Tuesday, June 12, 2018

163/365/Whining/Negativity

The biggest heartbreak for me—the thing I’ll be mourning the rest of my life—is that lack of a home. Not feeling really at home as an adolescent or teenager. Not feeling like I had a comfortable place to invite people to. Not having a place I wanted to go back to—or could. Not having the kind of family where we could all hang out together, or at least try to, because there was a place for it. There’s no changing it, and I have to let it go. But it makes me sad. (And a little resentful.)

7 comments:

  1. And after years of having no control over it, you are now responsible for it. You, my darling Indigo, are entitled to more than a little resentment.

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  2. Yes, what S just said. It's okay to feel sad (and a little resentful) for what you never had. (For other reasons, I never felt I could invite people home to my house/home either, as a child/teenager, and I feel sad about that too.) It makes me appreciate my home now so much more.

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  3. Me too, Mali. Never knowing when Dad would have one of his temper-tantrums, I kept friends away.

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  4. Yes, you're definitely entitled to those eminently understandable-under-the-circumstances feelings of sadness and resentment. And whatever else arises as you continue to deal with this situation.

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  5. Yes. This is a real thing. And mourning that the rest of your life is a likely thing too. I think many of us have similar pieces of childhood that, now that we are adults, we recognize as broken and sad and worth mourning.

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  6. I agree with what everyone has said.

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