Anonymous wrote:The people who had truly magical childhoods are a rare breed. It’s the silent types you know are traumatized. I’m one so aggrieved and in therapy.
I avoid people who are dismissive and or can’t possibly think beyond themselves and their own very specific life experiences- they are oddly delusional, self-involved, narrow-minded, judgmental and lack empathy.
Anonymous wrote:Our upbringing was far from perfect and we grew up in a divorced family, but both my parents really did care about us and tried their best. There were no major problems like physical/emotional/sexual abuse or substance addictions, and we always had our needs met. Yet my siblings have become huge drama queens as adults and pretend that my parents did a bad job when in reality we probably had a better childhood than 85% or more of this country. My siblings have a decent relationship with my parents but don’t respect them and constantly talk s*** behind their backs and it’s always about something really petty. Why are they like this?
Anonymous wrote:I have opposite issue. Ten years apart from sibling. They claim their childhood was happy.
Mine was miserable with a mentally ill mother.
My sister will say my parents were neglectful out one side of her mouth and then say she had a great childhood out of the other.
I don’t speak of it, or anything that matters, with her any longer.
Maybe you are right, OP, or maybe you are in denial or maybe your childhood was good while your sibling had a crappy one.
Anonymous wrote:Their experience may be different than yours. Who are you to judge?
Anonymous wrote:Our upbringing was far from perfect and we grew up in a divorced family, but both my parents really did care about us and tried their best. There were no major problems like physical/emotional/sexual abuse or substance addictions, and we always had our needs met.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our upbringing was far from perfect and we grew up in a divorced family, but both my parents really did care about us and tried their best. There were no major problems like physical/emotional/sexual abuse or substance addictions, and we always had our needs met. Yet my siblings have become huge drama queens as adults and pretend that my parents did a bad job when in reality we probably had a better childhood than 85% or more of this country. My siblings have a decent relationship with my parents but don’t respect them and constantly talk s*** behind their backs and it’s always about something really petty. Why are they like this?
Let me guess, this is a sister between the ages of 18-21?
"we probably had a better childhood than 85% or more of this country" That quote of yours speaks volumes. You have no clue and you are clearly indicating there were some issues that may have been serious but you minimize them with some made up statistics. The pressure to ignore abuse in families is immense.
Anonymous wrote:Barring abuse, adults should have long moved on from their complaints about not perfect childhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Their experience may be different than yours. Who are you to judge?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our upbringing was far from perfect and we grew up in a divorced family, but both my parents really did care about us and tried their best. There were no major problems like physical/emotional/sexual abuse or substance addictions, and we always had our needs met. Yet my siblings have become huge drama queens as adults and pretend that my parents did a bad job when in reality we probably had a better childhood than 85% or more of this country. My siblings have a decent relationship with my parents but don’t respect them and constantly talk s*** behind their backs and it’s always about something really petty. Why are they like this?
Let me guess, this is a sister between the ages of 18-21?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our upbringing was far from perfect and we grew up in a divorced family, but both my parents really did care about us and tried their best. There were no major problems like physical/emotional/sexual abuse or substance addictions, and we always had our needs met. Yet my siblings have become huge drama queens as adults and pretend that my parents did a bad job when in reality we probably had a better childhood than 85% or more of this country. My siblings have a decent relationship with my parents but don’t respect them and constantly talk s*** behind their backs and it’s always about something really petty. Why are they like this?
It’s cool now to have “childhood trauma” and “boundaries.”
Anonymous wrote:Their experience may be different than yours. Who are you to judge?
Anonymous wrote:
My parents treated us all differently. I'm the middle sister who complains about them and my siblings don't believe me when I tell them about some memories. They think I make up stories about my parents. I don't. I literally had a different experience. My parents indeed treated me the worst and now I set boundaries to protect myself.