Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP have you ever had the opportunity to take care of someone else? It is rewarding and it helps a person shed the need to be the cared for person.
I am a mother of two children and take care of them every day, yes. I also spent years caring for my parents. I also volunteered with kids for many years, coaching at a camp and providing reading tutoring.
I think caring for others can be healing but no I do not think it replaces the need to feel cared for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am mid-40s and had a dysfunctional, abusive childhood. My parents also come from dysfunctional, abusive homes and they are what therapists call emotionally immature. I have forgiven them for my childhood. It was what it was.
The upshot is that no one really took care of me when I was young. I had to figure stuff out for myself and look after myself. I got so good at it that as an adult, I was suspicious of people who were very caring and kind. I married a good man but he iss stoic an unemotive. He is a good partner but is not tender and does not caretake with me or the kids. I am the caretaker in my family and I think I'm pretty good at it-- I just give my kids the stuff I know I missed out on and it seems to work well.
I've also been in therapy fory childhood and I have found ways to care for myself and extend kindness to myself. They call it reparenting. I do think it's important and I do that, though it is different than being cared for by someone else.
But as I approach 50, I find myself thinking about how I've never really felt taken care of, and how this still impacts me. I think it would be good for me to feel cared for in this way, even if only for a time.
Is there a way to feel truly cared for, at my age? Is think I'm going to get a lot of suggestions to go to a spa but I've done that and it's not the same. I am looking for a kind of emotional support, not physical care.
Is this a lost cause? Do I just need to let it go?
That's sad, because it is and because you are stuck in past. Past is just a story, move on like an adult. Do self care and/or seek therapy if needed and possible.
Anonymous wrote:I am mid-40s and had a dysfunctional, abusive childhood. My parents also come from dysfunctional, abusive homes and they are what therapists call emotionally immature. I have forgiven them for my childhood. It was what it was.
The upshot is that no one really took care of me when I was young. I had to figure stuff out for myself and look after myself. I got so good at it that as an adult, I was suspicious of people who were very caring and kind. I married a good man but he iss stoic an unemotive. He is a good partner but is not tender and does not caretake with me or the kids. I am the caretaker in my family and I think I'm pretty good at it-- I just give my kids the stuff I know I missed out on and it seems to work well.
I've also been in therapy fory childhood and I have found ways to care for myself and extend kindness to myself. They call it reparenting. I do think it's important and I do that, though it is different than being cared for by someone else.
But as I approach 50, I find myself thinking about how I've never really felt taken care of, and how this still impacts me. I think it would be good for me to feel cared for in this way, even if only for a time.
Is there a way to feel truly cared for, at my age? Is think I'm going to get a lot of suggestions to go to a spa but I've done that and it's not the same. I am looking for a kind of emotional support, not physical care.
Is this a lost cause? Do I just need to let it go?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a close group of friends?
I have some close friends, yes. I can talk to them about serious things and they are there for me if I ask. But I think I self-selected for the people in my life to be kind of self-contained and not the sort to overtly care for friends. Again, because earlier in adulthood I found that behavior so foreign I didn't trust it. I assumed if someone was very caring towards me, it was a lie. I now understand it's not that. I do have one friend who was like that towards me early in our friendship but learned not to be that way because it made me edgy and she respected my boundaries (a great friend!).
But I'm in a different place now and wish I had this experience but it's like a prior version of me arranged my life to ensure no one else takes care of me. I don't know how to undo that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel you OP. I have always craved a mother figure who can love me unconditionally and offer guidance on life (my mother was very neglectful and emotionally stunted). I now bring comfort to myself, I realized I don't need a loving mother to turn to, I turn to myself. And to nature. I take such glory in a nice breezy day.
Same, but there are times when I wish I had an emotional connection with a wise, loving mother or father. I've done fine turning to myself, but I've been challenged attaching to others. DH is the only person in my life who has shown up as this person and I’ve often failed to acknowledge or appreciate it.
no one wants to act like your mom or dad, and is is evident when you expect that from them, impossible to hide. It comes across as neediness and wanting to be babied. no one is going to want to do this for another adult, especially one who has done grown woman things like get married and have kids.
The type of person you are thinking of (who demands to be babied and tries to turn people into their mother/father figure), are not self aware though. OP is self aware about her needs, what happened in her childhood, and also respectful of boundaries (understanding she cannot expect her children to fill this need). She is wounded though, as someone who was abused/neglected as a child. You might consider having some empathy for that.
The people who are self aware are always looking for that care from their friends and family, they cannot help it. The constantly strategize to be "cared for", that is all they do. Being non self aware about this means this need never is one you would conceive of having.
Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, OP, you are an adult, act like you are!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel you OP. I have always craved a mother figure who can love me unconditionally and offer guidance on life (my mother was very neglectful and emotionally stunted). I now bring comfort to myself, I realized I don't need a loving mother to turn to, I turn to myself. And to nature. I take such glory in a nice breezy day.
Same, but there are times when I wish I had an emotional connection with a wise, loving mother or father. I've done fine turning to myself, but I've been challenged attaching to others. DH is the only person in my life who has shown up as this person and I’ve often failed to acknowledge or appreciate it.
no one wants to act like your mom or dad, and is is evident when you expect that from them, impossible to hide. It comes across as neediness and wanting to be babied. no one is going to want to do this for another adult, especially one who has done grown woman things like get married and have kids.
The type of person you are thinking of (who demands to be babied and tries to turn people into their mother/father figure), are not self aware though. OP is self aware about her needs, what happened in her childhood, and also respectful of boundaries (understanding she cannot expect her children to fill this need). She is wounded though, as someone who was abused/neglected as a child. You might consider having some empathy for that.
Anonymous wrote:Good Lord, OP, you are an adult, act like you are!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel you OP. I have always craved a mother figure who can love me unconditionally and offer guidance on life (my mother was very neglectful and emotionally stunted). I now bring comfort to myself, I realized I don't need a loving mother to turn to, I turn to myself. And to nature. I take such glory in a nice breezy day.
Same, but there are times when I wish I had an emotional connection with a wise, loving mother or father. I've done fine turning to myself, but I've been challenged attaching to others. DH is the only person in my life who has shown up as this person and I’ve often failed to acknowledge or appreciate it.
no one wants to act like your mom or dad, and is is evident when you expect that from them, impossible to hide. It comes across as neediness and wanting to be babied. no one is going to want to do this for another adult, especially one who has done grown woman things like get married and have kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel you OP. I have always craved a mother figure who can love me unconditionally and offer guidance on life (my mother was very neglectful and emotionally stunted). I now bring comfort to myself, I realized I don't need a loving mother to turn to, I turn to myself. And to nature. I take such glory in a nice breezy day.
Same, but there are times when I wish I had an emotional connection with a wise, loving mother or father. I've done fine turning to myself, but I've been challenged attaching to others. DH is the only person in my life who has shown up as this person and I’ve often failed to acknowledge or appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel you OP. I have always craved a mother figure who can love me unconditionally and offer guidance on life (my mother was very neglectful and emotionally stunted). I now bring comfort to myself, I realized I don't need a loving mother to turn to, I turn to myself. And to nature. I take such glory in a nice breezy day.
Same, but there are times when I wish I had an emotional connection with a wise, loving mother or father. I've done fine turning to myself, but I've been challenged attaching to others. DH is the only person in my life who has shown up as this person and I’ve often failed to acknowledge or appreciate it.