4 feelings your childhood still affects you.
Childhoods are the foundation of every human.
They are beautiful yet critical because that is what builds the lives of our adulthood.
At the childhood level, our great mentors were our parents (those that cared for us). Donât get it twisted with the word âmentorâ, I know it involves an experienced person but at the childhood level, children only know their parents or those who catered for them because they see them every day and they adopt their characters and see them as our ideal, perfect person and so we trust whatever they say was right.
Parents always have great expectations from us (children) and their actions end up influencing our lives to their peak or doom.
Lots of children out there are still acting base on their childhood challenges because that has been their home since childhood and change are difficult, some donât even have a why so why should they undertake the process of change.
Our parents are humans like us and some of them probably didnât have a great childhood so they gonna scrap on because they donât have everything figured out.
Furthermore, so this write-up is not to blame anyone but to understand why you act the way you do, see the problem, find the solution, and see if you need a change.
Nothing sucks like limitations.
And not taking responsibility for your life makes it worse to solve.
Here are the 4(four)ways if not more your childhood still affects you;
1. Feeling responsible for otherâs emotions:
Letâs say you had a parent with mental issues and they confide in you (their child) on your developing brain. This builds up a child to be responsible for others emotions because that is what they did for their parents all their childhood life.
Childhood is supposed to be fun, thatâs where children need to explore, and having that kind of burden placed on them at a young age, formulates their brain to cater to others emotions
This occurrence limits the adult from knowing priorities, giving affirmation to peopleâs opinions and requests, it stresses the adult both mentally and emotionally and it kills self-esteem in them. Iâm not trying to say you shouldnât trust your children or share your burden with them but knowing at what stage of their life, their mental and emotional capability helps you know if itâs right.
Itâs a great feeling being there for someone but hurting yourself in the process is not the truthfulness to self but destruction.
Being available all the time and, not able to say NO,
Or the thought of you not having your boundaries, not taking care of yourself brings up some thoughts of guilt in you, you should understand that it probably came from you being given an emotional responsibility that wasnât yours to bear at that age.
âChildhood is the best of all the seasons of life, and the longer it lasts with happy memories, the stronger the emotional stability in adulthood."
2. Feeling responsible for your parentâs emotional state:
I donât how long itâs gonna take for some parents to realize that their children are not responsible for how they should feel, I understand you (parents) have expectations from your children and it hurts when they donât behave in a certain way you expect them to but it shouldnât get to you because they are children still in the process of learning and every childâs learning rate are different from another child.
Letting your expectations get to you, warrant you getting upset and using abusive words on your child, limits their exploration and learning process, and that mess up the brain of the child.
Children will always be children, filled with so many questions in their heads and so they explore the inside and outside, they want to know whatâs going on in the family and environment, they absorb the emotions, and they act out how they feel not because they want to make mummy or daddy sad, or being a jerk. Children are just being children and you are making you angry by expecting them to do what you think they should be doing.
So if you were given the burden of your parentâs emotions, it probably made you feel like a bad child âim making mummy or daddy angryâ, maybe you were even told that you are a bad child.
This feeling subjects the adult with such childhood into experiencing not feeling good enough.
3. Feeling pressured to fulfill your parentâs dreams:
Having your parents manipulate you into fulfilling their unmet dreams and you start to believe that you are responsible for making everyone happy or believe that everyoneâs expectations are more important than yours without really checking if itâs what is important to your life goals and your life goals arenât meeting to others expectations, maybe youâve probably tried it and they are still not satisfied and happy and thatâs because you canât make anyone happy truly if they donât want to be.
4. Feeling of being emotionally neglected:
When all attention is given to your sibling with a mental health issue, pressure is put on you on how to act, what to say, and all attention is given to your sibling. This might not be harmful physical because it shows you want the sick one to be better but emotionally it is because the healthy child suffers emotional neglect because of the less energy given to the healthy one and more energy to the chaotic one, and what this does to adult is that it arises a dis-feeling of I donât matter and it limits the adult from assessing of self because they were disconnected due to not having a voice to speak and ear to listen.
Itâs possible to be present but emotionally detached from your child and that creates a feeling of abandonment in adulthood because of the insufficient space for exploration of self in my family.
All these are phases of oneâs life that came through what we had to experience as a child and following these 4 feelings above, resulted in self-shame, neglect, and self-abandonment of oneâs self.
I have lived and scaled through them and I could say⌠Yes. Change is difficult but knowing your whys, paying attention, learning how to take a step back, and not just respond to your emotions like that, taking full responsibility for your improvements only then can you expect people to appreciate you and always listen to yourself and ask meaningful questions.
Childhood is a golden part of our life that we can never go back to but you can take responsibility for making your adult life worthy.
âGrowing old is mandatory, growing up is optional."
Note:
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