Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a simple way to deal with this: stop asking your parents for money. You are an adult. Support yourself. Pay your own bills. If you can't afford your lifestyle, change your lifestyle. Don't wait for an inheritance. Have no financial dealings with your parents at all. You will much, much happier.
That’s not how it works with financial abuse. It is rarely the adult child asking for money. The parent pretends to be generous, but does not disclose countless hidden strings. So they insist on fully funding grad school. Then you need to study during a holiday weekend rather than come home and you are the devil and the threats start. That is one of many examples.
OP here- this exactly.
The controlling parent has lied to anyone who will listen for decades that he supports us financially and then throws a hissy fit when he hears through the grapevine that I have hired a professional rather than requesting his help (internet stalking my Google reviews).
I’d love to shut this off but simply keeping my distance isn’t enough.
Do you still take financial support? At some point though, it becomes clear that any financial support comes with strings, you have to start declining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a simple way to deal with this: stop asking your parents for money. You are an adult. Support yourself. Pay your own bills. If you can't afford your lifestyle, change your lifestyle. Don't wait for an inheritance. Have no financial dealings with your parents at all. You will much, much happier.
That’s not how it works with financial abuse. It is rarely the adult child asking for money. The parent pretends to be generous, but does not disclose countless hidden strings. So they insist on fully funding grad school. Then you need to study during a holiday weekend rather than come home and you are the devil and the threats start. That is one of many examples.
OP here- this exactly.
The controlling parent has lied to anyone who will listen for decades that he supports us financially and then throws a hissy fit when he hears through the grapevine that I have hired a professional rather than requesting his help (internet stalking my Google reviews).
I’d love to shut this off but simply keeping my distance isn’t enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My ILs are very generous and they never ask for anything in return except for us to never mention it to anyone else including my parents.
Oooh, smart people. So are your the DD or DS of these amazing people?
Anonymous wrote:My ILs are very generous and they never ask for anything in return except for us to never mention it to anyone else including my parents.
Anonymous wrote:My ILs are very generous and they never ask for anything in return except for us to never mention it to anyone else including my parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a simple way to deal with this: stop asking your parents for money. You are an adult. Support yourself. Pay your own bills. If you can't afford your lifestyle, change your lifestyle. Don't wait for an inheritance. Have no financial dealings with your parents at all. You will much, much happier.
That’s not how it works with financial abuse. It is rarely the adult child asking for money. The parent pretends to be generous, but does not disclose countless hidden strings. So they insist on fully funding grad school. Then you need to study during a holiday weekend rather than come home and you are the devil and the threats start. That is one of many examples.
Anonymous wrote:There's a simple way to deal with this: stop asking your parents for money. You are an adult. Support yourself. Pay your own bills. If you can't afford your lifestyle, change your lifestyle. Don't wait for an inheritance. Have no financial dealings with your parents at all. You will much, much happier.
Anonymous wrote:If so, why? What’s the point?
Anonymous wrote:My mother did this to the extreme.
It didn't happen in a vacuum; she was a nasty, controlling person and used many tools -- money was just one of them. If only I had a dime for every time she started going on with "I will disinherit you!!!!" She finally did change her will to give me less when I voted for Obama, lol.
Anonymous wrote:My dad did that to me. He would ask personal questions like: “Have you ever been pregnant?” before he would sign my college tuition checks. It’s sad that he never thought to develop the kind of relationships with his kids that encouraged conversations and trust instead. It was also sad and stressful for both of us that he apparently never thought about the fact that I would end up as he legal next of kin— making medical decisions on his behalf. When he died, my initial feeling was relief.