“Wait—your parents are still married?”
The therapist stared at me, his mouth agape.
“To each other?!”
I nodded warily at this abrupt shift in the tone of our conversation. I was 24 years old and still new to the mechanics of therapy. Just moments before, this man—himself old enough to be my father—had been explaining how all families, loving or otherwise, could be a source of great distress, dysfunction, and pain. He had seemed to be easing my path to revealing any untold horrors of abuse or neglect. I don’t think he’d have batted an eye if I had launched into a description of ritualistic animal sacrifices we had conducted as a family every Sunday afternoon before picnics.
“Even divorce can be very rough on a child,” he had said, tilting his head in anticipated understanding.
But my still-married parents caught him completely off-guard. Underneath his astonished gaze, I felt the legitimacy of my pain shrink. What am I—shiny-haired product of such a perfectly “unbroken home”—doing here on this leather couch? I suddenly wondered.
* * *
What else have I been doing the last few months, just in case losing a pet after twenty years together, going back to work full-time, setting (and enforcing) major new boundaries with the parental units — and all without having a mental breakdown in the process — wasn’t enough?
Why, joining the content writing staff at The Body Is Not An Apology (a completely fabulous community dedicated to fostering radical self-love and ending body terrorism), of course! You can read the rest of my piece, “You Have Power Now”: 9 Ways to Save Yourself From Your Parents, here.
I encourage you to read around some other pieces on the site while you’re there — if you appreciate the kind of topics I tackle here at Coffee, you’ll find plenty of interest over at TBINAA too!
What a great post. Very resonant. And congrats on the new jobs. You sound like a perfect fit for that fabulous site.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you so much!! It feels a real privilege to be part of the community doing that work.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Just one of those stressors would make me yampy. I hope you realize how awesome you are.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Awww, thanks! Also? “Yampy” is an absolutely delightful word — and points to just how awesome you are too, Ms. Sandy Sue Wordsmith. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ha. I wrote a little story a while back where I needed a bunch of British euphemisms for “crazy.” I love Google.
LikeLike
Hats off to good boundaries! I know what a challenge that can be. I am so proud of all you are accomplishing!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks!! Am hoping someday soon to start sleeping more than 4hrs a night so I can emerge from this mental fog — and truly APPRECIATE it all! 😀
LikeLike