T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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822.1 | changing roles in family? | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Aug 23 1989 10:12 | 50 |
| I'm beginning to sound like Dear Abby with the same advice for
everybody . . . but it sounds like you should talk to somebody in
the Employee Assistance Program. They're generally very good at
helping out with work-crisis situations, it's completely
confidential (your manager will never know), and they can refer
you to outside counsellors who can help with your family problem.
Something about the tone of your narrative makes me wonder if
there isn't some kind of unacknowledged tension underlying the
surface causes of the fight -- someone's drinking problem, maybe?
Something that the rest of the family has agreed should be kept
under cover, not admitted even in private? The person who is
willing to face the emotions and refuses to conspire to keep the
lid on is always resented and blamed for the family problems.
Often they even blame themselves (sounds like you're doing that.)
A friend of mine was thrown out of her family circle for years for
complaining over Christmas dinner that her father was always
drunk. It was the simple truth, but she was blamed for daring to
say things like that about her father. She wasn't reconciled with
her family until years later, after her father finally got
treatment for his drinking problem.
If there is a family problem, you probably can't solve it for
yourself. All you can do is detach yourself from the old
patterns. It will be extremely upsetting for them, but you'll
have to figure out how much of your own life and peace of mind
you're willing to sacrifice to keep the family functioning the way
it's used to. Did you really have to pick up the pieces of
planning this function for your sibling after s/he disappeared the
week before, or could s/he have been left to absorb the
embarrassment of his/her own shortcomings? Do you have to go to
this upcoming out-of-state event? What are the consequences if
you don't go? What are the likely consequences if you do?
I'm not suggesting you answer these questions here, but they're
the kinds of questions that I had to ask myself at one point when
I felt like my family was using me as the family's emotional
lightning rod -- I was the designated emotional one, and no matter
what the underlying conflicts were, everything was fine as long
as I kept my temper. And when it got to where I couldn't take it
any more and I blew up, the resulting disruption was my fault for
being too emotional. It spared everybody from having to look at
the real issues. When I moved away and quit playing the role,
there was a lot of tension and resentment over my "defection" for
a long time. Any time you change your role within your family,
it disrupts the entire pattern of family interactions and it can
be very stressful.
--bonnie
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822.2 | Response from anonymous author of base note | QUARK::HR_MODERATOR | | Thu Aug 24 1989 11:54 | 46 |
| Just to add some clarification around my original note....
The event taking place in a few months is a wedding.
My sibling is marrying, and the rest of us are
in the wedding party. Unfortunately, we don't have
the option whether to attend or not.
We hesitated to conduct this type of party, because:
1. The sibling getting married has a LONG history of
troublemaking, being generally immature, and causing
my parents a great deal of heartache. He is the type
of person so obnoxious, you could tell him that and
he would not comprehend HE has a problem.
2. A young relative and her SO of the siblings and myself have
trouble when they drink. i.e. they punch each other out,
and in general cannot handle their liquor.
3. The other sibling and her mate cannot stand the above couple
because of the fighting, which they have been witness to
numerous times.
4. The above players, when together, for lack of a better
phrase "DON't KNOW WHEN TO QUIT". Like walk away, go home, show
discretion, back off. They turn into hysterical raving lunatics,
which is how the evening ended.
Another factor - many of us work for DEC. We also live in
in close proximity to each other. I'm trying to picture how
future family dynamics will work, because we can't change our
job or homes currently.
The dynamics of this mess are so complicated I can't even think.
I have acknowledged my part and apologized to the sibling I
hit, so I have taken responsibility for the piece I owned that
night. The really awful fighting that went on after I left (
and this had nothing to do with me) involve issues I cannot
understand or address.
My husband and I are thinking of talking to a counselor who
can facilitate a meeting for the rest of the family. We are
worried that my other siblings will lose control of we don't
obtain professional assistance. Is this a good idea?
|
822.3 | Skip the riot | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Aug 24 1989 12:06 | 8 |
| You always have the option of not going, even to a sibling's
wedding.
Why not determine beforehand that you will leave after the
ceremony (i.e. not attend the reception and anticipated
riot)?
-John Bishop
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822.4 | You Do Have a Choice | HPSTEK::BOURGAULT | | Thu Aug 24 1989 14:36 | 25 |
|
This is my first reply in this conference.
The previous response is totally correct. You have the CHOICE of not
going to a sibling's wedding, even if you are in the wedding party!
Sure, it will cause nasty feelings. Sounds to me though like there are
already so many nasty feelings that some more wouldn't make any
difference.
You can't change other people. You CAN change yourself and your role
in a relationship. When you change your role, the relationship
changes. If you start to refuse to be drawn into these family messes,
eventually your family will realize that they can't bait you or use you
for the "emotional lightening rod". I know.....I used to be the
lightening rod in my family. I stopped allowing it. Now the
relationship is better because my role is being me.
Just for background, my mother is an alcoholic who kepts totally self
centered, opinionated, obnoxious, etc when she drinks. I now walk
away. And I do that for me!
Good luck.
Faith
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822.5 | restricting the liquor would help, if it can be done | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Aug 24 1989 14:41 | 24 |
| If some people are expected to overdo it at the bar at the wedding,
maybe the discrete thing to do is to have it "dry" except for champagne
for the toast? - of course, that will only work if your folks, rather
than the problem sibling who is getting married, are paying for the
reception, and only if you can convince them to not have an open bar
(without causing WW III). Otherwise all you can do, if protocol
requires you to be there, is to recruit a few like-minded relatives to
help keep things under control - which may or may not work real well.
You don't have to stay for the whole reception anyhow; no one will
notice if you disappear after a politcally-correct interval, especially
anyone who might be drinking too much - slip away if that is starting
to happen!
We did not want to have a bar at all at our wedding, just wine, but my
mother-in-law insisted that the relatives would expect one, and offered
to pay. As it turned out, the only person who had a little too much
was my husband's boss (someone drove him home). Most of our friends do
not drink anyhow, or only drink wine, and we didn't particularly want
to tempt anyone else who didn't know real well who might end up having
too much, but people were all well-behaved anyhow. Of course, we got
to do pretty much whatever we wanted to arrange (unless persuaded
otherwise as in the liquor supplied by my m-i-l) since we paid for the
whole thing - that helps!
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822.6 | Stay outta the fray | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | Letting Go: The Ultimate Adventure | Thu Aug 24 1989 14:44 | 12 |
| You say you don't have the option of not attending your brother's
wedding. Obviously, you feel obligated to attend and will most likely
feel guilty if you do not. Keep in mind that it is YOUR RIGHT to say
"no".
I agree with .3's suggestion - attend the wedding, but not the reception,
since that's probably when the "fun" will begin.
Don't feel guilty about taking care of yourself first!
Carol
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822.7 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Thu Aug 24 1989 17:08 | 11 |
| I agree with the right to not attend the reception, and the
recommendation of the dry bar. However, if you have no choice,
try and make sure you are not scheduled to sit at the same table
with anyone you think may cause trouble. Even if you *are* slated
to be in the "wedding party" proper, try to find some people at
a remote table who you know, and spend the reception getting
reacquainted with them, or just shooting the breeze. And if things
begin to get nasty - leave. Immediately.
-Jody
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822.8 | Just say no... | TOOPHE::FIKE | Mike Fike-AS0 Q.E. Lab 271-6781 | Fri Aug 25 1989 11:09 | 35 |
|
I feel for you for the strain your family relations is putting on you.
Years ago I experienced the same type of family dynamics between siblings and
as I got older and married with a family of my own, I concentrated my
emotional life on my "own" family.
I came to realize that ALL siblings tend to disagree, but the real
problem is that people just don't know when or how to "let go". Have you ever
noticed in nature how the sibling animals will grow up, mature, and leave to
form their own clan/den/family. I think that we as humans try to artificially
extend relations that were never naturally intended to be lifelong. All
relationships have a beginning, middle and an end. Even sibling.
It sounds like that's where your sibling life is now, with everyone
trying to "get along" in spite of their differences and resentment builds up
and finally an "explosion" due to all the repressed anger/resentment/etc.
The solution may be very obvious , but for some , difficult to accept-
....leave, and put it behind you. Go on with you life/job/spouse/kids and let
the past die. Ignore weddings/funerals/reunions and any other "staged" events
that you know will cause you discomfort. Don't call/write/e-mail with your
siblings because you can't fight with people you don't deal with. Eventually
they will get the hint and stop bothering you, and you'll be the peace of mind
you deserve.
I read somewhere of a conversation betwwen a therapist and their
patient and it goes like this.
Therapist: Then why do you think you let your family keep treating you like
that?
Patient: My family needs me. I love my family. MY FAMILY IS MY LIFE!
Therapist: And how is your life?
Patient: MISERABLE!
Case closed.Be happy...
Mike
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