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1237.1 | Excerpts | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Wed Apr 11 1990 18:51 | 73 |
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The book: Toxic Parents by Dr. Susan Forward
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Table Of Contents
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Introduction
Part One: Toxic Parents
One: Godlike Parents
- The Myth of the Perfect Parent
Two: "Just Because You Didn't Mean It Doesn't Mean It Didn't Hurt"
- The Inadequate Parent
Three: "Why Can't They Let Me Live My Own Life?"
- The Controllers
Four: "No One In This Family Is an Alcoholic"
- The Alcoholics
Five: The Bruises Are All On The Inside
- The Verbal Abusers
Six: Sometimes the Bruises Are on the Outside, Too
- The Physical Abusers
Seven: The Ultimate Betrayal
- The Sexual Abusers
Eight: Why Do Parents Behave This Way?
- The Family System
Part Two: Reclaiming Your Life
Nine: You Don't Have To Forgive
Ten: "I'm A Grown-Up. Why Don't I Feel Like One?"
Eleven: The Beginnings of Self-Definition
Twelve: Who's Really Responsible?
Thirteen: Confrontation: The Road to Independence
Fourteen: Healing the Incest Wound
Fifteen: Breaking the Cycle
Epilogue: Letting Go of the Struggle
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Notes - Dr. Susan Forward also wrote, "Men Who Hate Women, and
Women Who Love Them"
From the back of the book:
"A dynamic, powerful, hard-hitting book. It offers
tremendous hope, as well as understanding. It could
truly be a lifesaver."
- Abigail Van Buren ("Dear Abby")
"I consider Susan Forward to be among the foremost
therapists of our age. In "Toxic Parents" she offers
us a penetrating model of how to heal the frozen grief
of our dysfunctional past..."
- John Bradshaw
(author of "Bradshaw On: The Family")
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1237.2 | Excerpts, cont'd | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Wed Apr 11 1990 18:51 | 38 |
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{From: "Toxic Parents", by Dr. Susan Forward, p.10,11}
Freeing Yourself from the Legacy of Toxic Parents
-------------------------------------------------
If you are an adult child of toxic parents, there are many things you
can do to free yourself from their distorted legacy of guilt and self-doubt.
And I want you to proceed with a great deal of hope. Not deluded hope
that your parents will magically change, but the realistic hope that you
CAN psychologically unhook from the powerful and destructive influence of
your parents. You just have to find the courage. It is within you.
...
"Aren't I Supposed to Be Responsible for the Way I Am?
------------------------------------------------------
By now you may be thinking, "Wait a minute, Susan. Almost all the other
books and experts say I can't blame anybody else from my problems."
Balony. Your parents are accountable for what they did. Of course, you
are responsible for your adult life, but that life was largely shaped by
experiences over which you had no control. The fact is:
- You are *NOT* responsible for what was done to you
as a defenseless child!!!
- You *ARE* responsible for taking positive steps to
do something about it now!
...
The process of diminishing the negative power of your parents is a
gradual one. But it will eventually release your inner strength, the
self that's been hiding all these years, the unique and loving person
you were meant to be. Together we'll help free that person so that
your life can finally be your own.
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1237.3 | Excerpts, cont'd | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Wed Apr 11 1990 18:52 | 40 |
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{From, "Toxic Parents", by Dr. Susan Forward, p.47}
It's What They Didn't Do That Hurts
-----------------------------------
It's easy to recognize abuse when a parent beats a child or subjects a
child to continual tirades. But the toxicity of inadequate or deficient
parents can be elusive, difficult to define. When a parent creates
damage through omission rather than commission - through what they *don't*
do rather than what they *do* do - the connections of adult problems to
this sort of toxic parent become very hard to see. Since the children of
these parents are predisposed to deny their connections anyway, my job
becomes especially difficult.
Compounding the problem is the fact that many of these parents are so
troubled themselves that they evoke pity. Because these parents so often
behave like helpless or irresponsible children, their adult children feel
protective. They jump to their parent's defense, like a crime victim
apologizing for the perpetrator.
Whether it's "they didn't mean to do any harm," or "they did the best
they could,", these apologies obscure the fact that these parents abdicated
their responsibilities to their children. Through this abdication, these
toxic parents robbed their children of positive role models, without which
healthy emotional development is extremely difficult.
If you are the adult child of a deficient or inadequate parent, you
probably grew up without realizing that there was an alternative to feeling
responsible for them. Dancing at the end of their emotional string seemed
a way of life, not a choice.
But you *do* have a choice. You can begin the process of understanding that
you were wrongly forced to grow up too soon, that you were robbed of your
rightful childhood. You can work on accepting how much of your life's
energy had gone down the drain of misplaced responsibility. Take this first
step and you'll find a new reserve of energy that is suddenly available to
you for the first time - energy that you've exhausted on your toxic parents
much of your life, but which can finally be used to help you become more
loving and responsible to yourself.
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1237.4 | Excerpts, cont'd | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Wed Apr 11 1990 18:55 | 63 |
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{From: "Toxic Parents", by Dr. Susan Forward, p.187-189}
From Chapter Nine - You Don't Have to Forgive
---------------------------------------------
At this point you may be asking yourself, "Isn't the first step to forgive
my parents?" My answer is *NO*. This may shock, anger, dismay or confuse
many of you. Most of us have been led to believe exactly the opposite -
that forgiveness is the first step toward healing.
IN FACT, IT IS NOT NECESSARY TO FORGIVE YOUR PARENTS IN ORDER TO FEEL
BETTER ABOUT YOURSELF AND TO CHANGE YOUR LIFE!
Certainly I'm aware that this flies in the face of some of our most
cherished religious, spiritual, philosophical, and psychological
principles. According to the Judeo-Christian ethic, "To err is human, to
forgive divine." I am also aware that there are many experts in the
various helping professions who sincerely believe that forgiveness is not
only the *first* stop but often the *only* step necessary for inner peace.
I disagree completely.
Early in my professional career I too believed that to forgive people who
had injured you, especially parents, was an important part of the healing
process. I often encouraged clients - many of whom had been severely
mistreated - to forgive cruel or abusive parents. In addition, many of my
clients entered therapy claiming to have already forgiven their toxic
parents, but I discovered that, more often that not, they didn't feel any
better for having forgiven. They still felt bad about themselves. They
still had their symptoms. Forgiving hadn't created any significant or
lasting changes for them. In fact, some of them felt even *more*
inadequate. They'd say things such as: "Maybe I didn't forgive enough" ;
"My minister said I didn't truly forgive in my heart"; or, "Can't I do
anything right?"
I took a long, hard look at the concept of forgiveness. I began to wonder
if it could actually *impede* progress rather than *enhance* it.
I cane to realize that there are two facets to forgiveness: giving up the
need for revenge, and absolving the guilty party of responsibility. I
didn't have much trouble accepting the idea that people have to let go of
the need to get even. Revenge is a very normal but negative motivation.
It bogs you down in obsessive fantasies about striking back to get
satisfaction; it creates a lot of frustration and unhappiness; it works
against your emotional well-being. Despite how sweet revenge may feel for
a moment, it keeps stirring up the emotional chaos between you and your
parents, wasting precious time and energy. Letting go of your need for
revenge is difficult, but it is clearly a healthy step.
But the other facet of forgiveness was not as clear-cut. I felt there was
something wrong with unquestioningly absolving someone of his rightful
responsibility, particularly if he had severely mistreated an innocent
child. Why in the world should you "pardon" a father who terrorized and
battered you, who made your childhood a living hell? How are you supposed
to "overlook" the fact that you had to come home to a dark house and nurse
your drunken mother almost every day? And do you really have to "forgive"
a father who raped you at the age of 7?
The more I thought about it, the more I realized that this absolution was
really another form of denial: "If I forgive you, we can pretend that what
happened wasn't so terrible." I came to realize that this aspect of
forgiveness was actually preventing a lot of people from getting on with
their lives.
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1237.5 | Last of Excerpts | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Wed Apr 11 1990 18:56 | 92 |
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{From: "Toxic Parents" by Dr. Susan Forward, p.189-190}
From Chapter Nine - The Forgiveness Trap
----------------------------------------
One of the most dangerous things about forgiveness is that it undercuts
your ability to let go of your pent-up emotions. How can you acknowledge
your anger against a parent whom you've already forgiven? Responsibility
can go only one of two places: outward, onto the people who have hurt you,
or inward, into yourself. Someone's got to be responsible. So you may
forgive your *parents*, but end up hating *yourself* all the more in
exchange.
I also noticed that many clients rushed to forgiveness to avoid much of the
painful work of therapy. They believed that by forgiving they could find a
shortcut to feeling better. A handful of them "forgave", left therapy, and
wound up sinking even deeper into depression or anxiety.
Several of these clients clung to their fantasies: "All I have to do is
forgive and I will be healed, I will have wonderful mental health,
everybody is going to love everybody, we'll hug a lot, and we'll finally be
happy." Clients all too often discovered that the empty promise of
forgiveness had merely set them up for bitter disappointment. Some of them
experienced a rush of well-being, but it didn't last because nothing had
really changed in the way they felt or in their family interactions.
I remember an especially touching session with a client named Stephanie,
whose experience illustrates some of the typical problems of premature
forgiveness. Stephanie, 27, was an extremely devout born-again Christian
when I met her. At age 11, Stephanie had been raped by her stepfather. He
had continued to abuse her until her mother threw him out of the house (for
other reasons) a year later. Over the next four years, Stephanie had been
molested by several of her mother's many boyfriends. She ran away from
home at 16 and became a prostitute. Seven years later, she was almost
beaten to death by a client. While recovering in the hospital Stephanie
met an orderly who persuaded her to visit his church. A few years later
they married and had a son. She was genuinely attempting to rebuild her
life. But, despite her new family and her new religion, Stephanie was
miserable. She spent two years in therapy, but she still couldn't shake
her intense depression. That's when she came to me.
I put Stephanie in one of my incest-victims' groups. In her first session,
Stephanie assured us that she had made her peace and had forgiven both her
stepfather and her cold, inadequate mother. I told her that if she wanted
to get rid of her depression she might have to "unforgive" for a while, to
get in touch with her anger. She insisted she believed deeply in
forgiveness, that she didn't need to get angry to get better. A fairly
intense struggle developed between us, partly because her religious beliefs
contradicted her psychological needs.
Stephanie did her work dutifully, but she refused to tap in to her rage.
Little by little, however, she began to have outburst of anger on behalf of
other people. For example she embraced another group member, saying, "Your
father was a monster, I hate him!"
A few weeks later, her own repressed rage finally came out. She screamed,
cursed, and accused her parents of destroying her childhood and crippling
her adult years. Afterward, I hugged her as she sobbed. I could feel her
body relax. When she was calmer, I teasingly asked, "What kind of way is
that for a nice Christian girl to behave?" I will never forget her reply:
"I guess God wants me to get better more than He wants me
to forgive."
That night was a turning point for her.
People *can* forgive toxic parents, but they should do it at the conclusion
- not at the beginning - of their emotional housecleaning. People *need*
to get angry about what happened to them. They need to grieve over the
fact that they never had the parental love they yearned for. They need to
stop diminishing or discounting the damage that was done to them. Too
often, "forgive and forget" means "pretend it didn't happen."
I also believe that forgiveness is appropriate only when parents do
something to *earn* it. Toxic parents, especially the more abusive ones,
need to acknowledge what happened, take responsibility, and show a
willingness to make amends. If you unilaterally absolve your parents who
*continue* to treat you badly, who deny much of your reality and feelings,
and who continue to project blame onto you, you may seriously impede the
emotional work you need to do. If one or both parents are dead, you can
heal the damage, by forgiving *yourself* and releasing much of the hold
that they had over your emotional well-being.
At this point, you may be wondering, understandably, if you will remain
bitter and angry for the rest of your life if you don't forgive your
parents. In fact, quite the opposite is true. What I have seen over the
years is that emotional and mental peace comes as a result of releasing
yourself from your toxic parents' control, without necessarily having to
forgive them. And that release can come only after you've worked through
your intense feelings of outrage and grief and after you've put the
responsibility on *their* shoulders, where it belongs.
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1237.6 | y | FAIRWY::BERNIER | The Organic Christian | Thu Apr 12 1990 09:53 | 19 |
| Cindy,
This may surprise you but I agree eith this author (to a point of
course). The forgive and forget thing is not the be-all and end-all of
emotional/spiritual healing. I believe that responsibility for hurts
must be taken by the victimizer, not the victim. I also believe that
true, total forgiveness cannot be achieved until things are worked out
in each individual, and then between the individuals, each taking
responsibility for their deeds/attitudes, etc.
Forgiveness must be preceded by repentance. There are times when I
choose not to hold something against an unthinking, unfeeling person
but it is not the same as forgiveness, it's more like a kind of grace
extended toward the offender.
My thoughts are fuzzy this morning, maybe more later. Remeber though,
forgiveness is a good thing when it is done in its proper timing.
Gil
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1237.7 | No, I'm not surprised. (;^) | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Thu Apr 12 1990 12:10 | 4 |
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Well said, Gil. I concur.
Cindy
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1237.8 | There are levels beyond this... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Apr 12 1990 12:17 | 7 |
| Lest I be considered a sheep of some kind, this is just a little
reply stating that I agree with lots, but disagree with a bunch of the
excerpts you printed out of the book. I do NOT, however, wish to spend
my time responding in depth right now...maybe some other day/time.
Frederick
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1237.9 | Reply | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Thu Apr 12 1990 12:28 | 7 |
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Frederick,
You're always welcome to enlighten us with your knowledge of the levels
beyond. I'll listen.
Cindy
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1237.10 | Ratholes... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Apr 12 1990 13:53 | 36 |
| re: Cindy
You're always fun, Cindy! :-)
I started to get defensive when I read this, but got a phone
call while it was on my screen, and then I've somehow managed to see
the humor in this little scene. There's Frederick, putting something
down, or watering it down somehow...then there's Condy-roo, holding
in her anger (tongue-in-cheek) by saying "Okay, if you're so smart,
show us." Funny little situation, huh? Sitcom material.
I'm not sure of the way out, however. All I wanted to do was to
say, yeah, her stuff is good (about forgiveness) but that there is
something I can add or say to various parts...BUT, BUT, BUT...
It's more complicated than I care to spend my time writing about
right now, that's all. As the writer notes, she was conducting therapy
originally holding a certain set of beliefs. She changed her beliefs,
changed her therapy and is now writing (has written) a book from that
perspective. I hold that she is LIKELY to grow yet another level and
will change and will conduct therapy from a more comprehensive point of
reference. All I will say is that my "BUT..." is about some things
that I am aware of that go beyond her present conclusions. These
things are not simple to discuss. What she says will work TO A LEVEL.
Just like AA (or any 12-step program) will work toward THAT level.
All I felt like doing, and I haven't participated much in DEJAVU this
year, is saying that I can chew but not swallow this material. It's
good thinking, it thinks beyond the blind acceptance of religious
teaching, but there is a layer beyond which she hasn't unfolded yet.
(And there are probably layers beyond, of which I haven't gotten even
the foggiest ideas about...this fog I *do* have ideas about.)
So, I will take time to position myself, but I will not take time
to answer this right now. That's how I want it right now.
Cherchez la femme. Ou est la porte? Mon dieu, quel fromage!
Frederick
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1237.11 | Not ever silence bespeaks emptiness. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Apr 12 1990 14:02 | 7 |
| Frederick,
Keep in mind that she has to have written more than Cindy entered.
And that Cindy entered what *Cindy* thought was either best ior
most interesting ior newest ior most useful ior....
Ann B.
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1237.12 | Oh alright, so I was having some fun...cat is out of the bag. | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Thu Apr 12 1990 17:16 | 7 |
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Now Freddie, you didn't really think I'd let you get away with that,
now did you? Hey hey?
(;^P There - the tongue is out of my cheek now.
Cindy
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1237.13 | Freddie - it may be somewhere, but not in me. | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Thu Apr 12 1990 17:17 | 6 |
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PS. Quit projecting anger into me where there is none.
(;^) Except in your own mind, of course.
Cindy
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1237.14 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | | Thu Apr 12 1990 17:35 | 18 |
| Cindy, It all seems to work in principle. In order to "get better" you
should direct your anger away from yourself and towards the responsible
party, thereby losing your "guilt" and reaching a catharsis of sorts.
I don't see it working like this for everyone. Some people can't "get
better"" unless they forgive the offending party. It does make for
interesting NOTING, however. I do think I will pick the book up.
This, of course, is IMveryHO as I have no clinical training whatsoever.
Also, I was never abused or molested as a child. I was sort of left on
my own. My Mother had to work long hours to support us. My Father had a
stroke when I was 11 and although he wasn't completely disabled, He
couldn't work and really be a Father to us. He also lingered and got
progressivly worse over the 17 years that he lasted. Hmmm Maybe
somwhere deep inside I blame him for not being a Father ;-)
Phil
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1237.15 | Just another tequilla sunrise... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Apr 13 1990 13:50 | 26 |
| re: .13 (Condy-roo)
Cindy, Cindy, Cindy!! By now, after nearly three years,
you certainly know that I have anger and that I express it!
re: .14 (Phil)
There are some fairly astute comments in there, I think.
You are close to saying one of the things I believe is true. That
guilt is one of the main motivators behind the forgiveness issue.
My friend Lazaris has defined guilt (which he contends is not a real
emotion--real emotions have both positive and negative potentials,
artificial emotions only have negative outcomes) as ANGER we DON'T
feel we have a RIGHT TO. Further, that guilt cannot be processed.
Guilt must be converted into anger which in turn CAN be processed.
For the sake of this particular discussion, let us say you feel guilt
over forgiving someone. You can't process the guilt. You're stuck.
Then someone comes along and says you don't need to forgive them.
The guilt goes away. The hidden anger emerges. The relief is at
hand. But then comes the results of not forgiving. And that's where
this little scenario screeches to a halt. ULTIMATELY, forgiving
must occur, whether in this lifetime or some other.
Frederick
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1237.16 | | NOPROB::JOLLIMORE | A close look at planet Mars | Fri Apr 13 1990 14:20 | 10 |
| Frederick,
> .............................. after nearly three years,
> you certainly know that I have anger and that I express it!
Is that righteous anger??
Time to give it up, no???
;')
Jay
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1237.17 | Hard to read tones in these things, isn't it?! | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Apr 13 1990 15:45 | 9 |
| re: .16 (Jay)
I should have added a :-) to that. It wasn't intended to
sound *too* righteous. It could be, though. If it is, you are
correct. Time to pass on it. If it's just anger, then it needs
more work (but probably never eliminated.)
Frederick
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1237.18 | Mr. Contrary is truly amazed | CGVAX2::CONNELL | | Fri Apr 13 1990 16:44 | 16 |
| re .15 Fred, I am amazed that someone would share my oppinion. I have
spent years trying to have the opposite oppinion of what anyone else's
oppinion was. ;-) Basically, I do agree with what your friend has said
about guilt and anger being intertwined so. What I was trying to say, I
guess is, that whatever works for an individual is OK and until one
reaches the point of needing something different to work out repressed
feelings of anger and guilt about one's parents or anything for that
matter, then what you do is OK. We all need a "crutch" of some sort.
Whether we blame ourselves or our parents or that damned woodpecker
that wakes me up in the morning, it's basically "whatever gets you
through the night is all right." Who did that song anyway?
Phil
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1237.19 | In Margaritaville | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Fri Apr 13 1990 18:19 | 10 |
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Re.15
Freddie,
>I have anger and that I express it!
Well then, the book is obviously not for you! (;^)
Cindy
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1237.20 | Add'l thought | CGVAX2::PAINTER | And on Earth, peace... | Fri Apr 13 1990 18:20 | 8 |
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Phil,
"Telling the truth is not blame. It is telling the truth."
- Sonia Johnson
>(;*)
Cindy
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