I would really like some feedback on this question.
Why is it that the adult child who grew up being the scapegoat and whipping post for their parents in the family unit, is the one who gets the job of being caregiver to the abusive elderly parent put on them?
It seems like a cruel irony to me that the adult child who gets treated the worst, gaslighted pretty much since they were toddlers, and downright bullied in their own family is the one who almost always has to "step up" and become the caregiver to the mom or dad who always hated them.
What a situation to find yourself in. To be expected to have an endless supply of love, patience, kindness, and compassion for a person who had absolutely none for you at any time in your life.
Is it unfair to believe that an elderly person should not expect more from their adult children then they were ever willing to give? Or ever did give? I don't think it is. Thanks for listening. I just needed to vent for a minute.
If people find support from objective caring individuals, participate in therapy and has time away from the harmful people in their lives, they can learn to break cycles.
That person does suffer an identity crisis after experiencing trauma in their childhood and adulthood.
My friend who grew up in Nebraska was the ‘targeted’ one with her mom and brothers. This woman had 5 brothers who treated her like crap. She doesn’t have a relationship with any of them now, nor her mom.
That’s all she knew. Sadly, she ended up in an abusive marriage as well.
It took a suicide attempt and a fairly long stay in a mental hospital before she could see that she had even been gaslighted. Grooming starts very young. Abusive men know who to target! It’s very sad.
Her mom would provide warm blankets for her brothers to sleep under and my friend said she dreaded Nebraska winters because her mom would take away her blanket as punishment.
Her mom was evil. Her dad left when she was little because she was so mean to him.
She wouldn’t allow my friend to see her dad.
Her dad remarried. She reconnected with him as an adult and she told me that her stepmom is like the mom she never had.
Her stepmom is a lovely woman who is kind. They are close. Her kids love her and call her grandma.
People who suffered abuse or continue to suffer abuse should never be the caregiver.
They deserve to become free from their abuser. It’s really hard to visit a friend in a mental hospital after a suicide attempt because her husband beat her so badly.
Thank God, she is doing well now. She did benefit from her stay in the mental hospital. She was away from her abuser long enough to focus on her therapy and start healing.
Here is a quote that may help you today:
I don’t know who needs to hear this, but just a reminder that calls to ‘be kind’ to someone who has abused you is a gaslighting tactic. It furthers the idea that the abuser is deserving of considerations that his or her victims are not.
~Meg Pillow’s Doppelfanger on Instagram
I think an abusive elder WILL expect the moon from anyone & everyone they can. It's up to YOU how much YOU are willing to give.
Please remember that YOU are important. YOU count. YOU are a valuable human being and a child of God. YOU matter. Take care of YOU today because you deserve to.
At least caring for Mom and becoming that unloved child again has made me see how things developed as they did and I can start healing myself. I am learning not to react to the manipulation, when it is just kinder on myself to give in, and how to pick those battles! I committed myself, knowing I would learn about myself. No coercion or expectations from siblings who are also aware and healing, so no one to blame (not even me!)
I am hoping Working on learning to never get myself into an abusive relationship again.
God Bless You!
A loving God would not do that to their child. A loving parent would not do that to their child.
Why does the scapegoat keep coming back for more? Often because of attitudes like this. That taking abuse is the best self-sacrifice there is, and God wants it that way.
“Just be happy! Smile! Be nice! Never complain! You’ll be soooo blessed one day!! Let them keep hating and hurting you, because you’re a sinner who isn’t worth defending. God loves it when you suffer!”.
Nope. That’s not how it’s supposed to be.
You have answered your own question in your posting.
The grooming started long ago. People fall into a role that they felt was their responsibility because of a sense of obligation and guilt.
Hopefully, one day their perspective on the situation will change.
Unfortunately their perspective usually only changes when a person becomes sick and tired of being sick and tired.
Anyway, in our family, I am now the caregiver but my mom has dementia and doesn't remember that I wasn't her favorite child. She rather likes me now and says I'm the only one who has seen her naked (not true, my sister used to take her to her house for a bath and has helped clean her up here).
If you choose to be the caregiver, perhaps you'll be "lucky" and the one you are caring for will forget you're not the favorite.
Otherwise, like someone else said, it would be good for you to set boundaries, which is extremely uncomfortable for those of us who are used to doing what everyone expects.
I am glad you posted. I have found this is a safe place to vent and get support.
There are especially in families dealing with alcohol, whole books written about how one child assumes the "rebel" role, and one the "good child" and another the smart and another the bumbling, and so on. As many roles as there are kids. The peacemaker. The disruptor. The caregiver. The negligent, the responsible, the irresponsible.
We teach people directly how to treat us by how we ALLOW them to treat us. If we post a sign "kick me" on our forheads someone will kick us. NOW comes the question about what we do. Do we say "Sorry, I will try harder; if I fail please kick me again" or do we say "Do that again and you will never see me again".
It is quite honestly, in any relationship, necessary to tell someone what we expect and what we will accept. To stand and say "I don't deserve that; I am a good person. If you ever do that again you will never see me again". This holds true in any relationship. Say one of abused spouse, male or female. And we have to be ready to walk away.
I think the honest truth with children is that our parents form us as though we are malleable as clay. And it is hard to grow out of the form they shaped. They tell us either "You are strong and capable and able and good and can be anything you want"
OR
they tell us: "You are weak and ugly and bad and dumb and you better be better or I won't love you."
I have told the story about a girlfriend who did everything for her female partner. EVERYTHING. And then became ill and needed help. Her spoiled girlfriend left at once. When my friend ended in the shrink office the shrink said : "YOU are entirely at fault. You told her who you were, that you would do EVERYTHING for her. Now you have broken the bargain the two of you made. You let her down. YOU broke the contract".
THAT is a life lesson that is devastating to hear, but it was the beginning of a new life for my girlfriend. Due to getting good help she never made that mistake again.
I think honestly the only way out at some times, the only way for us to stretch out of our awful but "known and comfortable" roles, is to get professional help to shake us up.
Have you ever sat and honestly thought "Why am I continuing to do this?" "What do I expect to happen?" "What is the best things that could happen?" "What is the most realistic expectation of outcome here?" Do you journal at all? I don't mean journal a litany of the unhappiness of the day, but really ask yourself the tough questions, make the lists of choices.
So sorry; it's all so awful, but there is one thing likely guaranteed. We don't change people. And people seldom do change what they are at the core. And the choice, finally, is in our own hands. Stand up for yourself. Get help for yourself. And make a good and decent family of good and decent people you choose for yourself. People who will treat you as you treat them, with love and respect.
So sorry; these are such hard times anyway, and dealing with all this makes it seem impossibly hard at some times. I surely do wish you the best. I know my telling you that this is in your hands isn't a gift, it is only one more burden, and I am so sorry for that, as well, but it will do you no good for me to say "Someday they will know how good you are and they will tell you so and you will be all healed", because that just isn't how I see it happening out there. Hugs, Burnt. I am so sorry.
I hope, if this is you, that you will say a resounding "NO" to what you do not want to do, and a yes to what you are willing to do OF YOUR CHOICE AND WITH LOVE.
The SG child is often blindsided when the abuse continues and feels they have no option but to continue to provide care. The other children in the family who all along benefited from the SG being the parents' target are reluctant to provide any help, because they have become adept at blaming the SG for the parents bad behaviour and they do not want to become the target of abuse.
At least this is how it has played out in my family. Except I got therapy, set boundaries and refuse to take any more abuse from either of them. My brother the Golden Child, bought into me being the Problem Child and it has impacted our relationship too.