Quote from: cynthialee on August 22, 2010, 09:32:45 PM
Hikari;
Don't give up on family, sometimes they grow up and mature when we are gone from their lives.
Thank you for your hopeful words, even though it is very hard for me to conceive of a reconciliation. Though, I must admit it is at least in theory possible. After all I stopped living with my mother around the age of 13 and got her to give up custody (To my at the time 18 year old brother), eventually we did start to speak again.
She does call me from time to time, and I suppose it is nice not to outright hate her, but I can't honestly say that I love her either (and I can't honestly say that this was ever the case). I do at least pity her, which is far better than it was 10 years ago. Her substance abuse problems will likely be the death of her (Within the next 5 years I would think) and I don't know if I will even show up to the funeral, I warned her by not showing up to my aunts funeral, that death by overdose will not be forgiven by me...
In any case, my hate for my father is very difficult to shake. Not only did I never love him, I don't think he ever loved me (My mother on the other hand, to this day absolutely adores me, even when I tell her she is worthless). The most ironic part about that, is that on paper it would seem if he were better, as he only abandoned me* and my brother twice, and his violence and drug abuse were never on par with my mothers, but as immature as it sounds, the fact he always chided me for being myself making me feel worthless, and always made me live in fear as a child makes me hate him with a passion that honestly is irrational.
I'd like to think that I am at least a somewhat reasonable person, and my feelings towards my family come off as rather unreasonable to most people, but I just never formed an attachment to them. Perhaps the oxytocin in my brain didn't work right when I was a child, I don't know, but I know my brother still has this unconditional love towards our parents regardless of the torment that we were subjected to.
FWIW, I hope you are right, it would be nice to see people change for the better, but I am not holding my breath.
*The quality of abandonment was better as well, my mother would leave us somewhere and just disappear, to be seen several months to a year later, my father at least, tell the family member he dumped us with that he was leaving, rather than leaving a note explaining it was all too much like my mother did.