Sins of our Parents

The sins of parents are among the most difficult to forgive. We expect the world of them, and we do not wish to lower our expectations. Decade after decade, we hold out the hope, often unconsciously, that they will finally do right by us. We want them to own up to all their misdeeds, to apologize, to make heartfelt pleas for our forgiveness. We want our parents to embrace us, to tell us they know we were good children, to undo the favoritism they’ve shown to a brother or sister, to take back their hurtful criticisms, to give us their praise.

To forgive is not to condone the bad things our parents have done. It’s not to deny their selfishness, their rejections, their meanness, their brutality, or any of the other misdeeds, character flaws, or limitations that may attach to them. It is important to separate from our parents—which is to stop seeing ourselves as children who depend on them for our emotional well-being, to stop being their victims, to recognize that we are adults with some capacity to shape our own lives and the responsibility to do so.

When we do that, we can begin to understand the circumstances and limitations they labored under, recognize the goodness in them that our pain has pushed aside, feel some compassion perhaps, not only for the hard journey they had but also for the pain we have caused them.

Getting to a forgiving place, finding the forgiving self inside us, is a long and complicated journey. We have to be ready to forgive. We have to want to forgive. The deeper the wound, the more difficult the process—which makes forgiving parents especially hard. Along the way, we may have to express our protest, we may have to be angry and resentful, we may even have to punish our parents by holding a grudge. But when we get there, the forgiveness we achieve will be a forgiveness worth achieving! So start your journey it is worth every hole and stumble along the way.
Allow people to evolve and change. And remind yourself that parents are people too. Some parents were horrible at parenting but not so bad as friends to their adult children. So be it. Let that be the redefinition of your relationship. Try not to judge the current reality against the context of the past. Instead, try to accept things as they are today.

Parents don’t come with owner’s manuals. And yet, we are far more complex than any piece of furniture or computer program we have ever had to put together or install. We are also all-too-familiar with the problems that can arise with do-it-yourself projects. Pieces don’t fit. Installations fail. It’s at those moments we are glad there are trouble-shooting instructions or FAQ pages provided. Well, guess what! Your parents’ mistakes are now effectively your trouble-shooting guide and FAQ page. “What happens if I scream and shout at my kids?” you might want to know. “Oh yeah, my parents did that to me. I know exactly what happens!”
Impatient, unkind and punitive parents aren’t impatient, unkind and punitive simply because you were unworthy of their patience, kindness or compassion. They were that way because they are impatient, unkind and punitive people. In other words, how you were treated is all about them, not you.

So, here’s the point I’m trying to make: All our parenting is done out of the context of who we are and what we know. Each one of us is limited in giving love by the limits to our capacity to love. Your parents were likewise limited. That understanding can lead to compassion which can lead to forgiveness.

And while we can always learn and grow, most people seem to live on automatic pilot. So, most of us are something within a stones throw of our parents’ behaviors, attitudes and habits. Likewise, mom and dad are products of their parent’s parenting too. Forgive them of that.
Sometimes we bury our feelings where they fester and decay, and then begin to infect other parts of the psyche as well.

Sometimes, like the body expelling poisons, the soul also needs to vomit emotional toxins. Doing this on paper helps sort out feelings and make sense of things. There can be a cleansing quality to putting pain to paper too. Be as explicit and detailed as you can. Dump everything onto the page. It may take several days to get it all out. That’s okay; take the time.

When you’re done, read it as a solemn recognition of the past. Then light the thing on fire and burn it. Let its ashes float away on the wind or up the vent. As the smoke lifts, feel the emotional baggage float away with it. Feel it rise with the ashes and smoke and disappear and be gone.

And then be done with it. I would suggest this be a one-time expulsion of pent-up emotional poison. Doing this repeatedly can have the unhappy effect of amplifying, rather than muting, the past’s continuing influence as you keep swimming in that polluted pool.

Your parents were not just your parents. They, like all of us, are complex beings with a mixed bag of character strengths and flaws. Perhaps you ended up on the receiving end of their flaws. But they are not likely without redeeming qualities as well. See that in them. And commit to learning from both their strengths and weaknesses. And be grateful for the life-lessons learned.
If you grew up without love, smother your children with it. If you grew up with family secrets, don’t have any. If you grew up with harsh criticism and ridicule and impatience, then be sure to compliment, love, and exercise patience with your children.

Let the example of decency and compassion you share with them be the focus of your emotional healing. But be sure not to commit the sin of overcompensation. Your role here is to love, not spoil.

In a sense, you will be parenting yourself with the love and compassion you wish your parents had shown you as you shower it on your own kids, in some way, making amends for what your parents failed to provide.

In other words, parent yourself vicariously through parenting your own children. Extend to them what your parents failed to extend to you and allow the love flowing from you to your children to heal the wounds from the lack of love flowing to you as a child.

This can be a hard pill to swallow. Still, it’s important to stop blaming your parents for current problems. Did they lay the foundation for the problem? Perhaps. But it’s yours now. That’s the inescapable bottom line of it.
You make the decision every day to hold on or let go. That’s your decision only. Accept that as fact. Own it completely and release your parents from the responsibility you’ve pinned to their shoulders for too long.

Don’t get me wrong, here. I am not suggesting your past is your fault. I’m saying that your present is the result of choices you have made, as you have allowed your past to influence them.

This step is admittedly difficult, but it is empowering and liberating once it’s fully accepted and internalized.

I am who I choose to be. I feel what I choose to feel by choosing what thoughts I choose to harbor and how I choose to think about things. I choose to learn ways to change my thinking and interpretations of life or I choose not to. These are all my choices. And they are yours too.

Final word on this point: Your parents may be responsible for creating the emotional context. You are responsible for keeping that context alive. So stop feeding it and let it wither on the vine.
Instead of constantly peeling away the scabs of life to see how things are healing underneath, decide what you want out of life, what traits are required to obtain what you want, and then act. Work at overcoming emotional obstacles and other personal obstructions without worrying so much about where they came from. Just get on with the work of living well.

The past is the past. Let it die there, and stop unburying the dead and move on. Trying to drag the corpse of yesterday through life will make each moment of today a bit more difficult to manage. So find purpose and passion in life and move forward, looking back only long enough to learn from it.
Sometimes out of a sense that justice must be served, or anger at the unfairness of how we were raised, we keep the pain and anger center court, at arm’s length, always in view. It’s time to stop. It’s time to grow. It’s time to forgive and let go and be free!

Love Vanessa 💓💓

Forgiving Your Parents

​This Christmas was the opposite of what I had dreamt it would be. My first Christmas in the new house I love, with my family I love (shan, courtnie, my mom, dad and Ashley), I had a little extra money, gifts wrapped for everyone under the tree, stockings filled….turkey ordered, two weeks off work…it is amazing how one persons misery, selfishness and pure unhappinesses can ruin it for the rest. 

If you read my blog you’d know I don’t have a relationship with my mother…but I wanted one…i had forgiven her for the past..at least I thought I had…until she arrived and from day 3 began to crank, complain and just be pure miserable to me and Ashley.  No matter what I did it wasn’t enough…it started to bring back bad memories from the past and the realization that I will never have a relationship with my mom. It ruined my Christmas, yes I know I shouldn’t have let it but it did…I was completely overwhelmed with past memories of hurt and pain.

I am not going to bash my mom here, I am going to move on and forgive and heal. 

Forgiving your parents is a core task of adulthood, and one of the most crucial kinds of forgiveness you will ever have to deal with. We see our parents in our spouses, in our friends, in our bosses, even in our children. When we’ve felt rejected by a parent and have remained in that state, we will inevitably feel rejected by these important others as well. I don’t want to treat others bad cause I am hurting and feeling rejected, I want healthly relationships with the people I love.

But letting our parents off the hook, it is the first step toward happiness, self-acceptance and maturity. 

Today I am working on resolving resentment. When you nurse resentments toward a parent it does more than keep that parent in the doghouse. We get stuck there, too, forever the child, the victim, the have-not in the realm of love. Strange as it may seem, a grudge is a kind of clinging, a way of not separating, and when we hold a grudge against a parent, we are clinging not just to the parent, but more specifically to the bad part of the parent. It’s as if we don’t want to live our lives until we have this resolved and feel the security of their unconditional love. We do so for good reasons psychologically. But the result is just the opposite: We stay locked into the badness and we don’t grow up.
I no longer want to be that hurt little child….I forgive….I AM A BEAUTIFUL KIND, LOVING ADULT!!

Love Vanessa 💖

Day 1 of 365 – Mind, Mouth, Moods, and Attitudes

“Behold, I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you.” – Luke 10:19 KJV

This is typically how our mind, mouth, moods, and attitude are connected: “when you have negative circumstances, you have a negative thought.”

Then you say negative things about the circumstance, and then your mood begins to sink. Next you get a bad attitude, and you end with more negative circumstances than you started with. 

You can break this cycle in your life. 

When you have a problem, nothing negative will fix it. Keep your mind, mouth, moods, and attitudes positive, and watch God and the Universe work miracles on your behalf.

“See the positive side, the potential, and make an effort.” ~Dalai Lama

I still find it’s easier to fall prey to negative thinking. Having negative thoughts play out like a movie in your mind but can only bring you pain, something that I’ve experienced many times throughout my life. Negative thoughts drain you of your energy and keep you from being in the present moment. The more you give in to your negative thoughts, the stronger they become. I like the imagery of a small snow ball rolling along the snowy ground, and as it rolls, it becomes bigger. That’s what one small negative thought can turn into: a huge, snowy ball of ugliness. 

When we start to have negative thoughts, it’s hard to stop them. And it’s much easier said than done to shift your focus to positive thoughts. But it’s the only way, especially if you want to avoid going down a path that is painful and unnecessary.

But……..a small positive thought can have the same effect blossoming into a beautiful outcome, it is just a matter of changing your negative thought to a positive one.

Smile. Bring yourself in front of a mirror and force yourself to smile. It really does help change your mood and relieve stress. You will feel lighter because it takes fewer muscles to smile than to frown.

Surround yourself with positive people. When you’re stuck in a negative spiral, talk to people who can put things into perspective and won’t feed your negative thinking.

Remember that no one is perfect and let yourself move forward. It’s easy to dwell on your mistakes. The only thing you can do now is learn from your mistakes and move forward. 

List five things that you are grateful for right now. Being grateful helps appreciate what you already have.

Read positive quotes. I like to place Post-It notes with positive quotes on my computer, fridge door, and mirrors as reminders to stay positive. 

Watch your thoughts, they become words. Watch your words, they become actions. Watch your actions, they become habits. Watch your habits, they become your character. Watch your character, it becomes your destiny.

Happy New Year and Happy positive thinking!
Love Vanessa 💖