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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!hellgate.utah.edu!csn!cns!rks
- From: rks@cscns.com (Dancing With synergy)
- Subject: Re: Donahue: Options for Kids
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- References: <1993Jan8.203523.2885@cbfsb.cb.att.com>
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1993 09:36:56 GMT
- Lines: 96
-
- mary.rita.otto (motto@cbnewsf.cb.att.com) wrote:
-
- : I hear where you are coming from. I feel sad that you were so badly
- : mistreated as a child. I hope you are healing from those wounds.
-
- I am not sure anyone ever heals entirely but it certainly does provide
- an "interesting" way of looking at the world, the universe and my place
- in it. :-) Actually, in many ways, it is very liberating. I don't answer
- to anyone but myself and my higher power (purpose) and I am not bogged
- down in some of the things I see others really do battle with. It ain't
- all bad.
-
-
- : I know a woman who realized that she did not want to be a mother and
- : gave up two infants for adoption shortly after their birth. She
- : loved them enough to want better for them than she felt she could give.
-
- Yes! That is the distinction between those who are capable of acting
- in love and a higher purpose and those who act strictly from self-interest
- of one variety or another.
-
- : Now she is working as a nanny and taking care of two children on a
- : part-time basis. She has a wonderful relationship with them, but says
- : that she prefers this to being a mother because she doesn't feel "trapped"
- : into being responsible for them 24hrs/day, 365 days per year.
-
- That sounds rational, responsible and *very* enlightened. She knows
- who she is and what she has to offer. And is willing to act on it.
-
- *Applause*
-
-
- : It is hard for me to understand that sometimes, because the thing in
- : my life that brings me the greatest joy is the love of my children.
- : For me, the breaking of that bond is painful to even think about.
- : Yet my own upbringing was cold and distant. The very idea of me
- : climbing onto my mother's bed to snuggle her in the morning the
- : way my children do would have been rejected out of hand.
-
- It would have been unthinkable in my family also. Cold and distant is
- a good way to describe it. I can recall having my mother make fun of
- me because I asked why we never had any pet names in my family. I had
- noticed that my friends had that at home. For a long time, I didn't
- know how to deal with that sort of thing in my own life and gained
- quite a reputation for being "cold and distant" myself. It wasn't that
- I didn't want it. It was more a question of not having any model.
-
- Obviously, you learned somewhere along the line how to do that sort
- of thing and be comfortable doing it. And your kids will have a *very*
- easy time with it because they have had the example.
-
-
- : We can make our lives different from what they were, and that is our
- : greatest hope for change in the world and an end to abuse. You
-
- Amen.
-
- : are certainly right about kids knowing instinctively what they need;
- : my children constantly let me know what they need and want, and I've
- : learned a lot from them -- I just have to be careful not to reject
- : their communications (verbal, emotional and otherwise).
-
- Exactly. Even though they might exasperate you sometimes. I was afraid to
- have children myself. I didn't really start to deal with my own issues
- until I was in my mid-thirties and I think any children born to me
- would have suffered before that -- then I would be providing therapy
- for them. :-) Not fair. Not a bit.
-
-
- : As survivors, we have to be strong and brave enough to parent ourselves
- : and meet the needs and treat the wounds that remain, and to learn to
- : do it better as we teach the generation that will follow us.
-
- I think one of the main things that I have learned is that it won't
- change. I spent years and years hoping it would. I finally had to be
- a big girl and accept that sometimes there just ain't no justice. Until
- I did that, all the rest was meaningless. I could go through the motions
- of healing but it didn't have any reality.
-
- I am far from warm and fuzzy and I have accepted that it will probably
- always be that way. However, I have other things to contribute. We all
- have a unique gift and it seems that the largest part of our higher
- purpose is to discover that. I express my caring in a very general way
- so I am very good in political situations/civil rights issues and so
- on. That is no less a contribution than those who can give on an
- individual basis. As survivors, I think it is really important to
- *understand* that. So many of us spend our time trying to become
- something we are not. Instead of turning all of those supposed
- negatives into positives, we invest all of our energy into tryinf
- to be what we believe we lacked. And the years pass by. Ugh.
-
- Namaste,
-
- //gisle
-
-
-