When You Hope to Be a Better Parent than Your Parents Were
As Stanford neuroscientist and MacArthur fellow Robert Sapolsky recently
tweeted: “There’s nothing like parenthood to make you really neurotic as you
worry about the consequences of your every act, thought, or omission.”
Many individuals who grew up with Adverse Childhood Experiences later
worry about what kind of parent they will be.
Cindy grew up as the eighth child in a large Catholic family that was always
chaotic.
Cindy’s mother, who grew up in an alcoholic family, began having children at
nineteen. By the time Cindy was born, two months premature, her oldest sister
was a teenager. By then, Cindy says, “My mom had been raising kids for more
than sixteen years.”
“Growing up, I felt my mother was almost like a kind of war victim,” Cindy
tells me. “I’ve been told that because I was premature, I got more attention when
I was born than my siblings did. I had that, at least, on my side.”
Weak parenting skills were passed down on both sides of Cindy’s family tree.
Cindy’s grandmother was widowed very young and raised Cindy’s father and his
five brothers with an iron fist. “And so he ruled us with the iron fist he’d
inherited from her,” she says.
Cindy’s parents divorced when she was young. Her father left. Then, when
she was twelve, Cindy’s mother announced, “I’ve been parenting for thirty years
and I want to be on my own. Go live with your father. Let him deal with it all.”
Her dad’s new wife didn’t like spending money on her husband’s kids and
“complained about the price of our dentist bills.
“I was really good in school, and my dad valued that, so in some ways I
walked on water with my dad,” Cindy says. A wan smile crosses her face. “That
saved me. My father was very achievement-oriented and rewarded me for doing
well but he was always pushing. If I got an A he’d say, ‘Why wasn’t it an A+?’
My good grades became a double-edged sword and he’d say, ‘You think you’re
so book smart, but you have no common sense!’ And that just wasn’t true.”
But those moments of shame were minuscule compared “to what he did to my
brother,” Cindy says. “He never lifted a hand to me, but he was really brutal to
my brother who was only nine when my parents divorced.” Cindy says she has
“a vivid memory of one day when he was about eleven, my brother was on the
floor and my father was just beating him in front of me. My brother would punch
holes in the wall in our house. He was so angry and hurt. My father’s approach
was to control with force, while my mother was just overwhelmed by it all. And
my father never took responsibility for how he damaged him.” Cindy’s brother
went to college for a little while and then dropped out.
Another brother went to college, then eventually started a deck construction
company. “I remember my dad telling him, ‘I’m embarrassed to tell people
you’re my son; all you do is pound nails for a living.’ ”
“I watched my siblings suffer,” she says. “One sister ended up in a group
home in her twenties after my parents told her she had to move out. Another
developed serious addictions. I was a bystander to all of that, too.” Cindy recalls
having “this aha moment” from the age of ten or eleven, “this internal dialogue
with myself that if I want to get out of here, I will have to
achieve
my way out.
Doing well on every test, every paper, felt like a matter of sheer survival. I was
plotting my escape from a very early age.” And her strategy worked. She
graduated from a well-known liberal arts college.
By age twenty, however, Cindy’s immune system started breaking down. “I
started coming down with every flu and cold around,” she says. “One infection
morphed into the next. For about a year I was almost never well.” I developed
chronic urinary tract problems, which led to “this terrible phobia about having to
urinate. It was a very self-reinforcing cycle where worry and anxiety made my
urinary tract symptoms far worse. It was as if my immune system was so tired of
doing battle.”
Then Cindy developed acute muscle pain. “One day, in my early twenties, my
neck hurt so badly—without my even knowing how I had hurt it—that I couldn’t
lift my head to get out of bed.” Altered immune function, increased risk of
infection, muscle spasms, and pain—she was twentysomething but had an old
woman’s excruciatingly painful and worn-out body.
Cindy worked hard at building her career and searched, in a remarkably
conscious and careful way, for someone she could love and be loved by who was
very different from her father. “Someone who wasn’t critical, someone who
listened, someone who saw the best in people.” Cindy met her husband when she
was only twenty-four. “I felt this huge window of healing open up for me; he
was this stable presence I’d long needed in my life.”
But as her life became more stable, she slowly became more aware of her own
emotional unsteadiness. “Some nights I’d have panic attacks and my husband
would spend hours just listening and talking me down.” At a certain point, “I
recognized how unfair that was to him. I told him, ‘I could cry on your shoulder
forevermore, but I need to grow up so I can be a full partner. I don’t want to be
the broken one. And at some point you are going to get weary from always being
the listener, the strong one.’ ”
Cindy worried so much about what kind of parent she might be that she didn’t
see how she could ever have kids. “I was so afraid of not having the skills to
parent, and of passing on the pain of my childhood. I knew there had to be a
better way to live than how I had been raised. I knew that life shouldn’t be so
painful.”
Cindy understood how deeply her past was affecting her and told her husband,
“I will not have children until I know that I am in an emotionally stable place
and can give them what any child deserves.”
Cindy and her husband had their first son when Cindy was in her early
thirties. “We both cut back on our work hours; we were tag-team parents all the
way.” Cindy loved her work, and her son was a happy baby, which gave her the
confidence to have a second child at the age of thirty-five. Her second child, a
girl, was a far more challenging baby.
“She was one of those babies who could not be comforted,” Cindy says. “At
times she would cry, scream at the top of her lungs.” Her daughter was highly
sensitive to stimuli, reactive to loud noises, unsettled. Cindy felt anxious when
she couldn’t help her to stop crying. “I felt inside that I was failing as a mom.
Because I had no template for what it meant to be a good parent, I didn’t know
what normal was,” Cindy says. “So I became this whirling dervish trying to be
the perfect, loving, always attentive parent, without thinking enough about my
own well-being. On the rare occasions when my daughter would nap, I would
push myself to spend more time playing with my preschooler.”
As her daughter got older and more settled, life got easier. “That is, until
perimenopause hit.” Cindy’s physical and emotional symptoms returned. The
depression she had wrestled with when she was younger came back, as did panic
attacks. She was engulfed by a flulike fatigue. She felt less able to manage her
emotions. She started a new job she was excited about, but it didn’t work out as
she’d hoped. She forgot things, then felt ashamed.
The saying “Fear swallows children—and the adults we become” was true for
Cindy. “After years of having felt more capable of handling whatever came
along, I’d wake up thrashing in the middle of the night. I blamed myself for not
being able to will myself to handle life better. If we’ve had a difficult childhood,
years later all the events of our past begin to seem surreal. It’s as if they never
really happened, so we forget the impact they’ve had on us. I felt that if my
childhood wasn’t happening to me right now, why should it still be impacting
me so much? Why couldn’t I just move on? The combination of perimenopause
and work stress reignited the trauma from my childhood. It brought up emotional
challenges that I hadn’t struggled with for a long time.”
Cindy recognized that she needed to find ways to heal herself if she hoped to
keep the past of “my own childhood from spilling into my children’s present-day
lives.”
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |