Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

How should adult child handle parents’ anxiety?

- Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. each Friday at washington­post.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or email tellme@washpost.com CAROLYN HAX

DEAR CAROLYN: I am looking for ways to retain a healthy relationsh­ip with my parents, who have a history of trying to control me with their anxiety. I have learned the hard way that things that excite me — taking trips abroad, dating someone who doesn’t align with their comfort zone, outdoor adventures — will trigger extreme worry and fear, to the point they will ask me not to do the thing, bargain with me to do it a different way, and, in some circumstan­ces, threaten that my actions will result in extreme detriments to their physical health since they will worry about me the whole time.

To be clear, I have no history of extreme actions — these activities would be considered fairly normal by most people.

As a result, I have built up a boundary so thick they know virtually nothing that goes on in my life outside general things with my job and where I live. This makes me extremely sad, as I end up keeping major things a secret from them to avoid the anxiety roller coaster. It makes me feel like a naughty teenager, and I’m in my 30s.

Is this the only way to retain a civil relationsh­ip with my parents? It really hurts, as I’d like to be able to confide in them without fear. — Emotionall­y Blackmaile­d

DEAR READER: How miserable for all of you. I’m so sorry they haven’t taken steps to address their mental health issues; they could be years into having their lives back by now, had they sought timely treatment, and with that a close, functional relationsh­ip with you.

Its current distance is not your fault. Not. Your. Fault. No guilt.

I’m pretty sure you know this already but it is worth saying anyway. You did what was necessary to put your adult autonomy out of reach of their toxic reactions.

As you contemplat­e inching back toward them, maybe think of this as a relationsh­ip eliminatio­n diet: You removed your parents from your life almost entirely and got yourself to a healthy place. Now you can start to reintroduc­e types of interactio­ns with them to see if they trigger a rash.

Start with confiding after the fact. Don’t tell them you’re going on a trip abroad; tell them you went on one as soon as you’ve gotten home safely. This is a basic strategy people use with anxious loved ones — and if it works even minimally, then you’ll be able to talk to your parents about more of what’s happening in your life. If it works ideally, then they will slowly gather proof that your way of life is no more fatal than anyone else’s. (They don’t sound receptive to new informatio­n, but I mention this anyway as a point in the strategy’s favor.)

If your parents flip out anyway, about a trip that’s already over, then take these disclosure­s back out of your diet.

Repeat this process with other things you’d like to share with them, adding and removing as their reactions warrant.

It’s also OK for you to acknowledg­e your thick boundary works and not budge from where you are. You want more of a relationsh­ip with them, yes, and that’s a loving impulse — but if they’re not capable of producing any other emotional output, no matter what adjustment­s you make to the input, then give yourself permission to drop this unreachabl­e goal — and forgive yourself for it, too.

 ?? ?? (Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
(Washington Post Writers Group/Nick Galifianak­is)
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