What are other ways that men and women heal from having abusive or non-existent relationships with their parents?
In other words, it may very well be that one's parent who failed them was equally failed by their own parent. If so, then it may be that they failed to give their child what they needed because they never received it themselves.
Were my parents the greatest?
No, they most definitely were not.
Did they at least try to be good parents?
To the undiscerning, one might answer "no." However, as the child in question, and because I came to learn a bit about my parents' own childhoods, I came to understand that the things that they were failing to give to me were the very same things that their parents failed to give to them. That understanding greatly helped me to not only not harbor a grudge towards them, but to actually have some compassion towards them.
We all live in a greatly fallen world, and it is easy to only focus upon how others are seemingly wronging us. We need to realize that others have been wronged too. Does this somehow justify their failures as parents? No, it does not, but it might help us to distinguish between that which was intentional and that which they simply could not do. This is probably a horrible analogy, but if any of you asked me for a large sum of money, and I could not give it to you simply because I did not have it, would it be right for you to be angry or upset with me? A person cannot give what they do not have, and a lot of parents simply do not have what it takes to be parents.
I don't know if any of that made sense or not, but it made sense when it was in my head. Lol.
When it comes to children who were abandoned by their parents, a similar principle might be at work. In other words, did someone's biological mother give them up for adoption because they were financially unable to support the child? Was the biological mother in an abusive situation, and did she give up the child in the hope that it would be raised in a safer and more stable environment? Similar questions could be asked, and the answers might help to alleviate some of the pain or feelings of rejection that the child may still be carrying.
Just some thoughts...
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