Upset
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I wish my parents were interested in their kids.

I’m at a restaurant and there’s a family near by and their son who is probably 18 is talking to his parents about his dorm at college and the parents seem so interested. Just little things like that I get jealous of. And not a mean type of jealousy. Just the type of jealousy that makes me sit and realize our parents wasn’t into us.
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hartfire · 61-69
I'm with you on that.
At 68, if I reflect back on my relationships with my parents, what I remember is
Dad talking endlessly about his own interests (which were interesting)
but never asking about my day at school, my hopes, agonies or fears, my experiences with neighbours, at the beach, reading, drawing or walking the dog,
nor what it was like enduring Mum's drinking binges when she nearly died and the house went without food.
After Dad died, when I was 14, Mum talked for 2 or 3 hours every day about my younger sister's latest acts of delinquency, never asking about my life.

I think both assumed they knew it all, and had no idea how a child needs to be able to express and feel heard, recognised and understood, and often needs help to understand or overcome difficulties.
It's a special kind of loneliness. One learns to become self-sufficient, but I've somehow never learned how to create that special kind of friendship that involves mutual trust, respect and open emotional intimacy. Somehow, I always meet the limits.
Maybe it's this dream of an ideal that is my faulting, believing in somethe st thing that can't exist -- just a child's need that can't be fulfilled.
My husband comes closest to being this kind of friend, but he's incapable of understanding many aspects of who I am. He has ADD - which means there's a neurological deficit that he can't overcome. It's organic & physical.
There's an irony in that. Did my unconscious accept a partner who mirrored that aspect of what was familiar in my family of origin?
Goodness knows, I would have given almost anything to learn how to be better at relationships. I still would if I could find out how. It's not for want of effort.
swirlie · 31-35
@hartfire

He has ADD - which means there's a neurological deficit that he can't overcome. It's organic & physical.

There's an irony in that. Did my unconscious accept a partner who mirrored that aspect of what was familiar in my family of origin?

It is very often that a girl will attract TO herself a male partner who mirrors the kind of guy her own father was, such as attracting males who beat her or verbally abuse her. In cases like this, physical as well as psychological abuse is what becomes 'normal' in a young person's life and in search of 'normal', a girl in particularly will find a male that mirrors to her what was always 'normal' in her life.
hartfire · 61-69
@swirlie And the same goes for men. Also, we can unconsciously end up with a partner of either sex whose personality is more like the same gender parent.

I sometimes wonder if it's just a matter of associative conditioning, with no actual purpose.

I've heard it suggested that the unconscious repeats the issues that need to be healed until such time as awareness and healing is complete.
I think this may depend on timing -- whether this healing occurs early enough in life to have the time to make the necessary changes.
If someone has conservative ethics, they're stuck with their first partner for life, even if the choices made by an immature pair are disastrous.
And then there are others who dump and switch partners like used take-out containers - always buying back into the same junk food -- getting increasinly unhealthy as time goes by.

We humans are really not very bright.

Or, at least, I know I've made far too many very stupid mistakes.