Imagine you had perfectly loving, supportive, and emotionally mature parents. All of your material wants and needs were taken care of as a child. Friendship, community, great teachers, joy, healthy habits — your childhood was practically ideal. Except… your drunk uncle raped you at family events for a decade and you were too terrified and ashamed to tell anyone about it.
How would you feel about your childhood?
I would hate it.
I’d feel so alone, powerless, violated, worthless, and afraid that it’d be hard to appreciate the one million beautiful things my shiny, happy, wonderful ass family did for me. Like someone giving you a bouquet of flowers and a Starbucks gift card while you’re being mauled by a grizzly bear. Certainly a swell gesture, but not actually all that helpful.
In fact, being surrounded by people who appear to be having a delightful time while you secretly fantasize about not waking up in the morning can be rather unhelpful.
“I Shouldn’t Feel This Way”
Many people look back on their childhood and decide that “It wasn’t that bad,” or “They did the best they could,” or “Other people had it so much worse.”
You have my permission to stop denying your feelings and the reality of your experience. No one has to understand, believe, or agree with you. Your trauma doesn’t need to be worse than anyone else’s for it to be valid.
If I walk into the ER with a broken arm and spot a guy with a bullet wound in his chest, I’m not gonna change my mind and go home. I’m gonna get some goddamn medical attention! And I certainly won’t belittle myself for not being in as much pain as the dude with the extra hole.
The Paradox of Family
If you feel like you had an awful childhood, it doesn’t necessarily mean your family was a roving band of sociopaths. It’s more often the case that your family loved you very much, had great intentions, and shit happened. You don’t have to choose between “I love my family,” and “My childhood sucked.” BOTH can be true.
People have such a hard time with this. Maybe because we live in such a “Find the bad guy!” culture. Perhaps toxic shame is so ubiquitous these days that blame has become a universal reflex.
Whatever the case, seeing a therapist to resolve childhood trauma (that bee tee dubs is likely affecting every area of your life), is not an indictment on your family tree. It’s literally just tending to your mental health. There is no witch hunt. No judge, jury, or executioner. This is between you and what you see in the mirror (which aren’t always the same).
Maybe your siblings enjoyed their childhood and you felt abused and abandoned. This happens all the time. Nobody has to be “right” or “wrong” about it. It doesn’t have to be anyone’s “fault.” Life is a sloppy mess with no instruction manual, and we’re all out here doing the best we can.
But if something doesn’t feel right, it probably ain’t.
And don’t you let anyone tell you different.
The paradox of wanting to share free content AND pay my bills 🤔
The paradox of wanting to share free content AND pay my bills 🤔
The paradox of wanting to share free content AND pay my bills 🤔
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Thank You Adam. Always hitting the right heart string. I love my family but I also had a shitty childhood. I always just wanted normal brothers, not one who sexulized me and everything about life and not one who was violent. It’s obvious to me that my family of origin was fucked up, having had one die of a drug overdose, 2 spent time in jail, the hidden nephew the list goes on and on. Thank You again, for giving me the proper words. I do love my family but I had a very shitty childhood. ✌🏻I wish the other would just fucking say it!
Yeah, the denial and the secrecy is the worst part! Keeping family secrets is the #1 way to carry shame that ain’t yours. 👎🏼
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
This really resonated with me. I have a super loving family, but having a mother with undiagnosed and untreated depression since the day I was conceived till my early 20s did a number on me. I have always felt some amount of shame though, during my healing process, because I know my parents did the best they could with the awareness they had. Still, owning up to the causes of my own depression was powerful because understanding my trauma allowed me to move beyond it and become the person I am today. Thank you for articulating this paradox so clearly!
Childhood is literally where we became who we are… and people are SO terrified of ever taking a look at it. Like, why is it so taboo??? Seems silly to me. Happy to hear that you’re not hiding from it or denying the facts. That is an uncommon valor you possess, my friend. Thank you for sharing. 🙏🏼❤️