Emotionally Unavailable Parents Impact on Our Mental Health

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 184

  • @ceciliaj3300
    @ceciliaj3300 2 года назад +370

    This is why I decide I WILL NEVER want to have children. I've been so hurt having emotionally unavailable parents. I never even ask to be born in the first place. I am currently still trying to heal from it all. But I don't know when this healing journey will end. So I do not want to risk repeating the same mistakes to my future children.

    • @radrag07
      @radrag07 2 года назад +44

      Same here, always knew I would never have children because of that. Healing and not becoming ourselves toxic to people around us is already a life-long task, which doesn't give much time left for raising children. Some people might find it self-centered, but I find it brave and wise. Good luck on this journey, all the best!

    • @nikkilove6035
      @nikkilove6035 2 года назад +23

      Same here. I’ve also seen how my sister is raising her own kids worse then we were with our emotionally unavailable parents. I am still healing and though I have so much love to give I just don’t have the mental capacity to deal with kids. I’ve seen history repeat itself in my family it’s full of narcissism and sometimes I just want to get away from all of them. I don’t want another progeny of abuse it ends with me.

    • @rubyjt5754
      @rubyjt5754 Год назад +13

      I'm in the same boat, I want kids but not enough to potentially abuse them.

    • @asscrackistan
      @asscrackistan Год назад +9

      You are good enough! That doubt was handed down to you, it's not your natural state.
      If it was learned it is possible to be unlearned!

    • @HollyJordan15
      @HollyJordan15 Год назад +9

      The fact you are aware of it would make you the most amazing parents! I’ve got two children a boy & a girl. One 28 & 25, they are so amazing & taught me so much. I never had a mothering bone in my body till I had my kids. I honestly couldn’t imagine my life without them, I love them so much.

  • @peezy304
    @peezy304 Год назад +126

    i don't remember being hugged as a child and that hurts

    • @Happyheart146
      @Happyheart146 8 месяцев назад +8

      Me too, it felt uncomfortable hugging my own children but I was determined to break the cycle. My mother would lock me up for up to 22 HR a day with no toys. She would beat me and give me cold baths for doing potty on the floor. If she'd supplied a bucket, I'd have used it. Showed no interest in my interests and actively encouraged me to skip school to clean the house. I ended up working in the family business for free for TEN years. My brother will inherit everything. The biggest thing tho, besides the put downs and coldness was the day I walked in on her mock breastfeeding my 6 month old son. I have no idea how long it had been going on/went on for as I was working for free. I was a people pleaser. I now live with schizophrenia and bipolar and my mental health team refuse me therapy because I'm an alcoholic.
      I'm 50 years old now. For the record I don't think my late father was aware of any of her abuse, he was always working. I'm very close with my daughter, but my son, whose 27 is a tad arrogant and entitled. I tried to over compensate with him. I was disassociated till my mid twenties but now am incredibly empathetic to the point where people abused me, my ex was a sociopath. Surprisingly my daughter is doing well and is well adjusted. I'm taking time for myself now.

    • @alerdman2002
      @alerdman2002 7 месяцев назад +3

      Oh my....my 💔.... I can relate to all of it just not to that degree I don't know if there is a degree from bad to worse I have been attending Coda and it's helped me tremendously to let go of my parents and to start working on myself to love myself and it's very hard it's so easy to fix anybody else but when there's nobody to fix I don't know what to do with myself, I will learn and I will learn to love me and I'll learn to know that God created me and loves me and was there with me the whole time whole time or else I would not be alive today thank you for sharing if that's what God to do he has succeeded greatly today thank you

    • @UnknownHumanOnline
      @UnknownHumanOnline 5 месяцев назад

      @@alerdman2002 What is CODA ?

  • @riskyjuice5208
    @riskyjuice5208 Год назад +69

    As an introvert, I would read books and watch youtube in a daily. You know you feel come and at peace in your room but then suddenly one of your parents starts screaming, victim blaming, and pissed off to somebody. This happens everyday.They would get upset at such little things. Sometimes they don't accept the blame when its their fault. Theres no saying hello, good morning, and congratulations in my home. Its freaking lonely. The worst part is that I have been copy pasting their words and actions this whole time. Ain't no way I am gonna end up like that when I become a mother. Even just being a human being. I want to show emotions and affection to others just like what my friends do. I want to be like them.

    • @willyfrankenstein6595
      @willyfrankenstein6595 Год назад +2

      How are you now?

    • @I_am_a_bell
      @I_am_a_bell 10 месяцев назад +6

      Can relate, I feel like we are reflecting their own behaviors by our own ones. I can't hug anyone, compliment anyone without thinking 1000000 times, so sometimes I just don't, which makes other ppl think that I am rude. I just don't know how to show affection because I have never received it from one's close to me. But now I am breaking out of that shell because I don't want my future kids to have another emotionally absent parent.

    • @marniejane88
      @marniejane88 3 месяца назад

      Ya it was really hard when youtube and social media wasn't around yet.

  • @sableempire9654
    @sableempire9654 2 года назад +68

    Its also generational- my parents are Boomers. They didn’t talk about emotions. Their parents fought in the biggest global war the planet has ever seen.

    • @samuelspiel8855
      @samuelspiel8855 Год назад +30

      Honestly I feel like that comment is a cop-out. I've worked in the oil field for years, been military, among other things. Seeing a bunch of combat doesn't mean it's okay to treat some 7 year old or 12 year old like shit, especially your own kids! And by the way, after the war in the 50s and 60s, those people saw extreme economic prosperity, extremely low wealth inequality, and had an extremely high-trust society. Certain minorities had it rough. But for 80% of people it was basically a golden age economically.

    • @malisle13descendantslover46
      @malisle13descendantslover46 Год назад

      Same here

    • @ramonburgos559
      @ramonburgos559 9 месяцев назад

      @@samuelspiel8855 💯💯💯💯💯

    • @coffeepandacat
      @coffeepandacat 3 месяца назад

      Does excuse turning a blind eye or shame your children when they need you.

    • @amberinthemist7912
      @amberinthemist7912 Месяц назад

      The boomers were the "I'm ok you're ok" generation. They went to the most therapy if any generation in history. And wrote and read thousands of self help books.

  • @marniejane88
    @marniejane88 3 месяца назад +4

    Yup both my parents were emotionally unavailable. It leaves you messed up. Really. You think no one cares about you or your feelings

  • @KrisK6334
    @KrisK6334 11 месяцев назад +19

    My issue is when something tough is going on why don people say we are here for you’ then they ignore you when you need them during hard times. This really hurts me bad.

  • @miawl9
    @miawl9 2 года назад +196

    This was very insightful. My parents were never „that bad“, but looking back it was obvious they were emotionally unavailable. This resulted in depression, anxiety and now burn out at 23 for me. I’m in therapy now but all of those self-help steps are still hard, but they work. Slowly but surely. Thank you so much for this concise explanation, I really resonated with what you said. ❤️

    • @nadaahmed3439
      @nadaahmed3439 Год назад +5

      This is exactly my story! I am 24 years old.

    • @mulanali
      @mulanali Год назад +2

      @@nadaahmed3439 sameeee!

    • @annaroseks
      @annaroseks Год назад +1

      are you an only child too?

    • @bigalexa8476
      @bigalexa8476 2 месяца назад +3

      I understand you, my parents also weren’t “that bad”, they bought us a lot of stuff and showed physical affection… but we could never talk to them about anything. Even now when I try it it’s pointless. I have 3 siblings, none of us have achieved anything, and none of us have ever been in a relationship…

    • @bluel8vhfss
      @bluel8vhfss Месяц назад

      I'm burned out at 16. they just don't understand and then get angry when I'm angry but expect me to ace school and go to college and everything but they can't even see that I don't care about my future. I don't want to go to college bc I see first hand how they have good careers but struggle financially, which leads to extreme stress and a cycle of never ending anger. there is no point in living and continuing life as they expect me to live. and I wish they saw that. I'm not suicidal by any means, but I don't want to live in the future and shit. ig they have an old 80s mindset and don't understand the way my generation differs from theirs. I'm just extremely stressed and they can't pickup hints.

  • @fifik3136
    @fifik3136 Год назад +56

    Each parental behaviour mentioned was my childhood. I dissolve into laughter when therapists ask whether my parents said, 'I love you' or hugged you or gave compliments....(but for as long as I can remember my Dad has been held on a pedestal out in the community). And as a child and even now, my Mum would rather do housework then parent or attend to our emotional needs. I grew up feeling flawed and unloved which still manifests in depression and anxiety no matter how much self-love I express.

  • @thelovely961
    @thelovely961 Год назад +42

    there was a lot of guilt and shame around rest growing up. now that I'm an adult, I find myself correcting my thoughts that I'm not lazy, my body just needs rest and that's okay. 😢❤

  • @RichardDeneen63
    @RichardDeneen63 6 месяцев назад +19

    I’ve spent my whole life healing from two emotionally unavailable parents it’s pretty sad when this happens especially when you’re young and do not know any different yet ,keep on healing everyone,unconditional love and compassion rules all!😍

  • @DE0498
    @DE0498 8 месяцев назад +12

    2:38 I can’t even lie this moment made me drop my head and cry. I feel this moment on such a deep level. My dad would react the exact same way when I confessed about my first girlfriend dumping me when I was about 13. I felt nothing at the time but sadness about being dumped but never that I wasn’t getting any support from my dad. All these years later it’s heartbreaking when you see it in front of your face and you were too stupid to realize it. That means that by that point it had happened so much that I was immune to it and thought that’s just the way parents responded to anything you told them. I seriously thought my parents were good people that wanted the best for me. The past year has taught me that I don’t know if that’s the case.

    • @paulstockton7121
      @paulstockton7121 6 месяцев назад +1

      You weren't too stupid. You're being hard on yourself. You were a child at the time and never had the opportunity to know anything else.
      P.S. And don't beat yourself up for being hard on yourself. 😊

  • @CloudySunflowerfield
    @CloudySunflowerfield 3 месяца назад +3

    I am 42 and literally just now realizing I am not alone in this. My parents are a mind fuck to me and my brother. My brother made the decision a year ago to put our parents completely out of his live. And he has. 100%. I am not there yet. It makes me so sad. I don't ever want to put them out of my life even though they really are not that nice they go back-and-forth. That's what I mean by a mindfuck. My parents will suddenly be nice and wanna talk and then the communication will just stop. And even sometimes when they do reach out and talk to me, it's not always pleasant. It usually ends up with me very sad feeling and I could never tell them that because they get really defensive and there's just no talking to them. they are always right and that's just the way it is. It's very hurtful. I thought about getting a counselor and talking about it but I always thought what the heck am I supposed to talk about this is just silly and just the way my family is but now that I'm hearing videos and reading comments, realizing it really is a thing that's more common than what I realize. And that alone helps me a little bit.

  • @faithcyan2462
    @faithcyan2462 Год назад +44

    Finally a video I can use when someone ask me "why you don't like your parents". The other videos had half the information but THIS video has everything.

  • @runningwithscissors1564
    @runningwithscissors1564 Год назад +21

    Typical narcissistic behavior. I don’t think they are full blown narcs, but they have traits.

    • @samuelspiel8855
      @samuelspiel8855 Год назад +3

      I recently saw an amazing interview with a prison psychologist. The conclusion is that for most people their sociopathy is like a muscle, or lack thereof. The more cruel a person is, the easier it is to continue to be that way.

  • @mikaela4180
    @mikaela4180 2 года назад +67

    I love the breakdown of what it looked like in childhood and how it manifests in adulthood. Very helpful!

  • @mykahbinion371
    @mykahbinion371 Год назад +12

    not me crying the whole 13 mins

  • @GoddessMarcy
    @GoddessMarcy Год назад +9

    I was this child and now I’m the emotionally unavailable parent and it hurts me bc I’m unable to connect.

    • @gael0462
      @gael0462 4 месяца назад

      Awareness is key, and you just acknowledge it. You are on time to heal and seek help so you can give all the vital love and attention that every child deserves ❤

  • @TheQueenIsWithin
    @TheQueenIsWithin Год назад +12

    It's so hard being on the autism spectrum and then have a horrible childhood as you mentioned so you've aways been a fighter or emotionally detached for survival, yet society punishes you for it especially if you're a woman. If only people could see how hard life was for you.

  • @Truthseeker-kc8rd
    @Truthseeker-kc8rd 11 месяцев назад +4

    Growing with emotionally unavailable parents will turn you in to one. Especially the anger part.

  • @arcelitex
    @arcelitex Год назад +9

    Both of my parents beat me while growing up. My abuse was because they had high expectations from me. For me to come first or second in class. I was in fourth grade when I came fourth in class and I was crying in class while other kids laughed at me for they barely passed. I got beaten that day. Many such examples, both my mo and dad used me as a punching bag and every success I got was never enough for them.
    I was 7 years old when I licked something that I wasnt supposed to eat, thinking I would pass in sleep.
    My teenage years were worse because they didnt teach me anything about the changes in my body or when my grades started to fall because of depression.
    Feeling of not being enough creeps me forever.

    • @arcelitex
      @arcelitex Год назад +5

      Fight or flight is my norm tbh I just want to relax.

    • @moon_0207
      @moon_0207 Год назад +1

      I think that’s just straight up abusive parenting. I feel like emotionally distant parents are more subtle than that.

  • @stacysmith3676
    @stacysmith3676 Год назад +10

    Toxic positively, I've never heard of that, I am 42 and my mom is always fake happy. My husband just left me with our 2 girls ages 7 and 2, for another woman out of the blue. I'm sad and grieving but it sometimes comes across as anger but I'm tired of crying, I don't have any human to talk to, he abandoned us and my only female friend shows narcissistic traits that I've tried to ignore, like she messaged and asked what she could do and I really didn't know, but nobody has came over here to help me with anything or just sat and talked, except if I ask my mom to come over this evening so I can go to the store without having to bring both of the kids, and she acts like it's such a hard task even though she lives 3 minutes away. she can go for hours with her church friends to their meetings and to the movies with her sister, but just does not seem like she wants to come and see if I'm okay or need anything or have any uncomfortable conversation.

  • @nancybartley4610
    @nancybartley4610 2 года назад +19

    All of your points are so accurate. Emotional neglect as you describe it is devastating to the healthy development of a child. On top of it, most of us also experienced many other negative factors: domestic abuse, divorce, financial instability, illness and death of a parent, abandonment and threat of abandonment, etc. If a kid was somewhat different, he/she might be abused by other kids. Kids with disabilities, autism, odd physical characteristics or habits make them stand out and struggle to fit in. Combine emotional neglect to these other issues and it is amazing that we didn't go stark-raving mad. Thanks, Micheline, for articulating the way emotionally neglect looks. Of course, we didn't know we were abused as kids. The subtle quality of emotional neglect means we may never learn about it as adults and struggle for years. It affects all our relationships: work, education, friendships (or lack thereof), health, intimate relationships, etc. One can live for decades simply with the believe that something is wrong and never know the cause. We think we were born defective. I doubt that we can be fixed after living so long without correcting the damage, but at least we can understand that we aren't totally to blame. This alleviates some of the self-hate which is a bit of a fix.

  • @ChoiReim
    @ChoiReim Год назад +8

    I try, yeah I fucking try talking to my parents about my feelings! However they don’t care, they do not care! I’m going through internal conflict with my art and self worth and I tried talking to my mom and she is just indifferent. My dad does help me by giving me motivation but that’s it, he doesn’t sit down and talk about it

    • @ChoiReim
      @ChoiReim Год назад

      Which is why if I have kids I will be the parent my parents never were, i will not hit them with a fucking chair when I’m angry, i will deal with my own anger and not lash out. I will talk to them with their feelings and troubles. I will comfort them. I aspire to be that parent.

  • @MelindaSivongxay
    @MelindaSivongxay Месяц назад

    I told my parents that my mental health isn't good because of the abuse i had endured in my kid, teen, and young adulthood years. The emotional abuse. Verbal abuse. Emotional neglect. All of this by my parents.
    My mom told me, "You could've been worse."
    It's been a month now since I've gone no contact. Grieving my alive parents is heart-wrenching. Neither of them bothered to ask me why my mental health is as it is. Going no-contact was necessary for my well-being. This is a pain I've never experienced before. I grew up as the oldest sister with 2 younger brothers. 27 years living in survival mode. Most of my childhood memories are tucked away and hidden. I can't remember most of my teen years as well. I only recently learned about scapegoating. And realized i was scapegoated by my parents.

  • @xoxobutterfly
    @xoxobutterfly 2 года назад +25

    I'm 30 and my dad still is emotionally unavailable to me. I ask him how he is doing ? But never once has he asked how I was doing..I try to make conversations with him but he doesn't continue the conversation .. I know I'm not successful like my siblings maybe that's why. I'm just really sad I feel invisible and i look for attention from men. It's not healthy

    • @anjaliv2117
      @anjaliv2117 Год назад +3

      Same here...

    • @Nicole-no5dd
      @Nicole-no5dd Год назад +7

      I feel the same way. Never good enough for them. He has never called me one time in my adult life.

    • @inzichte
      @inzichte 7 месяцев назад +1

      My dad those te same. They like to talk about what they like. So they can feel safe if they talk on certian topics.

    • @joshuaalvarez5796
      @joshuaalvarez5796 3 месяца назад

      Don't worry u do what u gotta do and keep staying positive 💯, U will see at the end of the day u will be ok with ur own success 🙏🙏

  • @MonicaJeanetteHillmer
    @MonicaJeanetteHillmer 2 года назад +11

    This video is spot on exactly how my life went or unfolded her and then you know I almost finished college with a degree when I was in my twenties for pharmacy technician and instead when I had four classes left and all A's I decided to use meth and went down that route and never finished school now I have $50,000 in student loan debt but I know that I was always trying to please people and taking everything on myself I didn't know how to even express anything to anybody because I was never listened to and yeah this video is just it gives me chills how like spot on it is and how you never see it until you're in a spot of actual healing

    • @universaltruth2025
      @universaltruth2025 2 года назад

      Wow that is rough 💗 I hope things have turned around. Just read your comment below. Sounds as though you abandoned yourself before you could succeed just as your parents abandoned you. It is so hard to explain why we abandon ourselves like that - I do to an extent all the time. I think fear anxiety, depression, helplessness and hopelessness come over me and I feel physically defeated and just want to give up.

    • @MonicaJeanetteHillmer
      @MonicaJeanetteHillmer 2 года назад +1

      @@universaltruth2025 thanks so much for your compassionate thoughtful and kind words. Things are definitely turning around. I believe Our Good Lord is making a way for me. As long as I don't dwell on my faliures or give up again. I believe at some point I will pay off my debt, which really does bother me, but I cannot let it. I am overtime going to fix my mistakes by choosing to keep going in a healthier direction... I have hope now and I don't operate out of emotion the way I once did and I see clearly.

    • @universaltruth2025
      @universaltruth2025 2 года назад

      @@MonicaJeanetteHillmer So glad to hear. I hope you continue to achieve your goals! I used to think that a lot of our decisions come down choosing life over death. Keep choosing life! X💛

  • @natalie-avalon8945
    @natalie-avalon8945 2 года назад +14

    Thank you so much for this informative video. My mother is a narcissist. And my father is emotionally unavailable. I experienced emotional incest from my father. And my mother was psychologically abusive towards me. I’m so burnt out now. I am no contact with my Mum and I am trying to have low contact with my Dad.
    I’m 20 years old. 😭

  • @evangelicful
    @evangelicful 5 месяцев назад +2

    Been healing in other areas of my life.
    So here I am..healing something else and it hurts. Yeesh. Thank God for videos like this

  • @Elsa-um2il
    @Elsa-um2il 7 месяцев назад +3

    My parent is 70% of these behaviors. She treats me differently than my other 2 siblings, and they never understand because they dont get the same treatment me. But i am working on myself and i have 2 small children who i will work effortlessly to change for the

  • @thebookishkhmerican4303
    @thebookishkhmerican4303 Год назад +3

    I sadly relate to all of this because my mom is Narcisstic and emotionally unavailable

  • @elyaequestus1409
    @elyaequestus1409 Год назад +9

    The fact that you opened up with that effects of emotional unavailablity is independend on their willingness or unablility is just straight up mind blowing to me.
    My mom had gone through a lot of abuse as a child. This abuse came out when I was 7 and she had to deal with her own (C-)PTSD and the (C-)PTSD of her sisters in law. My father provided the structure in the house hold by becoming even more liniar and problem solving than before and the result was that my parents were both unable to be effectively emotionally available.
    They want to be. But arent.
    This wrecks havock in combination with my autism and that they respond to my disability with jokes, jabs and sarcasm. I always felt like _I_ was the problem instead of them being unable to effectively support me. Or allow themselves to be supported. Heaven forbid if they would actually stand still and accept their own fucking problems.
    A close friend of mind rapped me on the knockles for being unwilling to listen to my dad's advice ánd hitting panick mode because she thought, at first, that my dad's advice was sound. She spoke a bit on that his POV is valid and that I was behaving like a subborn git in victim mode. She was correct on that end, I did behave like that. But when I unpacked that he started raising his voice because I didnt subscribe to his sense of reality and tried to convince me that he was right and that there were no other options than: GET OVER YOU PROBLEMS AND GO THERE, IT IS IMPORTANT FOR YOUR CARREER AND YOU ARE BEING DIFFICULT AND IT HAS ALWAYS WORKED OUT UNTIL NOW
    She was like. Okay. And THIS is why context matters.
    Instead of being treated like an adult, one that is cross with the situation and needs help, I was scolded like a child and my independance felt crushed. What helped me out of the curtains was when someone talked me through my options and we made a plan together.
    During yoga I felt like this was on them, not on me and that it makes sense of me to struggle with using my own voice. It wasnt wanted, they had enough on their plate which they couldnt deal with and me speaking up only reminded them of that.
    It wasnt my fault.

  • @Sunset248-j3t
    @Sunset248-j3t 5 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for highlighting being overly permisive as a downside! I've always hated this point and never thought why its seemingly negative when it seems like a good thing and as my parents say "builds charecter by letting you do whatever you want" when it was a serious lack of effort on their part.

    • @TheDaniela3112
      @TheDaniela3112 3 месяца назад +1

      My parents have always let me do whatever i want my entire life and as a kid I'd feel sorry for my friends with strict parents but now as an adult I see how important structure and rules are when raising a child. I would routinely stay up all night watching cartoons or playing on my phone when i was 9. I still stay up all night now and get anxious when I have to go to bed. I had unlimited time on the computer from as soon as i could read and type - I'd usually spend 5 to 8 hours on it every day after school, and was exposed to pornography and gore from a young age - when i was like 9 i watched a video where a man pushed a shot glass up his anus and it shattered. My screen time now that im 24 is from 10 to 14 hours daily. Thats all I've known.

  • @HollyJordan15
    @HollyJordan15 Год назад +10

    Could you also do a video on building meaningful relationships with available people please. Often we don’t realise the people we are trying to build relationships with are unavailable until sometime down the line; they show no tell red flags for quite sometime. I’m also someone who has good boundaries & don’t suffer fools. From your POV what is acceptable behaviour that you’d give a second chance as opposed to one’s you wouldn’t etc. Many thanks.

  • @DARKARTSPHOTOGRAPHY
    @DARKARTSPHOTOGRAPHY 6 месяцев назад +2

    Im 35 and my parents dont know who i am the slightest even though they " raised" me.
    I was a object, a have too, a burden they hate.

  • @deuteronomy3162
    @deuteronomy3162 Год назад +3

    Dang you really get it 100%. I have never heard anyone get this so well

  • @mikewilkins2030
    @mikewilkins2030 Год назад +4

    You put words to my pain! Thank you!

  • @talitabotana6992
    @talitabotana6992 Год назад +5

    Amazing video, after 28 years thinking something was broken and wrong in me, I get to know attachment styles and then the origin : emotionally unavailable parents.
    Your video and explanations calmed me really down, amazing job and thank you so so much !!!!!

  • @optamisticlife9342
    @optamisticlife9342 Год назад +7

    Did our parents ever feel really sad and depressed themselves, i wonder?

  • @tiffanymeeks9808
    @tiffanymeeks9808 Год назад +1

    It's hard because most of the things you listed for the parent side, is who I grew up to be as an adult and I'm terrified I'll continue the cycle. I have zero idea how to handle negative feelings, mine or anyone elses, or even how to label them. I just get mad bc I'm confused. This is the most helpful video in realizing if I want things to be different, I need help. I have to put in the work to fix myself, as hard as that is to even type. I have to do it for my baby and his future. Thank you for making this video.

  • @moon_0207
    @moon_0207 Год назад

    Both of my parents are emotionally unavailable, but I’ve never had depression, anxiety, I’ve never had any attachment issues, or issues making friends, I was never really a people pleaser. I understood that all I have to do is be myself and good people will naturally gravitate towards me. I feel like I have good balanced control over my emotions. All my friends are really mature and are often older than me and it really helps me mentally to have good friends to guide me.

  • @kateashby3066
    @kateashby3066 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is incredible advice for becoming mindful and understanding precisely why we do the things we do!! I went through this recently and I discovered that I have borderline personality disorder with NPD traits. I’m in recovery and those negative criteria are no longer calling the shots but I spot them here and there. Thank you for these great tools!

  • @zisukang4361
    @zisukang4361 8 месяцев назад

    This is so true. So difficult to deal with. When i was a kid, only thing i heard from them as a kid was just to focus on study, nothing more. Just the feelings of not being enough is so true.

  • @doesnotFempute
    @doesnotFempute Год назад

    i didn't realize my parents were emotionally unavailable until i had kids of my own. By then, my mom had been passed away for years and my dad remarried another toxic manipulator.
    My older sister and i turned out very different. She is deeply troubled, a perpetual victim who takes her problems out on everyone else via pure rage.
    She's in her mid 40s and still acts like a kid with ODD. She has raised trainwreck children who are terrified of her, but can't escape the trauma bond. i feel terrible, but eventually had to cut her off for my own sanity and the safety of my children.
    i always knew i wanted to be a mom - not just for the baby stage. I wanted to raise future adult humans and shower them with love and affection. This deep desire was unexplainable because my own parents were not affectionate at all, and low key hated me. But i just always loved snuggling babies, hanging out with kids, babysitting my nieces, cousins' kids etc.
    i understand a lot of people's concerns about not wanting to pass along their trauma. Of course i can't say yet what kind of adults my children will become. But right now, I'm confident their cups are full emotionally. Their teachers rave about how sweet, curious and brilliant they are. My youngest is nearly 3 and still loves to be held and cuddled. The preschool teachers love to cuddle him too.
    It can sometimes be a struggle to re-parent myself alongside my own children. But it's also incredibly rewarding and healing to see them flourish, to see their genuine thirst for knowledge, not clouded by anxiety, guilt spiral and fear of punishment/ humiliation.
    My parents and sister were my first bullies. I will be my kids' advocate and warrior.

  • @rini177
    @rini177 Год назад +3

    Wow i was expecting to relate to a few points but nearly every. single. point. hit harder than the last

  • @Deb1650
    @Deb1650 Год назад

    My sister always bullies me or takes control of situations without acknowledging my feelings. When I tell my parents they say "just go with the flow and keep the peace."

  • @GLesbihonest
    @GLesbihonest Год назад +3

    You read my entire life. 😔

  • @purpleclout1029
    @purpleclout1029 Год назад +2

    Ong this is so crazy hearing. Almost all this is my dad 100%.
    It’s so weird, this one time I got really overwhelmed I think, it was cuz my dad had came back to visit me in Arkansas after I had been there for a couple months, and he was talking to me about my behavior and stuff and in my opinion blaming everything on me (but I’m used to him doing stuff like this so I just went along w it) and he started crying and I was really confused cuz w how the conversation was going I just couldn’t understand…. And at the end he gave me a hug and told me he loved me (which he rarely does) and while he was hugging me I just like passed out for a couple seconds. It was so weird.

  • @malisle13descendantslover46
    @malisle13descendantslover46 Год назад

    Even though I’m 21 (22 in the next few days) I still experience this a lot with my parents which I feel a lot contributes to my mental health (the others being hormones and sleep) and it would make me feel alone sometimes which would cause my mind to overthink think and visualise minor embarrassing situations into more serious ones. Videos like this do help so I have now subscribed

  • @lexies78
    @lexies78 Год назад +1

    By far the best video that explains what it is, the symptoms and how to work through some of it. I keep rewatching to remind myself. Thank you❤

  • @ertaskwn
    @ertaskwn Год назад +1

    No 6 is so accurate!😢

  • @bleedingkansai9961
    @bleedingkansai9961 4 месяца назад

    Both of my parents were like this to me, and couldn't understand why. I looked up to them and wanted their protection and guidance, which never came. In the end I concluded that something was wrong with me, that I'm not good enough for anything, and this conditioning still torments me today. I left home 8 years ago and have never seen my parents since.

  • @RaTo-tv9gb
    @RaTo-tv9gb Год назад

    You are helping so many people.
    My heart is broken because my parent are just as you described.
    Hugs

  • @Gnosis639
    @Gnosis639 Месяц назад

    I do not have a joyful memory, or much of a memory at all, of the parents I lived with. Sometimes it hurts to hear other people talk about the relationships they have with their parents

  • @katec9893
    @katec9893 Год назад +1

    This is a brilliant video. I wasn't going to click on it as you look young to understand these topics but you absolutely do. I am going through this healing process currently and it can get v overwhelming and I can feel despairing at times, so it was v helpful to have these explained clearly with some steps to take. I've subscribed for further videos, thank you.

  • @amethyststarsaturn
    @amethyststarsaturn 6 месяцев назад

    I’m 26 and still not healed. Till this day I crave my parents love/attention and knowing I won’t get it. It tortures me everyday. Idk why I do this to myself I know better by now but I just want them to love me ….they have me everything what I wanted…spoiled me on birthdays, Christmas , ect ….but they hug me ( much) , I could never sit down and talk about how I feel for the day or if anything happens to me. HELL! my first breakup at 15 my mother told me to get over it….when my little sister told me to OFFLINE myself, I broke down and told my mom. And you know what she said to me? “ act my age”. …..my DAD? He never told me he loved me. And I really wished I was being frantic ……I have so many secrets that my parents didn’t know because…they’ll just blame me or I’m just being dramatic…🤷🏾‍♀️…. I pray one day I can overcome this…

    • @amethyststarsaturn
      @amethyststarsaturn 6 месяцев назад

      Another prime example…I got a new job offer today…and no one gave a fuck…just ask “ well are you gonna keep the other job too??” …just no congratulations….good job…nothing ….

  • @5qcW_WLlgt6-lke9-_kiQg
    @5qcW_WLlgt6-lke9-_kiQg Год назад +1

    This is so insightful! Professional advice! Thank you.

  • @mrmattycake
    @mrmattycake Год назад

    Bar none, this was one of the best presentations on emotionally unavailable parents.
    Good work!!!

  • @Free_Palestine2000
    @Free_Palestine2000 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this informative video 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @skittlepuff
    @skittlepuff 8 месяцев назад

    I’m not lying when I say everything you said is true. Except my mom doesn’t let us do whatever we want. She rules everyone in the family even my step dad. Especially my step dad.

  • @UnknoWnCitizenKb101
    @UnknoWnCitizenKb101 Год назад

    Thank you Dr.Macheline Maalauf
    ✨🕊️✨

  • @lyndalmorse6555
    @lyndalmorse6555 11 месяцев назад

    Yep. Sums up my parents very well 💔

  • @hawtain4399
    @hawtain4399 2 года назад +2

    Described my mum perfectly

  • @ivy5579
    @ivy5579 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for this. You have no idea how much this has helped me today.

  • @michellecordero5478
    @michellecordero5478 6 месяцев назад

    Coming here reading these comments make me cry.

  • @BeátaŽáková-r5y
    @BeátaŽáková-r5y Год назад

    This checked all the boxes. Hearing it helps. Thank you.

  • @MonicaJeanetteHillmer
    @MonicaJeanetteHillmer 2 года назад +5

    I remember figuring out that my mom could not take care of us the right way because she wasn't taking care of that way by her mom and I do remember making that connection but yeah it wasn't until I was in my early twenties and I had dealt with many things that were so hard to have to deal with on your own and a lot of consequences came from the repercussions of the way my parents raised me or technically didn't raise me and they weren't together it was in a divorced way so after the age of 14 I just stopped seeing my dad all together and then he disowned me at like the age of 15 for dating someone that was black so I didn't have either parent I could do whatever I wanted all the time and all I was doing was getting drunk High and having sex way too young. It was permitted though and even encouraged by my mom maybe not the sex part but I started having sex when I didn't even want to I just didn't know how to say no to the guy that followed me home from school

  • @jahairatorres1503
    @jahairatorres1503 10 месяцев назад

    This was very helpful in learning why I was so cold towards my children because my parents were emotionally unavailable to me I could not and did not know how to show emotions or feel them either thanks

  • @surbhi_27
    @surbhi_27 Год назад

    I relate it to this video on a whole another level.
    I couldn't even list out the problems and the symptoms I've faced all these years. This video is Extremely helpful for me

  • @georgedantz3617
    @georgedantz3617 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the very helpful information!💯👍

  • @sofiagamez7007
    @sofiagamez7007 2 года назад +2

    Omg everything you said is so true.

  • @chanellaDaboss
    @chanellaDaboss 3 месяца назад

    Personally i could get unavailable at times when I feel overwhelmed. My daughter is 5 and she cries a lot. She cries for any and anything and it drains the life out of me. It’s hard. I don’t understand why she cries so much but it’s complicated to deal with. She’s probably hypersensitive. I am hypersensitive and that’s why it’s hard to deal with that crying all the time. I do my best though, I love her ❤

  • @paulohagan3309
    @paulohagan3309 Год назад

    You sound like an expert therapist/counselor. Very good information and it resonates with me.
    Now don't stop; love the little sketches. Gotta say though, I'm getting the impression of a frustrated thespian ...

  • @NelsonBurtonIV
    @NelsonBurtonIV Год назад

    Thank you for this video!! I’m in therapy now and finally healing and learning how to move forward in a healthy way!🙏🏽💜

  • @nkule2493
    @nkule2493 Год назад

    Very insightful and relatable.

  • @sunnyadams5842
    @sunnyadams5842 Год назад +2

    'Just put it out of your mind!'' was the only lesson I git in Emotional Maturity from my father.! Good advice except the body keeps the score...And I was to blame for breaking down.
    I give my mother videos describing reasons why I went nuts and she just dismisses them by saying she ' does not agree'. Like you can just Not Agree with cancer and it says Oh- Ok! I'm outta here!!

  • @JohnKemmerer-j3v
    @JohnKemmerer-j3v 5 месяцев назад

    They play a part in me not feeling like a human being

  • @zz9195
    @zz9195 Год назад

    My experience has helped me be a better parent and not make my mothers mistakes

  • @NYCBrat
    @NYCBrat 2 года назад

    This video is extraordinary. Brimming with insightful information, useful tools & tips, and informed guidance. I can’t thank you enough for sharing this, you are beyond generous. And I am beyond grateful. xx

  • @avonleamontague2469
    @avonleamontague2469 4 месяца назад

    Thankfully #1 has never been a thing for me.

  • @amyli092
    @amyli092 Год назад +1

    My mother puts higher value in her own Christian beliefs and views, and it's not easy for her to meet me at my level as I can be highly emotional sometimes. A lot of her intentions do come from a good place and I know she cares for my well-being, but at the same time, I recognize that she's always felt unavailable to me growing up. Obviously I know that she loves me, but sometimes, even at 31 years old, receiving that love still doesn't feel like enough. It makes me feel frustrated... granted, my frustrations now don't feel like something that's impossible for me to deal with as I'm able to hold space for compassion and love. I just wish my relationship with my mom at least wasn't so back-and-forth sometimes.

    • @joygonzalez2272
      @joygonzalez2272 Год назад

      I can relate then as I grew older n many years of people pleasing later to make her happy but that’s never going to be the case , so I used to really question my mom , if she’s a faithful Christian woman but doesn’t take at heart , practicing their beliefs and use that towards godly love for us her kids , very confusing so it made it very difficult for me to get a relationship with god, now I’m more optimistic about that and no one’s perfect she probably was raised the same

  • @sharonbrown216
    @sharonbrown216 8 месяцев назад

    Thank-you so much for your help

  • @aurelijs8891
    @aurelijs8891 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for this detailed video, I found it to be insightful and validating. I have written down notes on the healing process you outlined. Are the steps meant to be taken one after the other or just different aspects I may tackle simultaneously?

  • @universaltruth2025
    @universaltruth2025 Год назад

    My mother was DA and probably slightly narcissistic and my father was DA and highly narcissistic. We all put my mother on a pedestal as she was the only one that gave out any positive emotion at all. But even so she was still mostly emotionally absent and toxically positive. No complaining. Just get on with it. A ‘nice’ charade. Problem is I’m 51 now & have my own children and she lives nearby. I hardly ever see her because the older I get the less I can stand to. But every birthday my children have she INSISTS on coming over. I have 3 children. I say yes sure of course. But the closer to the day it gets the angrier and more stressed I get. I don’t want her there. I want to celebrate my children’s bday by ourselves. Then I feel guilty because she is so “nice”. And I can’t say no. But I want her out of my life and our lives.

  • @RS54321
    @RS54321 6 месяцев назад +3

    This was incredibly hard to listen to b/c every. single. thing. resonated with me. It's hard, but necessary, to do the work to heal.

  • @chrystianaw8256
    @chrystianaw8256 2 года назад +5

    I wish you were my therapist

  • @thatafricangirl4041
    @thatafricangirl4041 Год назад

    Thank you ,this is an amazing video❤

  • @ramonburgos559
    @ramonburgos559 9 месяцев назад

    I feel the need to yell at my mom, but she's dead. I'm not happy about it, but I can't think of a single thing I miss about her. And that's sad.

  • @sapna319
    @sapna319 Год назад

    So helpful 🥺

  • @marniejane88
    @marniejane88 3 месяца назад

    And I recall trying to talk to my mom when I was going through PPD and her response was maybe you should talk to someone.

  • @rhi3165
    @rhi3165 Год назад

    I can’t believe that I relate to all of these

  • @robertap8467
    @robertap8467 7 месяцев назад

    I just isolate myself from people and life..

  • @HollyJordan15
    @HollyJordan15 Год назад +1

    What great videos; thank you! I live in the UK 🇬🇧 Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 to be exact. Could you be so kind as to do a segment on intellectualism as a defence mechanism to avoid difficult emotions. I notice I’m doing this more since my beloved Labrador passed past last August. I’m grieving I’m going through it acknowledging how I’m feeling etc, but how he passed was traumatic. But I’m finding as I’m writing the letter to vet (who did let us down) I’m going through research papers etc to back up my letter. I guess my reasoning is if it went to court it’s all about facts, I hope this makes sense. Many thanks.

  • @roninstormYT
    @roninstormYT 5 месяцев назад

    for me i had both off my parents but my father was never there for me for 32 years of my life i even got old enough too know that my dad was never there for my birth or never held me . growing up both off my parents my mom was there for me but you think me being my dads only son too continue his family blood line . boy continue not the girls . i grew up with 3 sister 2 half sister and the 3rd one is my blood sister we came from the same mom . i have a half brother but my sister found out that he not my dad son she found his dad . only two kids that got my dad features is me and my 2nd half sister . i had too learn so much from growing up i wish i had a dad talk with my dad growing up now at 32 years old i just hate seening kids both boys or girls with there dads . it hurts me .

  • @iwillhissatyou
    @iwillhissatyou Год назад

    Great video!

  • @freedomfries4life
    @freedomfries4life Год назад

    You are the best ❤

  • @sarayoung9395
    @sarayoung9395 Год назад

    What do you think about the concept we should never complain about anything? Do you agree with this, or is it toxic positivity?

  • @Knowthyself-zf3fy
    @Knowthyself-zf3fy Месяц назад

    Yep.. my parents..

  • @yeahjane
    @yeahjane Год назад

    Thank you🤍

  • @RENbby
    @RENbby Год назад +1

    Reading my mom like a book. 😒

  • @BitterSeaDrop
    @BitterSeaDrop 9 месяцев назад

    I don't remember the last time they said 'i love you' to me, or even hugged me.

    • @marisabeltran3084
      @marisabeltran3084 8 месяцев назад

      I thought parents saying “I love you” was something from the movies 😅…. Damn 😔