Sneaky Boundary Crossings in Childhood Trauma

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 มี.ค. 2024
  • Sneaky Boundary Crossings in Childhood Trauma
    Learn more about Patrick Teahan,
    Childhood Trauma Resources and Offerings
    ➡️ linktr.ee/patrickteahan
    MUSIC IS BY:
    Chris Haugen - Ibiza Dream
    • Chris Haugen - Ibiza D...
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    ⚠️ Disclaimer
    My videos are for educational purposes only. Information provided on this channel is not intended to be a substitute for in person professional medical advice. It is not intended to replace the services of a therapist, physician, or other qualified professional, nor does it constitute a therapist-client or physician or quasi-physician relationship.
    If you are, or someone you know, is in immediate danger, please call a local emergency telephone number or go immediately to the nearest emergency room.
    If you are having emotional distress, please utilize 911 or the National Suicide Hotline
    1-800-273-8255

ความคิดเห็น • 895

  • @patrickteahanofficial
    @patrickteahanofficial  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +156

    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro & Story TIme
    4:00 Format of Video
    4:18 Nothing to See Here
    4:42 Nothing to See Here (Examples)
    6:23 Nothing to See Here (Boundaries Crossed)
    7:30 Nothing to See Here (How This Boundary Affects Us in Adulthood)
    8:22 Nothing to See Here (Overcoming This Trigger)
    9:20 Nothing to See Here (Healthy Reparenting)
    9:55 It's Not Confidential
    10:38 It's Not Confidential (Examples)
    13:25 It's Not Confidential (Boundaries Crossed)
    14:21 It's Not Confidential (How This Boundary Affects Us in Adulthood)
    15:13 It's Not Confidential (Overcoming This Trigger)
    16:08 It's Not Confidential (Healthy Reparenting)
    16:57 You're Here For Me
    17:10 You're Here For Me (Examples)
    19:45 You're Here For Me (Boundaries Crossed)
    20:52 You're Here For Me (How This Boundary Affects Us in Adulthood)
    21:48 You're Here For Me (Overcoming This Trigger)
    22:48 You're Here For Me (Healthy Reparenting)
    23:45 My Beliefs Are Yours Now
    25:23 My Beliefs Are Yours Now (Examples)
    26:39 My Beliefs Are Yours Now (Boundaries Crossed)
    28:08 My Beliefs Are Yours Now (How This Boundary Affects Us in Adulthood)
    29:42 My Beliefs Are Yours Now (Overcoming This Trigger)
    30:50 My Beliefs Are Yours Now (Healthy Reparenting)
    32:32 Final Thoughts
    33:07 Motives Diagram
    35:49 Final Thoughts (continued)
    36:35 Connect With Me
    36:55 Outro

    • @spiritualspartan884
      @spiritualspartan884 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The format is incredibly simple in the best way. I am so grateful you broke it down like this, because it’s so easy to over complicate and confuse- this format fosters such an ease of understanding

    • @TheGIG-Podcast
      @TheGIG-Podcast 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you Patrick! I'm sharing your videos with other people all the time now. So thankful for you.

    • @PrincessDollieBunnie
      @PrincessDollieBunnie 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      thanks Patrick these timestamps make it easier to take notes!

    • @jessicabyland2879
      @jessicabyland2879 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you so very much for your wisdom, perspectives, time and validations on these. Its so relieving to know that the things I had experienced have names and I am now being taken much more seriously

    • @Variety_Streams
      @Variety_Streams หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Does being hit as a child also count as being part of the Beliefs section of the video? Wondering where I can look deeper into this topic of conditional love and physical discipline

  • @teresahemingway4577
    @teresahemingway4577 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1053

    They monitor you for joy so they can quickly try to squash it

    • @ardenthira2687
      @ardenthira2687 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +100

      Damn that is well-put

    • @Leviajohnson
      @Leviajohnson 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      Feel this

    • @leeow3n
      @leeow3n 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

      Words I've never had, but experienced!

    • @patrickteahanofficial
      @patrickteahanofficial  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +161

      oof. yes! I know this well.

    • @catherinesinclair7727
      @catherinesinclair7727 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Yep

  • @afterthestorm221
    @afterthestorm221 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +613

    Parents keeping secrets yet not allowing the child to have any there's a huge boundary violation in my family.

    • @FreyaGem
      @FreyaGem 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      I can relate. Now as an adult one of the biggest dealbreakers is if someone violates my privacy boundaries!

    • @peachesandpoets
      @peachesandpoets 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      ​@@FreyaGemexactly. I don't wait for an explanation. They're out of my life at the first betrayal

    • @KristinaKarina
      @KristinaKarina หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      THE SECRETS: not admitting child abuse, not admitting alcoholism, not admitting financial irresponsibility, not providing medical attention - all the while convincing the church that she’s done it all, suffered the burden of carrying it all.

    • @fartmagus
      @fartmagus 4 วันที่ผ่านมา

      yikes❤️‍🩹 so true

  • @katieeder6143
    @katieeder6143 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +576

    "You're here for me" describes my childhood perfectly. I learned about money issues, affairs, drama with the neighbors, what they thought about each other's inlaws (my grandparents), what they thought about my siblings, etc. I wanted to be a good oldest daughter and was fascinated by what was told. In adulthood, I can see how they didn't protect my right to learn things at age appropriate times.

    • @AA-iy4gm
      @AA-iy4gm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      We were their voluntold therapists.

    • @karengrant7894
      @karengrant7894 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      This is what happened to me as well.

    • @danak2230
      @danak2230 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      That's me too. I became "house mom" in my tween years. My own mother died when I was little. My dad and older brither made me their free therapist, cook, coparent, co-conspirator, etc. The worst part was that neither really respected my opinion or views. I had the responsibilities of a mom/wife but no respect or authority. I remember how this sapped my energy and sense of self. It was awful.

    • @carolnahigian9518
      @carolnahigian9518 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I was Kinnie's Puppet while Amdria/ Windy ABUSED me , then 20 yrs later called me a "homosexual"...Havoc Makers

    • @julietteferrars3097
      @julietteferrars3097 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      💔 “I wanted to be a good oldest daughter.”

  • @lindseynilsson2073
    @lindseynilsson2073 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +344

    I was raised to believe that I had no safe space of my own in my childhood home. If I tried to lock myself in my room to get out of a fight with my mother, she would pick the lock and break in, screaming at me. The house was hers and so was everything in it, including my bedroom. She even rented out my room to a stranger at one point and made me sleep in bed with her and share a room with her at age 11-12. I’ve grown to be very protective of my own space. I live alone with my son and my pets and find it extremely difficult to live with anyone else, especially a romantic partner. I get very triggered when things in my space are messed with or misplaced by others. My home is my fortress and I have a difficult time letting anyone in, physically.

    • @summacumsoap8983
      @summacumsoap8983 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      Lindsay, your comment triggered a memory of when I was about 6-8 years old. I woke up one morning to discover an adult female in my bed, complete stranger! Not a word was ever spoken before..or after...or Ever re who/what this was about!
      Apparently a person known to parent (s) as there was lots of jovial noise from downstairs as I was in shock still in my bed. Never introduced to me. Guess I was just to go with it...
      (one of so many boundaries crossed)

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      @@summacumsoap8983I lived in a sometimes party house. Someone was probably going too hard and needed to lay down. 🙄Children didn’t not only not matter sometimes we were invisible

    • @kingaogiegloabstractpaintings
      @kingaogiegloabstractpaintings 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      thats my childhood.

    • @somrahprincess1
      @somrahprincess1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Oh wow I’m the same way

    • @xLiLlyx98
      @xLiLlyx98 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Wow okay, that's really another level of fucked up but that thing with not being allowed to lock yourself in a room sounds familiar. Mom confiscated all the keys to the bedrooms and when I discovered that the bathroom key locked my room door and did it once, she confiscated that one permanently, too... Still isn't in that lock years later... When she was angry I was actually worried that she would kick down the door if I didn't open up 😬

  • @dptfo
    @dptfo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +272

    A misstep for me that’s happened more than once: my son is 4, and sometimes he does things or says things that I think are funny or cute or clever and I tell my mom about it and I can visibly see him shrinking back when I tell her. I didn’t realize that he would feel that way until I saw him feel it. I’m learning not to share things about him as entertainment, because it really is a betrayal of his trust in me. Building me up while it’s tearing him down, and I hate that for us both. It’s better for me to be quietly proud of him, esteem him highly, and be amused by him, without over sharing

    • @weronikaw2358
      @weronikaw2358 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      That's so wonderful you noticed and respect that now. We all make mistakes. Can't imagine how hard it must be to acknowlege you have been doing something wrong in terms of relations with your child. Much love to you ❤

    • @samiyaferguson9177
      @samiyaferguson9177 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

      Wow I love this, I was telling my sister in law about my daughter's eczema and although she's only 2 she got really embarrsed and said "don't say that" I'm going to give her more privacy now with her struggles ❤

    • @franceshorton918
      @franceshorton918 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Agree! We all need to zip the lip when dealing with other's feelings and growth.
      I've learned this the hard way.
      Zip that Lip 💋

    • @TheRealRedFlashlight
      @TheRealRedFlashlight 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thank you.

    • @user-dn8hd6xn1e
      @user-dn8hd6xn1e 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      Oh my gosh, you are doing really well perceptively, I hated hearing people talk about me as a kid even if it was good- sometimes I’d start acting the opposite way and then not even know why. 👍

  • @robinscapes
    @robinscapes 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +294

    After being trapped in the car with my mom for 12 hours, she slowed down to a crawl a block before my house so she could continue telling me off. She ignored my requests to get out of the car so I finally grabbed the wheel and steered toward the curb (going maybe 2 mph). She still tells people that I tried to kill her. Then she lost a couple hundred dollars and told my friends I stole it…without even asking me about it. My friends tried to shame me over it since she was so perfect and sweet with them. She never said anything to them when she found it.

    • @Commander_McSmirky
      @Commander_McSmirky 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

      I believe you. Sorry your friends didn't support you, sounds like she manipulated them too in order to control perception of the situation entirely. I just want you to know that I hear what you're saying and I believe you, and I hope you find resolution and peace moving forward.

    • @robinscapes
      @robinscapes 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@Commander_McSmirky thank you so much!

    • @melanieduke5816
      @melanieduke5816 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      Sounds like an absolute nightmare- hopefully you do not have to be anywhere near her anymore.

    • @arecestravi
      @arecestravi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      That is literally scary as heck. I’m so sorry that you’ve experienced that horror, and the betrayal of your own friends.

    • @1HorseOpenSlay
      @1HorseOpenSlay 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      " your mother is so nice. She would never do that." 😡

  • @GilmarGirl
    @GilmarGirl 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +160

    My family crosses boundaries a lot in the "My beliefs are yours now" category. The further I get away from it, the more it looks like a small cult with my father as the ringleader. It's so weird waking up from that and trying to be in the world without it.

    • @zekova
      @zekova 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      💯💯

    • @cynthiaskaggs6645
      @cynthiaskaggs6645 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I can totally identify with you. It took me decades to realize how cult-like my childhood family was like and is still like. It’s scary knowing that I am still the only one who recognizes it!

    • @vintagearisen
      @vintagearisen 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Same, I seldom go back to visit but when I do it's like visiting an alternate reality.

    • @myroc1
      @myroc1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I once pissed off the entire family by not enjoying Jurassic World. They just kept arguing that I misunderstood something or wasn't paying attention. There must be some reason that I could be so mistaken.

  • @NP_is_not_here
    @NP_is_not_here 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +237

    I used to be very afraid of close relationships--romantic relationships, loving platonic friendships, whatever--because I equated love with scrutiny and inspection. Eventually a therapist asked me, "Can you imagine experiencing anything else in a close relationship? Something like...support?" And no, honest to goodness, that possibility hadn't occurred to me before. I realize now my family was enmeshed in some pretty significant ways.

    • @jfcsrsly
      @jfcsrsly 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

      "I equated love with scrutiny and inspection" -- another light bulb moment after a whole video of light bulb moments. Thank you!

    • @catfudemagee1959
      @catfudemagee1959 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      This is so me, too. It’s terrible and isolating. I hope to recover some day and be able to trust people.

    • @electriceyeball
      @electriceyeball 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      What is this "support" you speak of?

    • @katariina7697
      @katariina7697 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      That's precisely how I feel! Every time I imagine myself with someone I imagine them scrutinizing me, my choices, my life. Just everything. Hasn't really occurred to me to imagine support. Thanks for your insight!

    • @misspatvandriverlady7555
      @misspatvandriverlady7555 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Support? People can just be in a relationship and… support? Eachother? Not try to use and control eachother, take advantage of every vulnerability? Yes, I’ve learned this is, in fact, possible l, now, but I sure didn’t learn that from my parents! 😬

  • @jeankipper6954
    @jeankipper6954 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +178

    They simply did not allow boundaries, on our parts. Punished for our "rebelliousness" for even trying to have any. Starting from babyhood. Somehow our very physical growth and maturation enraged them, when they noticed. I'm still finding pockets of problems that have this as an element. At 74 years old.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      At 71, we're in the same neighborhood.

    • @anessapfeifer249
      @anessapfeifer249 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Yeah. I can so relate.

    • @MS-bs8dd
      @MS-bs8dd 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      It’s great you’re dedicated to your growth Jean, Godspeed. Seeing it kind of like an insane asylum we escaped from as someone here described it. Such a tragic comedy, on a stage, actors and such… Now we see it. Now we heal it.

    • @fighttheevilrobots3417
      @fighttheevilrobots3417 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Oooof, this comment was very relatable.
      Boundaries equalled Disrespect
      And Disrespect meant I would suffer, somehow.
      Dear Gd I don't want my daughter to understand. I'm trying every day to break that cycle. She's 16 months old. It's hard work, but so important.

    • @lynnedavidson4772
      @lynnedavidson4772 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Seems it can take experiencing most of a lifetime before reality comes into focus.

  • @dgvfsa66
    @dgvfsa66 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +128

    I gave my mother my favorite book called "Empaths." I felt it would help her really know me and understand me. A week later, I asked how she liked it. She smile/smirked and said, "I gave it to your brother." She didn't care enough about me to even read it. That was a soul crusher..

    • @TheGIG-Podcast
      @TheGIG-Podcast 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      😓

    • @kriskairn3715
      @kriskairn3715 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Yes. My Mum doesn't keep books ( too much clutter and my step dad doesn't approve) 😢🤬😭

    • @dgvfsa66
      @dgvfsa66 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      ​@kriskairn3715 Apparently prefer to remain ignorant

    • @shannonluck5066
      @shannonluck5066 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      🤗 Ouch so sorry 😢

    • @ninanano2777
      @ninanano2777 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Did you tell her openly about your need of being understood or that it would mean a lot to you if she'd read (parts of) it?
      Asothers said, your frustration is totally valid. Just want to make sure you communicate your needs openly, so they can be met.

  • @nathanpetrich7309
    @nathanpetrich7309 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +187

    I have exactly one clearly communicated boundary woth my room mate, that when my door is closed I want privacy, and yet it seems every time I close my door she must have a detector that notifies her phone so she knows to come and knock. I can't have my door shut for FIVE MINUTES without her trying to invade my privacy. If I try simply not responding to her knock, she accuses me of ignoring her in a way that violates her boundaries.
    I need to gtfo...

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

      I am so sorry about this. My daughter had a college roommate that wanted to CONTORL everyone in the HOUSE! In. every. way. She demanded they all get together for prayer for meals, just weird. These were older college adult females, not freshman and it wasn't a religiously based university. We are people of faith. HOWEVER, my daughter had her own classes, jobs, and a boyfriend. This weird woman had once worked for my daughters dads second wife...made it worse... ewww.

    • @sueg2658
      @sueg2658 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      My narc mother crossed ALL bounderies. I was NOT allowed bounderies even into adulthood until I moved out of the house. Emotional incest to

    • @sueg2658
      @sueg2658 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      My narc mother crossed the line in every which way Patrick mentioned. She was a very sick person. Thank you to Patrick he has help me understand my childhood trauma more fully and guide my healing.

    • @annem7806
      @annem7806 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Do not disturb sign. Or back in the office at____ time?

    • @rupertperiwinkle4477
      @rupertperiwinkle4477 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      Tell her DONT BOTHER ME WHEN MY DOOR IS CLOSED. RESPECT MY PRIVACY. If she keeps violating your boundary, leave.

  • @sueg2658
    @sueg2658 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +204

    My narc mother violated ALL bounderies and I was allowed NONE. Very unhealthy childhood. Patrick’s videos are always enlightening for me. I suggest to others who were abused to look up the topic of “Emotional Incest”.

    • @AA-iy4gm
      @AA-iy4gm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      spot on, and look up parentification and parental alienation.

    • @gbluesky4264
      @gbluesky4264 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      All the best to you 😊

    • @paintedcrow
      @paintedcrow 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      There's a book called The Emotional Incest Syndrome which explains it really well. Sometimes it's hard to find good sources on that topic.

    • @electriceyeball
      @electriceyeball 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      You are not alone. Took the words outta my mouth. My mom killed herself 1 year 2 days ago.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@electriceyeballI hope you have support and that you flourish after such a long awful time. Vampire mothers really are h*ll.

  • @melissab3217
    @melissab3217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +60

    I will never forget my father taking my phone when I was 19 and looking through private photos of myself and my then boyfriend. He showed all my family members and even talked openly about how his body looked. This lack of privacy always made it hard to talk about abuse from him. It still feels like he's omniscient and knows any time I say something bad about him.

    • @AlexShiro
      @AlexShiro 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      That is disgusting.
      So sorry you experienced such evil.

  • @onelittledropintheocean
    @onelittledropintheocean 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +73

    My inner child is congratulating me right now because it's a miracle how much of my own toxic upbringing has not been continued in me as a mother.
    I cringe at what I have been ignorant to, but it's never to late to improve your parenting skills. My son is now 27 years old & I know the work I am doing on myself makes me a better parent & has a healthy influence on his life.

  • @julietteferrars3097
    @julietteferrars3097 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +82

    I ran away from home two days ago and it’s been exhilarating and terrifying. I’m staying with safe family members and have been shocked by how many people are in my corner supporting my independence. Thank you for sharing all of this great information, you have been my lifeline for the past few years while I’ve built up the courage to escape. ❤️

    • @m.maclellan7147
      @m.maclellan7147 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      Wishing you safety & healing. That took guts !

    • @moonafarms1621
      @moonafarms1621 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Future you is SO grateful, so proud of your strength!!! One day at a time!!!

    • @user-uu3us9ys4q
      @user-uu3us9ys4q 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Wish you luck.
      Never question your desigion you did a right thing.
      Don't come back, don't talk to them if you don't want. Your life is more important to you than supporting theirs unhealthy traits.

    • @gregpendrey6711
      @gregpendrey6711 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Going back is fatal. They will discard you and it will be 100 times more cruel each time. You can do it, you won't die. I promise that much. Please don't go back.

    • @summersun6536
      @summersun6536 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I ran away as a young adult, too, since I was still living with my parents. I had nobody to go to, so I stayed in my car for weeks or with people I did not know. Please don't make the same mistake as me and don't let them enmesh you again. I wish you all the best and that you may heal from all of what you have experienced.

  • @whodat4124
    @whodat4124 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +84

    BIG one with my mom around "It's not confidential". I felt exposed, exposed, exposed, vulnerable and learned it was unsafe to share. OMG.."my beliefs are your beliefs"...Oh yeah. IF I didn't agree with her (she was a single parent) then there was hell to pay. Her paradigm of "Men leave, men suck, Mean only want....." came up with such force when I fell in love in college. She did everything she could to break us up and then disowned me. Boy did that send me into years of processing stuff of I thought we were best friends, I thought she loved me etc. We went no contact and she never looked back. I've been happily married for 37 years building my own life, the way I want and with whom I want.

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I could have written this.

    • @whodat4124
      @whodat4124 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@monicadlynn YOu are not alone!

    • @xLiLlyx98
      @xLiLlyx98 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I love that you were able to do that! And I hope you can say from the bottom of your heart that you, too, have never looked back ❤

  • @HLBear
    @HLBear 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    I stopped journaling. It was so bad that I struggled to write daily thoughts about the news for a class in college. Putting my feelings on paper is still painful and feels exposing.

    • @shadowfax9177
      @shadowfax9177 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Same here. My mother would constantly go through my stuff and then when she couldn't find anything accuse me of being "so secretive".

    • @paintchipsfromthewal
      @paintchipsfromthewal 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@shadowfax9177yeah the accusations and anger when I stopped writing everything was the worst.

    • @pushista9322
      @pushista9322 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Mother read my journals so I switched to foreign languages which I was good at and I keep journalling in English up until this day (I'm Russian)

    • @poogissploogis
      @poogissploogis 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      This is a huge one for me! I want to so bad but I don't know if I'll ever get over that paranoia

    • @karendalsadik7119
      @karendalsadik7119 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      How sad. I think I understand. My mom would go through my room when I was out. Once I was at the beach with a friend and my mom went through my room and found contraception my dresser. She made a big deal about me having the foam. contraception. I belittled her when she accused me of acting like a whore. If her accusations were true I’d have been he fism with me!

  • @deenadamico2673
    @deenadamico2673 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +68

    Mother Gothel on the slide "You're here for me" is so fitting. 😖 I saw Tangled in the theatre with my covert narcissist mother. Might sound silly, but it was triggering for me to witness the abusive character behaving so similarly (even using the same verbiage like "Mother knows best") as my own abuser sat next to me.

    • @shortcakeplush
      @shortcakeplush 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      I had the same feeling when I saw her on here too!! She was my mother's favorite character...I remember telling her the mom in the movie scared me and she would sing the song to taunt me when I wasn't behaving according to her standards. So uncanny!!

    • @SENSEF
      @SENSEF 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I saw Tangled with my covert narc mother-in-law! I felt icky just like you! Glad to know I'm not alone!

    • @casmathews9216
      @casmathews9216 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The song from Meghan Trainor "I am your mother" - cannot listen to it. When it came out and TH-cam was pushing it, I literally had to stop browsing my content for bits because some of the lyrics were triggering

  • @plantculturescomics
    @plantculturescomics 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +165

    When my mother included me in her activities, she made it my business. I didn't need any of that and it set me back as an already deeply troubled child.
    I would never talk to my parents about something important. Last people I'd go to for support, sadly.

    • @gretchenrobinson825
      @gretchenrobinson825 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      We have to work so hard just to get where most kids start out!!!
      So, 'what's wrong with me?' instead of 'what the heck???'

    • @plantculturescomics
      @plantculturescomics 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@gretchenrobinson825 Oh geesh I feel this. Being able to also understand where my anger, frustration and disappointment comes from has helped immeasurably. Now that they own their responsibility (in my mind only) and l left the situation, a lot of healing has occurred. It's exhausting, this healing stuff.🫶🫂 I wish you the best💚

    • @jenp5759
      @jenp5759 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I hear you. Sometimes as a young adult the few times I tried the answers were not only unhelpful but mostly unhealthy. In a podcast recently by someone I admire the suggestion was not to take their advice and look elsewhere.

    • @INgirl812
      @INgirl812 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Same here!

    • @Trammiliin
      @Trammiliin 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Oh, I usually tell nothing to my mother, because the next thing happening is one of my aunts calling and asking about it. It might literally take 20 minutes from telling her and aunt calling me. And yet she's absolutely devastated by the fact we (my siblings and I) never tell her anything and her sister's kids are very close to their mother and they talk about everything. 😂

  • @ufoufo2788
    @ufoufo2788 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +72

    My birth-giver told her sister "What matters more to you, your salvation or your son?", asking her to move to Washington with her and she said no (my aunt wanted to stay with her son).
    This was shortly after I silently cut off my mom for telling me she won't support me until I become christian. I felt so hurt and so enraged that my mother could throw me away like that, when all I ever did was try to connect with her and love myself. Those two things are mutually exclusive. There is no world where my mother and myself can coexist. I have to either sacrifice myself or let her go.

    • @jj4791
      @jj4791 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Conditional love is the root of christianity. Salvation is conditional.

    • @sarahlawrence1451
      @sarahlawrence1451 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@jj4791 I respectfully disagree with you on this. It's just people being people and manipulating others hiding behind whatever they can find, whether that's religion or whatever. No-one can force another person to convert and there's no biblical basis for this either. It's sad that religion can be weaponised by unstable people

    • @publicserviceannouncement4777
      @publicserviceannouncement4777 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow. I really resonated with the last part of your comment. I think a big reason I'm having a hard time giving up weed and alcohol is because I don't feel like I'm being my authentic self. Did your mother, by chance, tell you "it's her way or the highway" or that "children are meant to be seen and not heard."

    • @ufoufo2788
      @ufoufo2788 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@publicserviceannouncement4777 Oh yes, "Seen but not heard" was one of her favorites to tell me

  • @pvqts1
    @pvqts1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +43

    My mom literally sent out a quarterly e-mail newsletter with all of our family business in it - including her ex husband. And she wonders why we don’t tell her anything

    • @AlexShiro
      @AlexShiro 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Oh dear God, how intrusive 🤨

  • @drb3353
    @drb3353 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +83

    I enjoy your use of the word “seduce” here. It helps me to understand just how inappropriate these behaviors are/were. Thank you Patrick!

  • @shimmime
    @shimmime 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +62

    Whenever my father comes to visit, he berates me about not buying a house or being able to drive and has little to talk about otherwise. I feel the only reason he visits is to exert control.

    • @susangarrard2753
      @susangarrard2753 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      I really had to limit my time with my Dad when I became an adult.

    • @melanieduke5816
      @melanieduke5816 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Stop letting him come over

    • @InfiniteMindset99
      @InfiniteMindset99 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I had to state certain boundaries with my parent over and over again until finally I said if you bring it up, that’s it we don’t need to talk. She’s not going to change, but the dynamics of the relationship have changed.

    • @slightlysarcastic3098
      @slightlysarcastic3098 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      I kept trying to have Family Holiday Dinners with my parents. I would be stressed out & uncomfortable. My father would commandeer the conversation and be weirdly aggressive. After gotten my groceries together one year, he decided they weren't coming over because he bought a turkey breast. My mom was pissed because she was looking forward. I wasn't invited.
      No more "family dinners" at my table after that. I stay home and enjoy movies and my stuffing and cranberry sauce in peace now.

  • @viveksmom
    @viveksmom 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

    My uncle gave me a beautiful gold necklace. I left it and anything expensive with my parents when I went to college. My mother started wearing it; which I didn't mind, but then she paired it with a pendant that she said wouldn't go with any other necklace and kept it as an item with her jewelry. When I got upset and said it was a gift from my uncle, she said that she shared everything with me and that I had given a piece of another gift from the same uncle to my grandmother as if my giving one thing was morally equivalent of her taking another.

  • @arecestravi
    @arecestravi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    I’m glad that’s not mostly my situation. But I’m sad that’s because my parents were traumatised by their parents, so they clearly were avoiding such behaviour with us.
    For example, when our grandmother first lived with us for several months, me and brother were very confused that she didn’t understand that you need to KNOCK in the door, ask and then come. She was also confused, especially when mother told her that it’s a rule in this family because of HER OWN behaviour in mother’s childhood.
    “But they are just kids”, - grandmother said. “They are my kids, not yours”,- simply answered mom.
    I have tricky family, but doors were sacred and only now I understand how that added just a bit of so needed sanity.

  • @ardenthira2687
    @ardenthira2687 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +83

    What you said about confidence betrayals as a form of ownership really hit home 😮‍💨

  • @Saran_wrap
    @Saran_wrap 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    My parents play all sides of the fence. They use us to validate themselves by tearing each other down, and go around the whole family circle and do it over again with my siblings. I was convinced that I was helping my mom leave my dad who is abusive and alcoholic; the things she tells me cause me so much torment. Yet… when I talk to her about his dealings with us growing up she calls me a liar and tells me “he has a good heart.” I’m turning 29 this year and only recently have I recognized that she is 50% of the problem. This after telling her some hard stories and her blatantly saying “well what I REALLY can’t handle is him messing with my work people.” I was speechless because in that moment I realized we were never loved unconditionally by either of them. I still don’t know how to process this. It is a lonely feeling but somehow it validates the loneliness I’ve always felt. I’ve watched this video three times over so I can learn how not to do this to my children.

  • @punkaakee
    @punkaakee 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +134

    Doesn’t everyone get pissed off when someone says “it’s fine” and it clearly isn’t?

    • @Christian-97
      @Christian-97 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      They have good reason to. If it truly was fine, the other person wouldn’t be upset about something.

    • @MerryLeafField
      @MerryLeafField 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      They probably meant that it’s survivable.

    • @someone-gi5lq
      @someone-gi5lq 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      well yeah but no lol

    • @teresamagnusson
      @teresamagnusson 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      No. Most people understand that if a person says something is fine, they mean that they don't want to be interrogated about the issue.

    • @drawingmomentum
      @drawingmomentum 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@MerryLeafFieldglad ur not my parent

  • @trichomaxxx
    @trichomaxxx 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    The hardest for me wasn't the abuse but trying to fit into society with what I learnt was normal from my family and getting in trouble for my behavior. Having to relearn how to live as an adult, knowing it will never be perfect.

    • @Tsuki7786
      @Tsuki7786 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      💯

  • @LadyAmatsu
    @LadyAmatsu 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    My dad constantly crosses my boundaries over hugging and pictures. I don't like to be hugged, not even by my parents. I appreciate it when people ask me first if I'm okay with a hug, when I'm given a choice and they respect it. My dad is never respected this. He even guilt trips me if I resist because he feels he's owed that hug just by being the parent and that providing for me entitles him to it. Then with photos he puts me into group situations where I am forced to either go along with it so as not to cause a scene. Or worse, he takes pictures of me without my knowledge. I feel empty when I give hugs and I hate seeing photos of myself because of all of this. I guess that's part of the "ownership" these parents have, because they own me I don't get a choice

    • @patrickteahanofficial
      @patrickteahanofficial  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      It's all about giving children choice.

    • @lisak5804
      @lisak5804 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Omg my mom does the same thing! You described it so well

    • @Banana_hamock
      @Banana_hamock 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      I hated giving/receiving hugs because of this. My dad hugs me because it comforts him and doesn't truly care If I want to or not. That sense of emptiness of a performative hug is awful.
      At the same time I've barely seen my parents hold hands or show affection with each other. These inconsistencies really mess with a kid's conception of love. It took a lot of work and time to be able be affectionate with other people for sure.

    • @lisak5804
      @lisak5804 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@Banana_hamock yes! It's depleting of us when we have to do what they want for their needs and ours doesn't matter and is disregarded. We have to hug because they want it, they need it and it doesn't matter if we don't feel good giving one...only their needs and wants matter. My parents did it with me and they started to do it with my kids and telling my kids to give other people hugs too and I told my kids they didn't have to and I'd back them up but it's so hard to advocate for yourself as a child and be out in that situation

    • @Banana_hamock
      @Banana_hamock 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@lisak5804 yes! And if you try to say no it's met with something like "oh what's the big deal, it's just a hug (in this case)" and at face value it's true, for me, that's why it is so hard to argue against. They don't want to see what it means to impose a choice on your child over and over again because they get something out of it.
      Good for you on creating boundaries with your kids! My sister doesn't let her kids see my parents and has basically gone no contact at this point. It's been hard, but they are better off, undoubtedly.

  • @spiritportraits1
    @spiritportraits1 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    A possible untreated trauma symptom of the my-beliefs-are-your-beliefs toxic family is that the kid can end up vulnerable to cults or extreme groups even (and perhaps especially) in an enraged reaction *against* the parents

    • @roxanneconner7185
      @roxanneconner7185 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      underrated comment, this describes my partner

  • @suzettedavidson7062
    @suzettedavidson7062 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    My mother did this takeover of our joint bank account for college that I'd been putting money into from my crappy high school jobs. And then she moved away, leaving me no place to live to work at my summer job before starting college. She had stopped drinking a few years earlier and this is how she chose to behave, sober. She had to leave the place where her ex-husband, my father, lived. Her custody of me was basically holding her back from a life without my father and a life with out me. She didn't tell me what was happening with the money until after she took it. A few weeks before graduation, she told me she was moving away. The movers would arrive on the day of my graduation. I asked her if she could put it off. No. She could not do that. All of this confirmed that I could not trust her. I've worked very hard on my "issues" about my father, who was very different and outright abusive. But my mother could not/would not protect me from him and was shocked when I confided in her about the abuse. Thank you for reading this.

    • @fozziebean
      @fozziebean หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      What your mother did was absolutely awful. And she acted that selfishly while sober, too! I hope you can learn to trust people.

    • @suzettedavidson7062
      @suzettedavidson7062 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@fozziebean doing my best. I'm here with other adult children, finding my support people. Thank you.

  • @AA-iy4gm
    @AA-iy4gm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +58

    The way you present the content is so helpful and easy to understand.
    Btw if your mom regularly bashes people behind their back, including your siblings, you can safely assume she's doing the same about you.
    Narcissist parents go one level up and not only tell someone else what you told them but they slightly twist it in a way that makes you look bad, like exaggerate what you said or they might even add to it, saying you laughed at someone when you didn't et cetera, it seems sometimes that they use you as a cover to get their own internal judgemental feelings out about something but not be perceived negatively themselves and in the same breath make you look bad especially to people that you have a good standing with.

    • @misspatvandriverlady7555
      @misspatvandriverlady7555 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      My ex-husband and I used to visit my in-laws weekly; my ex would go be with his mother, and I ended up stuck listening to my FIL trash-talk everyone in the world; his siblings, his neighbors, even his other (not present) children! I had the thought after a while, “I bet he trash-talks me when I’m not around, too! 😑”.

  • @ShivaHM.D.
    @ShivaHM.D. 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

    Oh, I just had a conversation with my mother, and this video came up in my youtube subscription list.
    She is used to treating me as her personal therapist, something she's been doing since I can remember. I've been going to therapy this year, and asked my mother to stop talking to me about things that aren't in my control, she keeps saying "okay" or "I'm so happy that therapy is working for you" and in the same conversation goes on to tell me about issues she has with my father and a loan my dad recently took. And when I point out that she's crossing a boundary, I just set, she tells me, "I can't talk to you anymore. " or "You just want me to shut up. " Sometimes, talking to her makes me feel so hopeless and frustrated.

    • @jaccrazy21
      @jaccrazy21 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Same, in my past when my parents divorced. I had to ask my mom to say his given name vs. “your dad” all the time. Like honey I am not to blame for ya’lls miss communication. And I am trying to date and figure this stuff out myself. A person can only handle so much …
      Proud of you for going to therapy.

    • @AA-iy4gm
      @AA-iy4gm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Good on you for going to therapy and exercising that during those unfortunate opportunities, to really get the benefit of boundaries it's actually what you do when they keep crossing them, in this case, since you already told them what you expect, if they keep crossing it you need to stand up and get going. Boundaries aren't about making someone else do something, it's about how we set them up and see that they are respected one way or another by controlling whether we let it happen to us. Good luck to us all, it gets easier with practice and time. Sometimes when parents keep being bothersome like that despite your efforts, you probably need to reduce the amount you're exposed to it and that's okay.

    • @carolnahigian9518
      @carolnahigian9518 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I was mom's " little Doctor" ( her Words)! and she never failed at hurting me. Never missed a Chance at SHAMING me,publically.

    • @INgirl812
      @INgirl812 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      My mother tried to make me her therapist for years. I actually tried to help for a little while. Then I started to get annoyed at her because she wouldn’t follow my advice to find a REAL therapist.

    • @warchikk
      @warchikk 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Good for you for going to therapy! Stick with it, and it's not okay for your Mom to work through her personal issues with you. Don't feel bad for drawing that line. You're her kid, not a friend or a therapist.

  • @ATChick
    @ATChick 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    My mother used my abuse for entertainment in front of many of the family members that I loved and trusted including my grandparents and my cousins.

  • @mday3821
    @mday3821 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    I found out at 48 yrs old that my narcissistic mother was going through my bedroom and stealing from me throughout my childhood and teen years and even the last years of her life when I lived with her. She always blamed my brother. She even sold my stuff to buy booze with. I feel like a fool for not knowing it was her!
    Thanks Patrick for shedding some light on this.

  • @rorbee
    @rorbee 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    My father never had any interest in my life or friends after i started school. As soon as my parents' marriage started going sideways, my father was very interested in spending some "fine father and son time". He tried to poorly manipulate me, explained how he abused my mom in detail, just sharing the most unhinged things to his 13 year old. I don't think I've ever felt as betrayed, and hope it stays that way. 28 now, many years of therapy behind, still learning to human.
    4 for 4, my family is so good at your exams, Patrick! :D Thanks for all you do

  • @zoekothe3457
    @zoekothe3457 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I got my period at camp in 1978. When I got home, I raided my mom’s Kotex box on the sly because I was too embarrassed to tell her. She figured it out and came into my room for, “The talk.” Afterwards, I begged her not to tell my two older brothers and she said she wouldn’t. The next morning at breakfast my 15 year old brother blurts out in front of my other brother and my dad,“Soooooooooo….” 🙄

    • @rsamom
      @rsamom 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Sorry you went through that.🤗💔😢

  • @nr4930
    @nr4930 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    I turned 65 yesterday. My parents both passed on over a decade ago. They still don't know if I even graduated high school - they never asked. I was an honour student too but skipped both graduation and prom. What was the point? No interest or celebration. Zip. I still shake my head at that.

  • @JawaMech
    @JawaMech 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    Ooooof. “You’re Here for me” is so spot on it hurts. My mother even said “I don’t need a therapist because I have X”

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I wish I could get back the time wasted listening to the stuff I had to! And it never helped a thing! No contact now, and thank heaven!

  • @SteffidelaM
    @SteffidelaM 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +58

    Holy crap. I just had a major revelation about my own problems and triggers. As someone who is at the beginning of healing from trauma, your videos are amazing.

    • @LBrad100
      @LBrad100 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Keep going!

  • @ruthjones5557
    @ruthjones5557 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +47

    I think I suffered all of those boundary violations. Mum telling my dad and brothers I’d started my period immediately after I’d asked her not to; mum using me as her therapist; mum telling me all about her marital difficulties and turning me against my dad who wasn’t a good father but it’s left me questioning how much of my anger towards him is truly mine or hers; mum opening my mail; mum forcing me to hand over my savings to a brother, insisting it was a loan and that she’d pay me back but later renaged and told me to get the money back from my brother (who denied any knowledge of a loan). I could go on but the list of boundary violations is too long. All of this left me with a sense that if I set a boundary then I was doing something wrong. I still struggle with boundaries today. And yet I have zero problem in respecting other people’s boundaries!

    • @Trammiliin
      @Trammiliin 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Oh, I can truly empathise with it. Sounds like our mothers could be mentally cloned. I didn't even tell my mother I had my periods. When she found out 3 years later, I was sitting on toilet, trying to clean myself up. She opened the door (it didn't have a lock) with a grin and yelled so that everybody at home could hear: "YOU CAN TAKE THOSE PADS IN THE CLOSET". I had to tell her multiple times to close the door and go away but she didn't until I screamed at her to shut the f-ing door and get the f out of there. Then she was hurt I treated her so badly when she just wanted to help. This is insane how those parents can even weaponise their children's bodily functions against them.

    • @SteeleMagnolia
      @SteeleMagnolia 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@TrammiliinI totally feel your pain. Our mother never spoke to us about periods, like it was a shameful event, to which led us to feel that it was something to never discuss. What a hateful woman she was and still is, although I broke off contact with her years ago.

    • @kingaogiegloabstractpaintings
      @kingaogiegloabstractpaintings 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I had the same situation about that period thing....

  • @kimberlymccracken747
    @kimberlymccracken747 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I cannot tell you how often this happened in big and small ways. The two biggest ways I recall are 1) waking up to see her packing my Dad's socks on night. She just non-challantly mentioned they were getting a divorce. I was nine years old. I said "It's about time" (equally non-challant) and went back to bed. But, I secretly wanted her to follow me, offer me comfort and a discussion about the decision. It never happened.
    2) Shortly after my Dad moved out he came to the house and became immediately violent with my Mom. He then wrangled all of us up, dragging us to the back bedroom where the guns were kept screaming that he was going to kill us them himself.
    I broke away and got help. Luckily, he didn't go through with it. The next day I asked my Mom if we had yo go to school. No discussion, no hugs, no nothing. They did send my ten-year-old neighbor to talk to me once I got to school 🤷‍♀️ WHAT?!! She was from a troubled, but not voilent, home herself and we just sat there and stared at each other. VERY strange.

  • @jasfra
    @jasfra 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Thank you for putting these into words. These subtle betrayals distorting perception can cause so much harm to a child's self esteem, mental and physical health. The chronic stress! Emotional neglect is so hard to spot happening - it's the healthy behaviour that should happen but is absent; emotional abuse is aimed at someone to manipulate them by lowering their self esteem; psychological abuse aims to manipulate through distorting perception of reality. And through it all I still believe my NPD parent had no idea of the extent of the harm they were doing because they were only focused on defending their own ego. And the rest of the family and the half safe relatives look on and see nothing because no one wants to deal with the reality of it all.

  • @silvercatshadow
    @silvercatshadow 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    I picked this video to accompany me in picking an outfit for Easter tomorrow. I didn’t think I’d hear something that, in the final section of the video with the “my beliefs are yours” part, would stop me in my tracks and slump half clothed against the wall and just close my eyes like “this is what my parents do” they took away my autonomy by telling me I didn’t need to do any job but only get good grades, so I got those grades. Found out I was gay and I don’t think that my fundamentalist, Pentecostal, evangelical, charismatic, nondenominational Christian parents could ever comprehend the depth of pain they would cause me throughout my life. I live with them for medical and financial reasons. I have put my foot down after Covid lockdowns at their church lifted I refused to go in. Then when my mother would harass me via text and calling me about whether or not I heard the sermon, I would always say yes I did and she’d fucking quiz me. I go to a Lutheran church now even though I’d consider myself agnostic. At this church, they tell me I’m not demon possessed, I’m not diseased and controlled by a spirit of homosexuality, I’m not disgusting, and that they accept me for who I am. I don’t know how I’d be alive right now if it wasn’t for the partners I’d met in college who would bring me to their Lutheran church, and if it weren’t for them not being too far from where my parents live, I would not have made it to where I am nearly as easily as I did. And… it wasn’t easy.
    My parents taught me only a few things in my life. How to obey. Only their beliefs are correct. I need to rely on them and believe like them. That spanking your kids will just make them hide from you + be afraid of you. And lastly, how it truly feels to fear authority.
    They taught me fear. They stole my autonomy. They said just fall in line. They said every other Christian isn’t a true Christian if they’re not like us.
    I’d also like to mention that they are extremely political. I’ve truly had to bite my tongue living here. As I come to grips with the trauma I’ve dealt with and that I still experience, I am beginning to taste the anger and the rage I haven’t been able to feel properly.
    They are best left in a small black and white world where they don’t know my real beliefs. I know I’d ruin their small worlds if they knew the truth. ❤️‍🩹

  • @nathanpetrich7309
    @nathanpetrich7309 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    Mom dragging us out to wait in line for Beanie Babies at 3am in subzero January weather, giving us money and threatening to ground us if we didn't go into the store on our own and individually buy them because the store had a limit of "only X per customer" when she wanted to buy more than that.
    Absolute psycho.

    • @misspatvandriverlady7555
      @misspatvandriverlady7555 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Sounds like she was behaving in an addictive way. Addicts will put everything else after their addiction. Yes, it’s incredibly destructive for their kids! 💔

  • @wingwmn217
    @wingwmn217 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

    Thank you for the healing suggestion of “letting people fail.” It’s def been a big thing since childhood to instinctively want to take care of others and quickly try to find a solution to their problems and then sometimes may even feel guilty at questioning whether we’d said the right advice or not, or if we said enough. Often left wondering why no one gives as much as I do. Or that it’s unfair bc I put in so much effort and gave so much of myself to help someone, that I never get the same in return, or am only met with silence.

    • @alexiswinter6948
      @alexiswinter6948 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Same here. I wish I'd put that effort into myself instead. I do nothing for myself.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      It's a hard lesson. I still struggle with getting things I need let alone want! At least it looks like an odd attitude and I get better at it all the time. ❤

  • @user-mj2ol6kv8y
    @user-mj2ol6kv8y หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Even worse than not acknowledging a fight between parents is when they blow up at you, make you cry, and then act like nothing happened. A few years ago I had a friend accidentally trigger an emotional flashback and him apologizing immediately and making me a cup of tea blew my inner child's mind, like they didn't even know that was a thing that grownups could do for you

  • @MoonbearStartiger
    @MoonbearStartiger 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    The parent who treats the other sibling different than me... yeah, like giving my sister preferential treatment and being overly rude and critical towards me, the one who needs all the love in the world and who's already really struggling with feeling alone.

  • @storydates
    @storydates 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    Why I always feel like I have to whisper when talking about my parents, even when I’m therapy or speaking alone with my partner. I can’t get over the feeling that I’ll be overheard.

    • @tehallanaz
      @tehallanaz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I took the opposite approach i speak very loud and vulgar because i know they are listening

  • @littlenoya9662
    @littlenoya9662 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    One of my parents' favorite "joke" and control tactic was telling me they've set cameras in the house and they know what I'm doing. I still can't convince myself that was just a lie, I don't have any means of knowing if it was. But I just remembered when you mentioned the journaling and feeling like somebody will read. They never (to my knowledge) went through my journals, and surely not through my phone, but I do still have that fear, because there was always a part of me scared that a camera was catching all that I was doing and writing. Damn.

  • @jeankipper6954
    @jeankipper6954 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    When I was in college, the folks got divorced. Moms turned to me to financially support her, be bossed by her, "I AM YOUR MOTHER," and emotionally depend on me as a small child. And really, really pissed at me for deliberately failing her. After 2 years of that I left, college, community and state, with one semester to go. I finished it 5 years later, then escaped again, making her madder. She never got better, never ever ever forgave, never saw my choices as legitimate in any way.

  • @falconbritt5461
    @falconbritt5461 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    "It's not confidential" patterns gave her endless amounts of gossip to immediately share, it was a virtual compulsion. That pattern of invasiveness can be used to not only invade your diary, go through your drawers and confront you if they don't like your poetry... they not only wrongly share what you tell them (immediately, to the entire family via phone, never mind any requests for privacy); they can twist what you tell them to paint you badly, "sharing" situations, feelings, thoughts which you never even said or meant. I was misrepresented to my entire extended family continually - consequently their perceptions of me are completely inaccurate (and probably irreparable). When I would complain to the narcissist, I was told, "But they're family!" I tried explaining that there are different people in families and not all of them are entitled to know my private feelings, issues, thoughts, but got absolutely nowhere. No sense of interpersonal boundaries even existed or was comprehensible.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your mother and my mother must have shared strategies. Yuck!

    • @comicsans3537
      @comicsans3537 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Mine would share all our fights on Facebook for a while :/

  • @DizzyDior12
    @DizzyDior12 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    My mom told me about being assaulted twice in her life without telling anyone else in my family, totally casually in a normal conversation. She would clearly despise my father and then say that she didn't when I questioned why she didn't just leave him and protect us from him if he was so bad. I found out when I was sixteen that she tried to k*ll herself when I was a kid. I remembered the day that it happened but no one told me until I was a teenager that that's what happened. I'm thirty four now and I learned yesterday that she tried to unalive herself multiple times. I'm sad for her but after decades of trying to get her to take care of herself, I'm not going to take on her burdens as my own.

    • @electriceyeball
      @electriceyeball 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      My mom spoke about suicide incessantly my entire life. 50yo. Mom finally killed herself last year. I can't say I miss her.

    • @dotcassilles1488
      @dotcassilles1488 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Something that helps me is to say in my head "I am not the source of your suffering, I give you back your self and wish you well" when my mum uses me as therapist. She refuses to talk to someone trained in dealing with mental health therapy because of bad experiences in the past

    • @drawingmomentum
      @drawingmomentum 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@electriceyeballseems like ur mom was asking for help in the only way she knew. 😢

    • @electriceyeball
      @electriceyeball 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @drawingmomentum she had the best medical care in the world. She inherited millions, had about ¼million left, hemorrhaged money. That and someone finally stood up to her lies. Not me. Long story.

  • @cyndijohnson5473
    @cyndijohnson5473 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    That isn’t just a boundary crossing, it’s a FEDERAL CRIME. Yikes.

  • @yamlwoz
    @yamlwoz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    My mother spent hours each week telling me how much she hated my father. How everything was his fault - I was in my 20s before the truth dawned. He was empty and quiet but not abusive in any way. But worst of all, if I did the tiniest thing that reminded her of him, she would shame me mercilessly, make a disgusted noise and say "Urgh! I suppose you're bound to have a bit of your father in you!"

    • @misspatvandriverlady7555
      @misspatvandriverlady7555 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      My father was/is AuDHD twice-exceptional. I inherited this from him wholesale. My father is abusive. I chose not to be that way quite deliberately at the age of 6. My mother has always had the “You are just like your father!” attitude. Well, yes, but actually, no! 🤷‍♀️

    • @yamlwoz
      @yamlwoz 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@misspatvandriverlady7555 it's horrible when you've put so much effort into changing yourself for the better, only to be accused of being 'just like him'. I hope you can be strong in your knowledge that you are not! 💝

  • @steggopotamus
    @steggopotamus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    For the "it's not confidential" I had no idea when I was or wasn't supposed to share information. I'm only just now beginning to get it. And I'm 40. I think it has a lot to do with neurodivergency but also poor modelling with my parents.
    "My beliefs are yours now": I remember so many times my dad would call me up to tell me what to think. And when my sister believed in evolution he would call me up to try to force me to force her to believe. I realized I didn't care about the past, so I avoided the conversation entirely, but I still struggle with believing I can speak my mind or ask for help.

    • @ushere5791
      @ushere5791 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Ugh. Fellow neurodivergent here. I still really struggle to know what to share, with whom, and when.

    • @steggopotamus
      @steggopotamus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@ushere5791 my default is to just remind people to always specify. And I double check a lot. I still mess up some, but a lot less. I'm pretty comfortable checking in these days.

  • @cloudwalker8266
    @cloudwalker8266 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    You described my parents to a tee. They relished dishing out public humiliation, especially when it came to exposing my mistakes, failures, and misfortunes. Their ultimate goal was to recruit flying monkeys who would join in the chorus, as if it wasn't bad enough just knowing that others knew my secrets.

  • @thepaintedpoppies1010
    @thepaintedpoppies1010 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    It sucks when you are the "therapist" for a parent because the other doesn't give them support... Despite BEING A THERAPIST. Yeah. Covert narc therapists are a nightmare. They know EXACTLY how to fly right under everyone's radar and are master manipulators. I was underwater for 35 years before realizing and breaking away. My biggest motivator was my kids. I REFUSE to continue the generational trauma. Our kids will have as healthy an upbringing as we can provide. And thankfully my husband is narc-kryptonite. ❤

    • @gleep24
      @gleep24 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Hey, solidarity to you - I, too, have a covert narc parent who is also a therapist. I was the eldest in a mostly single-parent household, so I became the emotional support/fuel for that parent and a second parent to my siblings. Ugh. Congrats to you too on getting away and breaking the cycle.

    • @joannamikkelsen1460
      @joannamikkelsen1460 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Your children are lucky to have someone as aware as you.

    • @jacquedaw
      @jacquedaw หลายเดือนก่อน

      yes I ended up being the therapist for my covert narc mother when I was a child, I am now training as a therapist and realising just how much my childhood effected me, I have very limited contact and grey rock my Mother now. I would like to go no contact but I know she would create such a drama with my sisters etc and be the wounded victim that it would take too much of my time and energy. So I ring on birthdays and Xmas and that is it. I know I am still the scapegoat and that I get bad mouthed all the time for being the 'difficult' one. You'd think if I was so difficult she would be happy to let me go, but she has a need for me to be around so she has someone to blame for everything, as well as make her feel powerful as she attempts to covertly demean me, dominate and control... I'm not doing that any more.

  • @vall3ygirl
    @vall3ygirl 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Can you talk about observing and recognizing a toxic abusive family as an outsider, for example your partners family? Or how they act normal when you're around and the dark side comes out when you're gone?

    • @jj4791
      @jj4791 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ask them (lovingly) about their childhood. Their mom. What their most fond memory is with her. With their dad. Etc.
      Keep in mind, people with toxic families can still grow up to be kind and considerate people. So don't discard them for failing to have a good relationship with their parents. This is not the child's failure as any kid wants to be loved by their mother and valued or respected by their father.

  • @Sophia-ix2ri
    @Sophia-ix2ri 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Confidential issue hits hard. The worst was when my mom took me with her to a 12 step meeting when I was about 8 (which was inappropriate in and of itself; usually she left me outside). I was vulnerable and shared with the group as everyone else was doing. Afterward, she told my dad (her alcoholic ex) what I said there, just because she thought it was interesting and was making conversation while dropping me off at his house. Just one example.
    It's no wonder that I kind of felt like no one can be trusted, and just used to live my life as if trustworthy people weren't ever a real option that existed.

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      This. So this.

  • @DG-kl6ud
    @DG-kl6ud 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

    Hell yeah, I have been my family therapist all my life and I'm the youngest child in my family 😂😂... never got to talk about my problems, only made to listen to and validate their crap

    • @BPLdenver
      @BPLdenver 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I was recently talking with someone about my childhood, and he said incredulously, "So, they just trauma dumped all over you?" Boy did he cut to the heart of it while I hadn't seen it that way before.

  • @phyllisandpaullenz4461
    @phyllisandpaullenz4461 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    My oldest sister was my "toxic parent" and still is. She is 80 and still gives gifts galore to please herself and withholds them if/when she is disappointed in me. ( I was one of the younger siblings she had to help care for)
    I am no-contact , now after a long spell where she went no-contact with me (27years) but chose to get together again. After two visits (and six or eight gifts) she again messaged me that she is disappointed in me. I am 72 and this still affects choices I need to make regarding family matters; like whether to visit a different sister in the hospital. It is very hard to move on.

  • @aishalanderos214
    @aishalanderos214 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    The last two boundaries are so intertwined with cultural and gender based expectations, can definitely relate as a POC + an oldest daughter. Also adding the healthy parenting examples helps so so much in giving ideas on how to be better for my future kids

    • @ushere5791
      @ushere5791 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      You’ve got this. You’re going to be a wonderful parent-the kind we all wish we’d had.

    • @aishalanderos214
      @aishalanderos214 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@ushere5791 Thank you, best of luck on your healing journey 🌷

  • @DivineLight87
    @DivineLight87 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    My sisters and I. The 6 of us. We’re seen and not heard. And when we were seen. We were beat like a man! Then we had to go on, like nothing happened.

  • @lundsweden
    @lundsweden 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Wow, both my parents tick these boxes. I'm still dealing with this at age 50.

    • @heyitsme5469
      @heyitsme5469 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Me too, all of it. I am 50 as well and whenever I see my parents (which isn’t often, we are low contact), they are still trying to treat me as a child and cross all of these boundaries.

  • @kseniakovalova3435
    @kseniakovalova3435 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    My dad withdrew the promise to buy me a prom dress because I said something he didn’t like ( he was an alcoholic and left us but still somehow was always in and out of our apt). I said to him something along the lines well why do you care, you left us. He later came up to me and said I I were such a smarty ass why wouldn’t I buy my own dress. What a jerk😅

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You and I could probably share alcoholic dad stories for years❤️

    • @kseniakovalova3435
      @kseniakovalova3435 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@monicadlynn I’ve been doing that with my therapist. It’s tough growing up with alcoholism in a family

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kseniakovalova3435 it is absolutely a process of undoing but it can indeed be undone👐🏽❤️

    • @izzyNFT69
      @izzyNFT69 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My mom would do similar things. Everything was conditional.

  • @bellaluce7088
    @bellaluce7088 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    🔎🧐🤔It took me decades to recognize how my mother sabotaged me to preserve the belief that she's superior and I'm inherently less than. It's *still* etched in my psyche. 🥺 Her gaslighting about "nothing to see here" was so effective that I only recently realized how abnormal it was that she literally didn't speak to or see me for weeks at a time while living in the same house in high school. Yet she had hours for my golden child brother. And to think I felt guilty because I thought *I* was the one who went no contact!

    • @BPLdenver
      @BPLdenver 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Woah. Your last sentence about gutted me. I went no-contact for over 30 years. Just a few weeks ago I finished writting a 10,000 word memoir on specific trauma moments, including when I was 9 and absolutely watched her morph into not caring anymore. And yet, until I read your comment, all I had done was consider that I was justified - in reality, she went no contact first.

    • @bellaluce7088
      @bellaluce7088 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@BPLdenver Oof! 😯There's no good age for a parent to leave without leaving, but 9 is brutal. My heart goes out to you. ❤ Congratulations on writing your memoir! 👏

  • @Trammiliin
    @Trammiliin 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    Couple of years ago I went no contact with my mother after she babbled to her sister(s) about my delicate health issue I only told about to three people. And she only knew because my doctor asked whether my other family members also have it and I asked her. And I got to know when my drunkard aunt asked about it, cheerfully, at a dinner table. I was absolutely devastated, as I was still grieving and wasn't ready to tell anyone, and left the party.
    It was the straw that broke the camel's back. But this is one of the most triggering thing she does. Talking about my deeply personal stuff to other people like my personal matters and struggles are just some interesting gossip material. Just a random example. I was 14-15 y.o. and at a cousin's birthday she described, right in front of me, to my aunt's husband with many other people listening, the shape and position of my breasts. When I got mad and stormed out from the room, she proceeded with shaming me, with a snarky grin, of being so sensitive. And she does it all the time and not only to me, but also to my siblings. But when she had a health issue, she even did not tell she had a surgery.
    She took away the money I earned as a paper girl and lied she did not. She forced us to hide our father was an abusive sadist. She complained how awful person our father was to us - kids that were beaten by him - and expected we comfort or praise her for handling some situation so well. She made me escort my alcoholic father home from work and when he still went to a bar it was my fault. I was 10 years old and terrified of him. She made me borrowing money from relatives. When I was in high school I was depressed and suicidal, and we had really heated fights with her. She sent me to psychiatrist, but lied to her all sorts of shit about me, and when I went there the psychiatrist attacked me verbally. She did the same with my aunts.
    And now she's talking to people that the reason I went no contact is because I had a birth trauma and I'm mentally unstable. :)

    • @AA-iy4gm
      @AA-iy4gm 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      That resonates, it sounds like childhoods with covert narcissists have lots of similarities. I'm sorry you experienced that, I hope you are on the road of finding peace despite her attempts. If other family and friends care to stay in touch they can, and eventually they might see something isn't adding up, either way if you find your own peace it's more important than anyone else believing your side.

    • @Trammiliin
      @Trammiliin 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      ​@@AA-iy4gm this is actually why I share that stuff - this is crazy how similar covert narcissist parents are. There are differences in details, but in general they are all kind of the same. I just recently discovered that she actually is a narcissist. Before I thought her issues are some weird mix of codependency, stupidity, ADHD, depression, low self-esteem, dissociation from reality etc. But now it all makes sense, why I always feel like I'm just like a prop to her play, not a real person.
      Going no contact with her is one of the best decisions I've made in my life. Initially the idea was to heal and reconcile, but now I think it's quite nice and peaceful not to have her in my life. 2 out of my 3 siblings support me in it.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      No contact is great! I hear the 💩 from your "mother" like mine too. Oh, by the way, I'm crazy. So says my mother. Narcissists to the core!

  • @DG-kl6ud
    @DG-kl6ud 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    It might sound weird but I struggle with the fear that someone will read or hear my thoughts and punish me for having an opinion about things....can't let them know whether I like or dislike something

    • @mando074
      @mando074 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      From what I have learned in this channel, find a safe person and talk to them about your thoughts, feelings and opinions. Sharing this with a safe person will help you find your voice.
      I struggle with this too sometimes.

    • @catfudemagee1959
      @catfudemagee1959 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I have that too, even to the point that I don’t know what I like unless I’m alone and have some time to settle down. Trying to figure it out at 43 is pretty ridiculous.

    • @Tsuki7786
      @Tsuki7786 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Omg I went through the same thing most my life until the past year or 2...I started shaking my head when I thought like that...the idea of just being perceived is a whole different level in itself

  • @sandiraymond1761
    @sandiraymond1761 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I went through my process of distinguishing myself when I was in my mid-30s. 🙃 I refer to it as going through my teens in my 30s. I heavily revised my religious, political, and societal views.
    I still feel like I don't have it completely nailed down. I struggle with the discomfort of feeling it isn't as certain and safe as the ironclad set of fundamental values my family of origin adhered to. But I allow myself to feel it, without requiring myself to jump into another rigid set of beliefs.
    Going through this process changed my parenting exponentially. I still have improvements to make. But seeing my parents accurately helped me see myself more accurately too. This has healed many hurts in my older, teen children. ❤

  • @brybaby89
    @brybaby89 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Soooo relevant to what I've been experiencing soooo long. The intuitive compass being severely broken. I'm only now starting to feel able to trust myself. Reasons why planned parenthood should be an option... If you're going to be selfish and raise a child you shouldn't... You don't get to be offended when they rightfully turn on you for the string of neglect dominoes that will inevitably fall.

  • @susanbeever5708
    @susanbeever5708 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    My mother was a narcissist and secretly took my award check that I had won in a music competition. I asked where the money was and she just said that she spent it.

  • @shmalicat
    @shmalicat 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I definitely went through most of these… but the “My beliefs are yours”, especially. They try to isolate you and be little versions of them. My mom even said to me (as an adult): “I expect you to take all of my advice”. Which is gross, but even more disgusting when you take into consideration that I would never actually ask for her advice, it’s all unsolicited. So, basically, it’s “You need to do everything I say because your life is about me”.

    • @journeytojoy3443
      @journeytojoy3443 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Late 30s here, & my mother is STILL trying to control me like this

    • @comicsans3537
      @comicsans3537 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      25 and my mother just now is realizing I'm not her mini-me like she thinks I am. We have similar emotional understanding (hyper-empathy) and actions, we look similar, but I am NOT her. I even now can actually express to her that "well ik you're having this issue, we're the same person and ik how I'd react" to get her to listen to me more 😅

  • @roomtospace
    @roomtospace 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    My dad was a good manipulator, from what I remember of him, he seemed like a covert narcissist because of his absolute lack of self-awareness or willingness to reconsider anything. My mom wasn't around when he needed to watch us so the abuse would go unnoticed or we were blamed for our disregulated behavior when coming back home, frustrated that we couldn't communicate what was happening

  • @INgirl812
    @INgirl812 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    My mother sent me and my younger brother outside to search in my father’s vehicle for signs a women had been in it. She shared with us little kids that she suspected my father had been with someone else. We found cigarettes with lipstick on the butts. We told her this. We were in early elementary school. I don’t remember if she said anything to my father or not.
    Another time she & my father had a really scary sounding fight. Mother told us to get in her car because we’re leaving. She drove around a lot and aired her grievances about my father. She eventually drove back to the house because she said my father would kill her if she left (I actually don’t think he would have. He never touched her, but they had horrible fights.) This whole thing was just another “knowing too much.”

  • @mondolilith7917
    @mondolilith7917 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    It sure feels like everyone is carrying some childhood traumas, and so few are consciously willing to do the work to both heal and be able to parent children effectively. Not repeating family trauma is a true success… which our children receive the nectar from. My job, as a parent, is to model compassion, curiosity, courage… and to be accountable for any mistakes I may make. Cultivating healthy boundaries and emotional intelligence in our children puts them on a path to true independence while also being present & active in the world. It’s a beautiful experience being able to give my child a far more wholesome & loving childhood than I could have imagined as a child.

  • @michellet796
    @michellet796 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Wow this brings up so many boundary crossings in childhood that i forgot: my mom buying me a diary then confronting me about a boy I wrote about a few days later; my stepmom taking my class ring that I had misplaced to teach me a lesson (without telling me), etc. No wonder i have a hard timetrusting that journaling is safe & I'm always worried someone will take something if I misplace it.
    Too many other things to list.
    As always Patrick, your videos are so eye opening & helpful!

  • @zzkittyzz5099
    @zzkittyzz5099 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Your story is heart wrenching even if you did eventually get the money.😮. The info you’re providing is awesome. Finally it all makes sense. Thanks! I’m 77 I guess it’s never too late. Here’s to joy.

  • @KSS-vo6yp
    @KSS-vo6yp 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Minute 1:43
    "......She was a master at shaming you for having a normal reaction"
    Holy crap, that was triggering, you knocked it out of the park with that one line. Spot on 1000%. I have never ever thought about it in that way, wow. That is exactly why I've never had normal dating relationships or even friends and then the guy I married.....every time I felt violated or a boundary crossed or anything that would warrant some type of confrontation
    ......I always retreat, I never thought I was worthy to speak up or call someone out. It's like other people do that but not someone like me. I can't even put it in words but I'm thinking you (Patrick) get it.
    I left my husband and found myself going down that familiar road again and again. Now I've totally become reclusive and don't engage whatsoever with really anyone.
    I don't know how to fix it and have a normal healthy
    reciprocal relationship

  • @anomally9742
    @anomally9742 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    For those of us dealing with mail thieves, or if you just need some privacy, you might be able to send your mail directly to the nearest post office and pick it up yourself with ID.

  • @DataRae-AIEngineer
    @DataRae-AIEngineer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Thank you. I needed this video because my mom decided she needs to come visit (my dogs) and I'm sure one or more of these will come up. Last time I had to see her I made a bingo card of toxic stuff I thought would come up and ended up with blackout so I bought myself a motorcycle as a reward lol. Even though I'm in my late 30s with a PhD it still gets to me, but the bingo card has been helpful in case anyone out there wants a suggestion.

    • @izzyNFT69
      @izzyNFT69 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What does your bingo card have on it? I'm hoping to use one myself.

  • @jackharper2087
    @jackharper2087 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Physical comfort & reassurance. Dad never wanted to touch me, mom didn’t want to touch me until she did & I wasn’t allowed to say no.

    • @michellet796
      @michellet796 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I remember feeling cut off from emotional support too. Then when I withdrew to protect myself my mom would want me to sit on her lap so she could show me affection. I remember it feeling uncomfortable but then it was over & she checked off that box or something. It's feels so strange thinking of it even now.

  • @thepaintedpoppies1010
    @thepaintedpoppies1010 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I have found just understanding why I have these triggers (and boy are some of them random) helps me process them and get triggered less often. Just being aware of what is happening and why helps a lot.

  • @jeanettemarkley7299
    @jeanettemarkley7299 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I'm sorry to hear about your prom.
    After my mother demanding I broke down and told her something I was going through. At some point she told my brother this private information. My brother tortured me when I was a kid and abused me into adulthood. She basically told my worst enemy aside from her. I found out about this years later when my brother announced the information to a mixed group of people.
    My mother also stole my birthday money I ignorantly gave to her to "hold". I guess she thought I was so young I would forget.
    The worst thing she ever did, to my knowledge, is stand in the next room with my father at her side and tell me, a grade school child, that she didn't love me anymore. I soon found myself living on the next floor up with my aunt.

  • @spiritualspartan884
    @spiritualspartan884 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    I knew about all my dad’s affairs and his struggles with my mom at the age of 13. He confided in me a lot. My mom also hated me. This makes a lot of sense. I also ended up being a therapist for my mother as well at a young age. So far I experienced a lot of these boundaries being crossed. 20:45

    • @monicadlynn
      @monicadlynn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Boy this. Dad going sober-again-but driving me around alone slamming beers, smoking joints and driving until I would cry to slow down. Not that it matter sex, but I was a small shy girl..🫣

  • @howitworksforme
    @howitworksforme 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    My mother told me she was going to buy me a tiny monkey, just to see me having a happy child face, as she admitted later, and didn't give a crap about me being sad then.
    Again, sadly checking all the boxes with both my parents today...
    But REALLY helpful video, because you tell so much about healthy parenting.

  • @morebirdsandroses
    @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Oh what awful stuff. My mother wanted a copy of herself so she could look good through me, but was also jealous in case I did look good. I was drafted as her mother, dump for her many dislikes and sufferings and ally against my father, her father.... Boundaries were so,so trashed! I still have a hard time with how angry this makes me. The outfall of defensiveness and caution are incredible. Little by little I excavate and defang this stuff, along with assuring my inner child that she is not to worry how big me thinks or feels, she is not here to take care of me!

    • @misspatvandriverlady7555
      @misspatvandriverlady7555 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It is okay to be very angry at being violated so much! “Writing a letter” that never gets sent could be a good way to work through such intense feelings! 😫🤬😭

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@misspatvandriverlady7555 Thank you. I'm going to write that, maybe scribbling all over a sheet of paper would be good. 👍

  • @kimberlygabaldon3260
    @kimberlygabaldon3260 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    Thank you, Patrick. Yep - when your mother gets on the phone and tells her friend about your crush, and the friend blabs it, and soon it's common knowledge... 🤬
    I was NOT parentified to my parents, but it seemed that i was made responsible for the behavior and the emotional state of the golden child, (the youngest). Anything i earned or created was seen as a resource for her, (even above being for me), and the middle child and i were scolded with "Why can't you keep her happy???"
    I felt powerless, knowing that almost ALL conflict would be decided in favor of the GC, (right or wrong), so avoided conflict by avoiding the GC, (who loved to start conflict, knowing she would win). For decades as an adult, i have been repeatedly raked over the coals for "not including" the GC. The scapegoat just can't win. Ever. 🙄

    • @deadparrot5953
      @deadparrot5953 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The scapegoat cannot be allowed to win, bc if the scapegoat isn't as terrible as they perceive, then maybe they aren't as wonderful as they want to be either-- and they cannot accept their own imperfections.

  • @kylapollard9275
    @kylapollard9275 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I could pretty much tick off all of these. Except my parents use to dog whistle A LOT so others never knew what it meant but just me.
    My mum would go through my room and read my diaries when I was growing up and even up until I recently moved out. When I was little she wouldn’t tell me she read my diary but this one time when I was about 23 she did and then told me she always had cause how else did I think she knew what was happening in my life. That time was including quite a significant trauma and she was asking all the right questions, which is what lead me to state this and so she had to come clean. I have also found out from others that she had been in my room and found certain items (not dangerous) but I was a fully grown adult as well. Since the age of 23 I never kept another journal until I moved out and it’s been for therapy. I had suspicion my mum was doing this when I was a teen so I didn’t really keep a journal then either.
    My mind is going crazy with all the memories of boundary crossings my parents had done.

  • @vivianworden2706
    @vivianworden2706 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    It crushes your trust in people. 😢

  • @Myspirit904
    @Myspirit904 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    My mother violated every single one of these boundaries…at 85, she is still controlling and toxic. Thank God for your videos, Patrick…

  • @rturney6376
    @rturney6376 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    This is a great 👍 topic.
    Even as adults, boundaries are crossed all the time. Shared some secrets with a fake friend recently and she gossiped about me. She justified it as “we all do it”.
    Someone else banged on my door. I told them several times NOT TO COME IN, they did anyway.
    It made me realize as people how much work we have in respecting boundaries. 😢

  • @rocketpsyence
    @rocketpsyence 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Oh my god the thing about confidentiality is so helpful. I always tell myself it wasn't that bad when my mom would do that (even when I was an adult). But it really does get in the way in therapy. I've read that Journaling is helpful but it's really hard for me to do it because yeah even though I live alone I do have this VISCERAL FEAR that my notes and journals will be found and read by someone. So i feel like even when I do it I still censor myself and never write down my real thoughts so it's less effective. I wouldn't complain about seeing more on this topic and how to cope with that issue so it doesn't get in the way forever.

  • @vivianivey6663
    @vivianivey6663 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    My mother “borrowed” any money l made babysitting neighbors children, but never paid it back. Never.

    • @katyasehryn8810
      @katyasehryn8810 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I hate that it happened to you 💔

  • @pigeonhawk4832
    @pigeonhawk4832 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Wow. Spot on !
    My mother was the same. She constantly crossed and violated my boundaries, and allowed my toxic narcissistic sister to do the same.
    And as for the Prom and any school dances, I was NOT ALLOWED TO PARTICIPATE! And. Not because of money, I was not allowed to be myself, to form friendships, have boyfriends, nor be an average, normal teenage girl.
    She also allowed intersibling bullying and abuse, allowed her and my toxic sisters dogs to rule the house and even bite family members, take and read my mail, try to take any money I earned from me, and allowed my uncles ex-wife to verbally and even physically abuse me.
    There were no alcohol nor drugs involved in my family, I'm not exactly sure what was wrong with her, but my grandmother was the same, and from what I've heard from other family, her mother behaved that way and was an absolute monster.I'm thinking a form narcissistic personality disorder and even sadistic traits.
    I'm sure her behavior is genetic as well as environmental, because my toxic narcissistic sister is EXACTLY like my mother.

  • @kathyomalley3753
    @kathyomalley3753 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Our family would beat up my brother and the next day pretend nothing happened. When i asked why he had a black eye my mom would deny it. I have trouble owning my own truth.

  • @Tilly850
    @Tilly850 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    #4...totally. You must be like me...because if you aren't you are not worth loving. Oh, and you are not allowed to have boundaries of your own.
    Looking forward to this either live or later.

  • @deec411
    @deec411 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I just realized how much damage my aunt did with her fear. She was afraid of everything. She was 5 when her father died which I'm sure triggered that 😢😢😢