My childhood
was a classic example of absolute patriarchal authoritarianism. I give great
credit to my mom (who being of the generation that a woman’s place is in the
home and there to serve her husband) who did her best to love and nurture our
sibling group of three. As is often true,
I being the oldest also received the more restrictive guidance and attentions.
I have no recollection of my father ever hugging me or telling me he loved me. I wondered often what was wrong with me. When
I was leaving for college the first time, I took a deep breath, walked over to
my dad, hugged him and said I loved him. He never put his arms around me. Whatever
relational hopefulness I had maintained for him, was broken on that day.
Looking back, all I can add is, he did the best he could from where he’d come.
On the
credit side of the ledger, he never abused any of us or our mom. We did get a
couple of ‘belt – lickins’ (actually not very severe – more scary); but can
honestly say we knew the consequences and deliberately chose to pursue bad
decisions; and definitely reinforced the concept of consequences. He was a
dentist and very successful. He was an excellent provider, but within the
constraints of his depression era childhood. We never wanted for the
essentials, but there were few extras. We were allowed almost no personally
driven decisions and if we expressed a desire, it was often met with “what in
world would you want that (or to do that) for. Besides, what would people think
of our family?” It was absolute rule; pretty much lock-down. I was a walking
example of the negative consequences illustrated in our text; except I wasn't aggressive.
I could not
have been more ill prepared for parenthood. And yet there I was with a family.
Predictably, I set off to follow the example of my upbringing. There was one
small (in the beginning) off-setting factor. Somehow I was profoundly aware of
how inappropriate my upbringing had been and also had some misty concept that I
might walk the same path. I tried, mostly unsuccessful, not to do so, but the
patterns were pretty deeply subconscious; almost always automatic and without
conscious decision monitoring. My early parenting was better than dad’s, but I would not want to invite anyone to judge by how much! :-}
There came a
sentinel revelation that was instrumental to help me self-redirect. I’d known
for some time that string of words: “…love is patient, love is kind…not self-seeking…always
protects…” with a few other things in there. All of a sudden it was no longer some ‘truth-thing’
out there in the universe, but was a spot light on just how/what I was doing as
a parent. That internalization became the self-check of my parenting decisions:
is this kind, gentle, patient, etc? I gradually became an authoritarian parent that began
focusing on nurturing the biopsychosocial uniqueness of each child; assisting
in their own self-discovery of who they are still becoming.
Hey Rebekah,
ReplyDeleteWow, your story was just jaw dropping for me. I just love how you shared how it was for you growing up as a child and then how you were as a parent and what you did to try and be the best parent you could be. I had a similar relationship with my dad when I was growing up. He never showed emotion, hugged us and that I recall even tell us he loved us. I even remember him telling me that I was too sensitive and a "big baby" because I was more sensitive than most my age at the time. I really enjoyed reading your blog this week as always. Thank you for sharing. :)