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Gwen's avatar

When I went no contact with my parents in 2010 it was what had to happen because of all the reasons you have talked about. I was feeling so guilty about it and went to see a counselor and they recommended the book Boundaries and I pretty much laughed my way through it! I knew there was no way my parents would be able to handle boundaries. It had to be no contact. They would try and contact me and make me feel bad and it was just awful. I know most of you totally understand what I am saying! Once in a while I would allow them to visit for an hour to see my kids. Why couldn't they just be reasonable?! It was always that it was my fault and they never took any responsibility for anything. I wasn't happy that I had to make this choice but I felt like they gave me no choice. They have both passed away and I am just so relieved to not have that take over my life and cause so much guilt. I really feel for all of you who are still dealing with such difficult parents. <3

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Russtofferson's avatar

"...while others notice that setting boundaries triggers anxiety or sadness in their parent, and they feel a heavy responsibility for rescuing their parents from that emotional state."

This is 1,000% me, and reading this I just realized that I've spent the bulk of my time with my therapist over the last several months trying to explain and game out my parents' counter moves. Even after abandoning hope of setting and keeping boundaries and going full no-contact after the election, the discussion has continued because I know my silence is making them sad, and if they're sad on account of me, then that makes me the bad guy. And I am hard-wired to not want to be the bad guy and to make amends if I discover I am hurting someone. Thus, any contact I have with my parents will automatically have me starting out on my back foot, apologizing, meeting their emotional needs while ignoring my own, and in the process dissolving all my efforts to establish my autonomy and boundaries. It's a trap, and they've executed it to perfection many times.

Finally my therapist asked me: "So what if you are the bad guy?"

(I know he meant it as me being the bad guy *in their eyes*, not literal villainy.) I didn't have a good answer in the moment and I still don't have one. It's just hard to turn off that sense of responsibility for their emotional needs even after I've blocked them from communicating those with me. I get the intent behind the question though: at some point I'll have to grow comfortable with not caring what they think of me and fully embrace the autonomy I've worked so hard to carve out for myself. The irony is that my authentic self is a far better person than the ideal self they created for me, so if they can only see badness there, that's their problem.

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