something I resent even more than my father’s emotional abuse, but I’ve seen in my advocacy work that her willingness to turn a blind eye to the damage being done to her children is sadly common. The mother who has the courage to endure whatever hardship arises in order to get her children into a healthy environment is a hero in my book.
Please demand that your husband get help, and family therapy too when safe. Your kids need to know this isn’t their fault.
Anonymous wrote:But if divorce, the child is then alone with the angry parent and without all the grown-up skills to protect themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was terrible, and I still have a hard time not believing that I’m responsible for others’ behavior. Plus I think I have kind of perpetuated the cycle. DH says he feels like there is a lot he can’t say because he doesn’t know how I will react to it; he feels like he has to walk on eggshells around me.
But I have worked a lot on my anxiety and I am on meds, so I think it’s getting better. We have a good relationship and I’m a decent parent because he is patient with me and I have committed to be calm around my kids. I don’t yell but I do get irritated, and they feel like they are responsible for my irritation. I have tried to explain that they aren’t and have pointed out that my reactions depend on my mood, not their behavior, so hopefully that will sink in.
But I still feel like I have a better relationship with DH and my kids than a lot of posters here. I never yell and I cultivate emotional closeness with my family. I work hard on it, maybe in part because I know how awful it was living with my mom who yelled and just seemed too caught up in her own emotions to be there as a good parent.
Also I would consider divorcing your husband, honestly. I know that it’s soooo complicated and I don’t know what the right decision is or what your circumstances are, but his behavior is emotionally abusive to your kids. My parents divorced and the time spent with my dad was a good respite from my mom. And he was careful not to say anything bad about her, so it was easy to still love her despite everything.
But if divorce, the child is then alone with the angry parent and without all the grown-up skills to protect themselves.