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Xantippe
Guest
I think there are a lot of people in the middle.Honestly a lot of it is…I feel like I end up forced into a dichotomy between “good wonderful parents that you should spend time with and work out any minor issues” and “awful evil abusive parents that you should cut out of your life forever.” There’s just no road map for anything in between, and nowhere I really feel safe offline trying to figure out where that roadmap is that isn’t just draining so much out of me in the first place trying to prove everything.
My mom, for example, was physically abusive to my sister and me when we were tween and teens, and had very little in the way of parenting skills suited to kids that age, especially girls. Her parenting philosophy was a) don’t talk back/don’t argue b) do what you’re told NOW and c) WHACK! WHACK! WHACK! when that didn’t work. Now that I have a teen and tween of my own, I realize that my mom was totally unprepared for parenting tweens and teens (although she’d done OK with younger children), as at this age, you need to be prepared for some back-and-forth, some persuasion, some compromise and some logic. It’s not as easy on the parent as instant obedience, but it is much more educational for the kids, as they learn how to make decisions and they learn about mom and dad’s thought process, not just mindlessly executing orders.
Now that I’ve been out of my parents’ house for 20+ years, I have a much better relationship with my mom. My mom was just particularly bad at dealing with tweens and teens–she’s actually great fun to tell my stories to on the phone once a week, now that I’m 40-something and she’s almost 70.