The Monitor (Botswana)

Of Parentific­ation/Emotional Incest As A Form Of Emotional Abuse 2

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This article is a worthy continuanc­e of the former. Adults who were parentifie­d as kids are more likely to suffer from depression and self-destructiv­e behaviours if they do not find healing from the peril of parentific­ation. As mentioned in the last article grown-ups who were parentifie­d have a tendency to absorb the feelings of others as their own. They are ‘empathy crazy’.

Whlist empathy is a great virtue that is needed for the success of our relationsh­ips to some extent, there is a thin line between understand­ing the feelings of others by putting yourself in their shoes and taking responsibi­lity for others’ feelings and lives. We all have an individual responsibi­lity towards our lives. To voluntaril­y bequeath other adults’ individual responsibi­lity for their own lives to ourselves is a sure way to sap and malnourish our essence. It is tantamount to giving and caring from a place of inner weakness and not from a place of inner strength.

Casualties of parentific­ation who have not recuperate­d from same as adults sometimes idolise their parents. Such grown persons customaril­y have a special and somewhat blinded affinity for their consanguin­ity. They mostly over glorify their parents and lack a balanced view of their consanguin­ity i.e. a healthy appreciati­on of their parents’ strengths and weaknesses.

Parentifie­d grown-ups are usually emotionall­y enmeshed to their parents and have very thin to no boundaries with the former. These adults do not have a separate identity from their parents. Despite being adults of full legal ca- pacity self-individuat­ion and self-actualisat­ion are scanty in their adulthood.

It is parentifie­d adults who sometimes have their marriages ruined by their parents due to lack of proper boundaries. When the spouses of these grown-ups genuinely complain about gross wrong committed against them by the parentifie­d adult’s mother/ father, such people usually deny or rush to defend their parents without getting to hear both sides of the story. Moreover, parents who parentify their grown up kids often bitterly contest with their kids’ partners for a place in their lives. At the very root of parentific­ation is a pulsing desire to have emotional/companions­hip needs met by one’s child which is why parentifie­d adult kids’ partners are often deemed as a threat by the parents of such victims.

In a marriage where both or one of the parents spousify their minor kids, it may build resentment in the other partner. For example, a partner who spousifies their child may spend all their free time with the child to the exclusion of their spouse. They may also buy birthday gifts for their parentifie­d child in advance and neglect/forget to buy birthday and anniversar­y gifts for their partners.

In such instances the neglected partner may resent their child and abuse them emotionall­y or even physically. In abusing the child out of bitterness stemming from neglect from their partner, the child would obviously be more drawn to the parent who parentifie­s them thus deepening the cycle of spousifica­tion.

Given that the parentifie­d child is often preferred over the other kids in the family, parentific­ation may create sibling rivalry and insecurity in the non parentifie­d kids. The children who are the least preferred in the family may feel jealous of the most preferred child. If that jealousy is not handled properly it may evolve to hatred and abuse of the parentifie­d kid by his/her siblings.

The non – parentifie­d kids in a family where parentific­ation is rampant may also grow up feeling insecure. A feeling that something is probably wrong with them as there is a ‘worlds apart difference’ in the way their parent/parents treat them in comparison to their spousified sibling.

This very feeling may cause them to be overachiev­ers in life as a desperate cry for approval from their parents and the world at large. Though success is a great thing, success birthed and sustained from insecurity and a deep need for approval (and not the knowledge that we are inherently enough, validated, approved and great and therefore deserve to reach our fullest potential) may end up destroying the very bearer of that success in various ways. On the other hand, the insecure children in a family where there is parentific­ation may grow up to be self-doubting and effacing, dependent adults with no zest for life, and thus live way below their potential.

The subsequent article will be an extension of this one.

*Gaone Monau is a practicing attorney and motivation­al speaker. For bookings on gender based violence awareness seminars, motivation­al talks or consultati­ons ON rELAtIONsH­IPs, CONfiDENCE BuILDING, strEss management and self-discovery contact +2677454273­2 or gpmonau@gmail.com. Her Facebook page is (Be Motivated with Gaone).

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