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- From: shiva%morpheus%Servers@MAGNOLIA.BANYAN.COM
- Newsgroups: alt.support
- Subject: Parents of Adults Divorcing
- Message-ID: <9207221505.AA05325@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU>
- Date: 22 Jul 92 15:05:45 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Lines: 64
- X-Unparsable-Date: Wed, 31 Dec 69 19:00:00 EST
-
- A couple of months ago, my mother started a conversation with that old,
- familiar, soap-opera line "Your father and I will always care about each
- other, but..." It seems that at this point in their lives they have
- decided it makes sense to explore all the options in their relationship,
- which includes discussing the possibility of separation/divorce.
-
- I could spend a lot of time telling you what is good about this resolution
- of theirs, because as an Intellectual Objective Adult who knows them both
- very well I can see tremendous benefit in the two of them finally sitting
- down and talking about reality (the biggest thing that has been missing
- from their marriage). In reality, the whole thing has really thrown me.
- I don't think I want them to stop the work they're doing; I don't even
- think I'd want them to stay together if they really felt they'd be happier
- apart. There is a lot about the feelings that I'm having that I don't
- really understand yet; I think I've been avoiding them until the verdict
- comes in (i.e. why deal with it if they're just going to end up staying
- together?).
-
- What has really distressed me, though, is my mother's reaction to me in
- all of this. When she first told me about this (I have never discussed
- it , or even alluded to it, with my father), she wanted to know how I felt.
- She said she hoped she could help me without jeapordizing her own progress.
- But ever time I suggest that I might be disturbed or distressed - or
- *anything*, in fact, other than pleased that they're finally talking about
- things, she stonewalls me. It's as if she doesn't believe I have any
- right to be upset at all. "You should be grateful," she said once, "that
- your parents care enough about each other to at least try to work it out."
-
- I don't bring it up any more, but she does from time to time. She was
- telling me last night that she had spoken on the phone to my dad and my
- brother (my dad was visiting him), and that my brother sounded "subdued."
- I suggested that perhaps he was tired, or perhaps he was having a stressful
- time with my father, or perhaps he just didn't have anything to say. (These
- are generally the reasons my brother sometimes isn't talkative.) She then
- told me that my father had discussed "things" with him, but that all my
- brother had said was "Don't worry about me in all of this." (Did I *ask*
- what he said? No, I didn't.) She didn't think his discussion with my dad
- could have anything to do with his subdued mood; when I suggested it might,
- she said "But he said we shouldn't worry about him." Like my brother had
- said "Oh, fine, doesn't bother me in the least" instead of "Don't worry
- about me." Knowing my brother, I suspect what he meant was "I don't want
- to get put in the middle of all of this, so leave me out of it." Smart
- guy; I should have tried that. But I was absolutely astounded that my
- mother honestly seems to believe that a normal, healthy reaction from her
- children is "Oh, good. So, seen any good movies lately?"
-
- I need her to acknowledge that I have a right to feel upset, that the
- outcome of this does affect me, that it's normal to be distressed by
- the thought of your parents splitting up, even as an adult. I won't ask
- her to help me through this; that, I think, is too much. I'd be perfectly
- happy if the topic never came up between the two of us again. But the whole
- issue makes me feel about twelve years old; and when she gets irritated with
- me for having an emotional reaction to what she's telling me about, it's
- like someone has ripped my insides out and left a hollow, aching cavern. I
- feel absolutely alone.
-
- Has this happened to anyone else? Is my reaction normal? Do other adults
- deal more practically with their parents' splitting up?
-
- -shiva
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