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Ash
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Jan 23, 2020 05:27AM

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It's ironic that your post mentions how much you love that little boy: his kindness, compassion, empathy... And yet as I read your post, I kept thinking those qualities were leaping off the page as characteristics of the grown Man who wrote it.
Keep your head up. You're not alone.
Lifelong fan

You will get through this. People are hearing you now. We are showing you that you're not alone. And there are going to be more days and weeks like this one, where the anger and the confusion swells, but you will get through it. You have before and you will again.



I had a DNA test with Ancestry last year and found my real father was a person in my life only a short while. This after my older brother's death I hear from his son that he considered our family dysfunctional.
I feel like I'm too old to be thinking about all this.




I hope you feel better soon.




There is a book I would like to recommend for you. It's called "The Body Keeps the Score". It's about basically what you're going through right now. How your body will hold on to the trauma you've gone through. I really hope it will help you and I'm so sorry to hear about what you went through. You're right, you are stronger than your parents and most people. Remember that.

My heart goes out to you. Every child wants their parents to love them, regardless of how awfully they are treated, and as children we love and hate them at the same time while trying to do anything to make that happen even knowing whatever we do it will not be enough. They are the monsters; not you.
It takes a long time to realize and accept that it's ok to not love them and it's ok that as a child it's what you wanted most. Remembering it, feeling it - it's like tearing the scar tissue off an old wound. But it will now allow you to heal, with work and time.



To extend the beach ball metaphor, one must stop pushing it back down and instead face it (like you are doing, Wil) and appreciate the differences between where and who you were/are between then and now. Now you are older and wiser and can surround yourself with loving people and distance yourself from abusers. Through reflection and counseling and time and healing the "ball" deflates and eventually can't hurt you with the same intensity.
Healing is a journey and I hope yours (and all these folks') is helped along by not traveling it alone. Cutting off contact with your parents or other abusers is usually a necessary though painful step to healing, especially if the abuser won't honor your feelings or take accountability and show remorse. Take care and stay true.





Hay tantos problemas que desarrollamos de adultos que pudieron ser evitados en la niñez sólo con amor :(
En muchos casos lo más genial es ir a terapia, por favor normalicemos el hecho de ponernos en manos de alguien que estudió la psiqui humana para ayudarnos a avanzar, a conocernos y a superar cosas del pasado para tener un mejor futuro :)

I think this is an excellent point, Angela. We see so many troubled and/or addicted people in the arts and we* wonder why or even blame them for their troubles while not knowing or understanding what they went through. Even if this person doesn't respond or doesn't want to deal, it may help Wil feel like he is being an adult and doing SOMETHING, which is more than we can say for so many others.
*I'm using the "royal we" here, meaning more society.

Thank you for sharing. I'm so sorry this was your life- and so glad it is no longer your life.

This is beautiful.

Your post brought me to years. Thank you for being there for others.


Namaste


I know it hurts, So, so badly. But you are stronger than you think and you are going to be okay. Truly. You have no idea how many lives you've touched. You are valued. You are loved. You matter. I wish you well, my friend.


Find a way to move - sideways, upwards, weaving - it really doesn't matter. I know that to have love and compassion for others in my heart is enough. Holding on to the I who was not loved is folly, that I doesn't exist today, my mind has the capacity to change by simply knowing this.





Thanks,
Jimmer Gillespie

Your father likely suffered from extreme self-loathing, which is usually the cornerstone of narcissism. I assume he was quick to point out physical and philosophical flaws with everyone he came in contact with, as this was his mechanism of belittling others to raise his own self-worth. It's a nasty, dangerous path to tread, but it would be his choice to follow it.
Your mother, too, used you to increase her value. That manipulation was directed to make her better, with no thought given to how it affected you. That was her choice.
They both had extreme issues with self-esteem, and both chose a mechanism by which to lessen the effect. They both chose badly.
You have the same issues, whether inherited or imposed.
Herein lies the major difference. Your choices do not impose pain or suffering on others. You choose to do what you do each day, and we are all happy with your choices. Keep to that path.
You are not born good or evil. Your choices make you who you are to yourself and others. Personally, I'm extremely impressed with the young man (sorry. Young to me, at least) that rose from that childhood and I hope you can be, too.