My 7 Types Of Toxic Family Systems

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • In this video I talk about the 7 different types of toxic family systems that I have noticed working in my private practice while working with adult childhood trauma survivors.
    In this video we cover: triggers, childhood trauma, inner child, inner child work, c-ptsd, ptsd, toxic parents, narcissistic abuse, assertion, mind reading, moods, healing, abusive parents, emotional abuse, childhood ptsd, repressed memories, hypervigilance, narcissistic parents, emotionally abusive parents, child abuse, narcissistic father, childhood emotional neglect, abuse, narcissistic mother, single parent, divorce, chaotic family, codependency.
    Join the Monthly Healing Community Membership
    www.patrickteahantherapy.com/...
    Chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    1:57 Connect With Me
    2:54 7. Looks Good On Paper
    6:19 6. Ships In The Night
    8:37 5. Anti-Love
    11:42 4. Chaos System
    14:45 3. Toxic Divorce
    19:10 2. Toxic Single Parent
    22:04 1. Aggressor + Codependent
    24:52 Foster Care/Adopted
    26:06 Final Thoughts
    27:20 Outro
    Learn more about Patrick Teahan,
    Childhood Trauma Resources and Offerings
    ➡️ linktr.ee/patrickteahan
    ⚠️ Disclaimer
    My videos are for educational purposes only. Information provided on this channel is not intended to be a substitute for in person professional medical advice. It is not intended to replace the services of a therapist, physician, or other qualified professional, nor does it constitute a therapist-client or physician or quasi-physician relationship.
    If you are, or someone you know is in immediate danger, please call a local emergency telephone number or go immediately to the nearest emergency room.
    If you are having emotional distress, please utilize 911 or the National Suicide Hotline
    1-800-273-8255

Komentáře • 8K

  • @Princess-rz5hn
    @Princess-rz5hn Před 3 lety +10461

    I prefer to not have a child than have a child and hurt it.

    • @Cutiejuliya
      @Cutiejuliya Před 3 lety +239

      amen

    • @gokuorimura8084
      @gokuorimura8084 Před 3 lety +748

      This is me rn. I used to really want kids, but years with my parents just made me not want to take that risk for the child's sake

    • @Cutiejuliya
      @Cutiejuliya Před 3 lety +52

      @@gokuorimura8084 yes^

    • @strawberryfraisier6446
      @strawberryfraisier6446 Před 3 lety +363

      this. dont have a kid just to have a kid

    • @Sumermak
      @Sumermak Před 3 lety +223

      I have my 2 boys, not because I wanted kids… I didn’t because of my upbringing… but since I have them I have tried my hardest to be nothing like my parents in every way. It has worked thankfully, but now that they are older my personality issues are coming back full force. 😞

  • @angelicinternetuser
    @angelicinternetuser Před 2 lety +15119

    Whenever I heard the argument from parents who say “I clothed, fed, and gave you a home!!!” to their kids whenever they try to bring up something awful they did to their child, I always think this: You know who else clothes, feeds, and gives people a home? Prison. But they don’t do it out of love.

    • @wildcrocus
      @wildcrocus Před 2 lety +1451

      Literally what they are required to do. No rewards given for doing the bare minimum. Every person who chooses to be a parent signs up for 18 years of meeting all essential needs. No child should ever feel they owe their parents anything for having their basic needs met. Kids didn't choose to be born. It is 100% on the parents.

    • @---tc8km
      @---tc8km Před 2 lety +825

      One day I was fighting with my father because at 18 he would still want to rule every single aspect of my life and make all the decisions. When I said „no, it‘s my life“ he said he fed me, dressed me and put a roof over my head and if I was so damn ungrateful for that I should pay him back all the expenses I costed him. For years he literally expected me to pay him everything back, even the money he spent on diapers!!!!!! Wth?????
      Anyway, things got worse but after some years I could escape that hell and cut off any contact with them. I have been free and safe for 6 years now 🍀

    • @momplus4633
      @momplus4633 Před 2 lety +87

      @@wildcrocus my parents were by no mean perfect. Nor were they ideal as parents. They made a lot of mistakes. When I look back on their flaws I see them as just been human. When they say stuff like that they just reminding you of who's taking care of you. Nothing is wrong with that. And there's no law that says they have to be good parents. None! I mean it would be nice if they have good parents! That would be a plus! But it was common for dads to say he walked 12 miles in 6 ft of snow with no shoes on whenever you asked for new shoes to go with that one outfit you planned to wear on a date.

    • @coloradobrad6779
      @coloradobrad6779 Před 2 lety +259

      It was planned since birth that I work to pay their mortgage, not any other life. I had no choice. Once I found out I walked away.

    • @cows4lifemoo
      @cows4lifemoo Před 2 lety +332

      My mom used to yell at this at me all time, and things similar to that. Once when I was about 16 I finally yelled back "it's not my fault you chose to have kids and then had to take care of them". She did not like that...My mom is a narcissist and always acted like my sister and I owed her everything. To this day if we argue she still says shit like "I'm the mother, you need to respect me" like yea, ok, your lucky we still talk. 🙄

  • @bigpapamagoo8696
    @bigpapamagoo8696 Před rokem +3589

    Every time I go to someone else’s house and see how their family operates, I have the same thought: ‘they all seem to like each other a lot.’ The concept of a family genuinely enjoying one another’s company is so foreign to me.

    • @anonymouspersonq
      @anonymouspersonq Před rokem +53

      looks good on paper fam;)

    • @BeRightBack131
      @BeRightBack131 Před rokem +101

      I agree. I know families who actually spend time together. My family? We're likely to kill each other. Not joking. I'm literally terrified of my brothers, who've been known point guns at each other's faces, had cops called because they were wrestling over the gun, etc. My sisters are almost as bad, except they've never pulled a gun on anyone, just started fights that get pretty bad, including physical. My family hates me, and the feeling is now mutual. Needless to say, we pretty much avoid each other at all costs. If I saw my brother or sister in a grocery store, I'd turn around and walk out before they spotted me lol. Seriously.

    • @manifestlove888
      @manifestlove888 Před rokem +14

      But then stay a week or two and you’ll soon have a toxic label for them too for not functioning to the perfect dynamic you’d wish for yourself.

    • @turolretar
      @turolretar Před rokem +3

      maybe you’re the reason, give it some thought

    • @BeRightBack131
      @BeRightBack131 Před rokem +68

      @@turolretar who, me? Lmao. Yeah, I'm the reason they were shoving guns in each other's faces, when I lived and worked at least 200 miles away at the time. Geez. Pull your head out. Smdh.

  • @anniep855
    @anniep855 Před rokem +1126

    As an adult, my mom met a new friend of mine and commented - with true astonishment - “she really likes you”! That one comment told me everything about my childhood, and why I always felt like an alien in my family.

    • @arispiercing
      @arispiercing Před rokem +118

      i'm so sorry , that is actually horrible

    • @tink6225
      @tink6225 Před rokem +44

      i hope ur still friends w that person

    • @tulipsandpeaches1834
      @tulipsandpeaches1834 Před 11 měsíci +10

      What? I dont understand

    • @tink6225
      @tink6225 Před 11 měsíci +164

      @@tulipsandpeaches1834 being suprised that anyone could possibly ever want her daughter's company is telling of her own attitude towards annie

    • @chrisbryson6309
      @chrisbryson6309 Před 11 měsíci +25

      Mine did that just recently with her old friend. I'm 63! She was so surprised that this respected friend ( who doesn't suffer fools gladly) thought my husband and I especially delightful 🤷

  • @calidobe
    @calidobe Před 3 lety +9846

    The problem is the parents being parents when they are children themselves.

    • @OddWolf666
      @OddWolf666 Před 3 lety +630

      There was a certain point in my life whilst transitioning from a boy to a young man that I realized that no one actually knows wtf is going on, every adult is just an overgrown kid, still holding on to all the memories and feelings that we had when we were young and we're all just doing our best to help each other learn. That's why once you reach a certain age, you don't feel different w each passing year, because your physical growth has stopped and it's up to you to grow as a *person.*

    • @msc2u1
      @msc2u1 Před 3 lety +227

      Or just flat out unfit to take care of themselves let alone children.

    • @AliciaB.
      @AliciaB. Před 3 lety +167

      @@OddWolf666 Everyone is still a child TO A CERTAIN EXTANT. Yes your childhood never leaves you and shapes your personality, but it is very much possible to digest it and make peace with it, and end up in a place where understanding what was going on then gives you at least a basic idea of what is going on now. That's what maturity means. People also call that adulthood, even though there's indeed a quiproquo. Being an adult in a mature sense doesn't mean no longer being a child, but rather no longer being JUST A CHILD. What Brandon was saying is that unfortunately, many people involve themselves in parenthood when they completely lack that maturity, and the undigested trauma or shortcomings from their own childhood - in which they're stuck emotionally - get in the way and prevent them from dedicating their mental energy to caring properly for another.

    • @GoofyFang
      @GoofyFang Před 3 lety +8

      @Lena Medina just rough pal, wish I could help :(

    • @InklingThe
      @InklingThe Před 3 lety +31

      @Lena Medina yup! My mom had me at 17, and my paternal grandmother was the one who told me how much her grandparents (my great-grandparents, who were wonderful) helped her out. My mom tried to take credit for SO MUCH that other people did for her.

  • @LimyChitou
    @LimyChitou Před 3 lety +3893

    Good on paper family sounds like -
    "There is no war in Ba Sing Se..."

  • @affsteak3530
    @affsteak3530 Před 10 měsíci +685

    My family is a combination of Ships in the Night and Anti-Love.
    I've told my spouse and therapist that my parents raised us like houseplants. We were physically cared for, but there was no real interest in us as people.
    My friends, my hobbies, my emotions were treated with mockery, and I'm just starting to come to terms with how damaging that was.

    • @Interdacted
      @Interdacted Před 10 měsíci +38

      :(
      My family likes to remind me of things I've done as a child that I don't really remember. Then laugh about it

    • @Rubythereaper
      @Rubythereaper Před 10 měsíci +7

      @@InterdactedI’m glad im not alone with this!

    • @bidheadedsophia
      @bidheadedsophia Před 8 měsíci +17

      House plants…perfect definition.

    • @dogscott7881
      @dogscott7881 Před 8 měsíci +14

      Wow, the term “houseplants”….that hit me hard. That’s all I was.

    • @themerpheus
      @themerpheus Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@dogscott7881 yup, raised like a houseplant, except I remember my dad did broke my toys and destroyed my favorite houseplant that I have been trying to grow with them, just because I didn't let him watch his show.

  • @buckadillafilms
    @buckadillafilms Před 11 měsíci +355

    Im breaking the curse, no kids. End the bloodline. End the trauma. Make the world a marginally better place.

    • @britteny1564
      @britteny1564 Před 5 měsíci +21

      I am doing that same

    • @socaaccount117
      @socaaccount117 Před 5 měsíci

      man hands on misery to man.
      it deepens, like a coastal shelf.
      get out as early as you can,
      and don't have any kids yourself.

    • @dgvfsa66
      @dgvfsa66 Před 5 měsíci +21

      I had one son. He chose to have none. That bloodline and trauma has ended. At last.

    • @anya93918
      @anya93918 Před 4 měsíci +25

      Same. Me and my sister, we're doing the same after a whole childhood of being made to feel "grateful" and that we had to "give back" for all the "sacrifices" our parents made for us.

    • @BjarkiHugrakkr
      @BjarkiHugrakkr Před 4 měsíci +17

      Same. I refuse to bring another person into this world just for trauma and society to crush them.

  • @chloe9723
    @chloe9723 Před 2 lety +2206

    As a child I was often told that I was mature for my age, and now I'm told the opposite. Oh how the turns have tabled.

    • @CatBarefield
      @CatBarefield Před 2 lety +57

      Lol same

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas Před 2 lety +184

      You had to be mature to survive your childhood, maybe?

    • @laurabythatagari8944
      @laurabythatagari8944 Před 2 lety +32

      Fkn SAME

    • @fe-feluvhart6350
      @fe-feluvhart6350 Před 2 lety +187

      Me too! Usually nowadays my parents tell me that I need to "grow up"
      Bitch I'm 19 and barely coping shut the F*CK up.
      Here's to healing! :)

    • @emilemartin4002
      @emilemartin4002 Před 2 lety +7

      Glad to hear im not the only one

  • @theksheedz6185
    @theksheedz6185 Před 3 lety +4956

    Everyone calls it childhood trauma when it’s really life trauma. The trauma of a toxic or dysfunctional family never ends cause even as an adult you have to endure the trauma of walking away from a family or/and not having family support, or staying in the toxic and dysfunction. Either is trauma. People think it’s just in childhood. Nope that’s just when you have a higher probability of being dependent on family than an adult.

    • @error60091
      @error60091 Před 3 lety +141

      Thank you for saying this, as sad but true as it is

    • @Kaagrant
      @Kaagrant Před 3 lety +213

      It’s also ongoing because emotions don’t just go away. Fear in childhood, terror on childhood, severe ongoing child abuse does such damage that victims carry it their whole lives. It causes complex PTSD, which basically ruins a person’s chances to live a normal life.

    • @toscatattertail9813
      @toscatattertail9813 Před 3 lety +77

      @@KaagrantI strongly agree... I have CPTSD, i was vaguely aware of the multiple mental/emotional/physical/sexual trauma's of my childhood but it didn't impact me until i was 63, ... i had a mental collapse and all the memories of my childhood surfaced in all their "glory". It took 3 years for the professionals to figure out what was going on and why i was losing awareness of the passage of time. Along with the CPTSD, there is Generalized Anxiety Disorder (which didn't surprise me because i seemed to have the word "scapegoat" on my back for my entire life) and Dissociative Identity Disorder (which did surprise me) with at least 14 separate alters identifiable at the time of diagnosis.
      -- i was lucky, i ran into nurturing people as i grew up, women who could see that i was not getting the loving support it takes to have a mentally stable child . That probably kept me from mentally collapsing much earlier on, it was not until the last of my support system collapsed that i did.

    • @berlinetta____2680
      @berlinetta____2680 Před 3 lety +75

      @Tensay H Not sure if I misunderstood you, but my experience is that if you have low self-esteem and poor childhood programming then you don't even know you have the right to make any decision for yourself. Most relationships I have had with any others, "friends", work colleagues, random people, 8 out of 10 times have resulted in a similar dynamic to my toxic family of origin. I have also experienced a number of physical traumas as an adult which I attribute to my toxic programming as I made poor disempowering decisions.
      I have recently cut off my family as I went through a catastrophic collapse (of many) that I could no longer avoid looking at. I am middle-aged but due to my programming, I actually didn't know I had the right to cut off my family as an adult. Even when I chose to no longer see "friends" I still felt like a child and didn't think I had the right to and that I was being naughty. People then treated me as such (as a naughty kid). So for me, with my programming there was/is no autonomous me who is in charge of my life. I was programmed to exist for everyone else's purpose whatever that might be and I had no right to have boundaries let alone enforce them. I am only just learning how to be an adult but really I am still a child in an adult's body. Disturbing really.

    • @jadecoolness101
      @jadecoolness101 Před 3 lety +50

      @Tensay H a comment made by someone who was not abused as a child.
      You can't just choose to walk away. That's like telling a depressed person to stop being sad.
      I don't know what love is. That's not me being "oo edgy" that's me saying that I don't know the difference between an abusive relationship and a healthy one. I don't feel comfortable knowing people who don't hit me/berate me/demean me/otherwise abuse me. It's not some sort of sick BDSM masochism or anything, I just don't know how to exist otherwise. When people are nice to me, it is deeply uncomfortable because they will eventually "snap" and be even WORSE than usual, as I've been taught through my whole childhood. "Kindness is the calm before the storm." I can't live being treated nicely, it's terrifying. It's stressful, far more stressful than any beating can be. because beatings are honest, and they end eventually, but "kindness"... "Kindness" is usually a mask that's used to hide building aggression that will explode in unpredictable ways.
      Even if I "choose to walk away" from my family, I will be abused by other people who are not family that I inevitably meet through my life. OR if by some miracle there are good people that find me valuable, I'll live in perpetually increasing panic as the days go on while this person does NOT abuse me, becoming more and more paranoid about how bad the outburst is going to be after all of this kindness is wasted on me. I get so stressed and paranoid that eventually, hanging out with these people (who don't abuse me for some odd reason), causes severe anxiety and I get to the point that I can't even be in the same room as them without breaking down and feeling like it's time for their aggression they've been hiding to come out. And since it's been so long that they've had to "hold back" there's a lot of "catching up" to do on correcting me.
      My life has to be either abuse, constant anxiety that leads to broken friendships, or solitude. These are the only options available to me, due to my upbringing.
      So explain to me how I'm supposed to choose to walk away.

  • @lazybuggg
    @lazybuggg Před rokem +420

    “If I’m miserable, you should be too.” Wow, describes my dad to a T. I feel seen, thank you for this video! ❤️

    • @kajal-xe6fi
      @kajal-xe6fi Před 11 měsíci +10

      Oh my god😢 my dad also....

    • @bgrego88
      @bgrego88 Před 10 měsíci

      Yea you don't know what parents had to do or go through for your existence, your dad had to give up his dreams for 30 secs of pleasure and stuck wit yo momma

    • @pulidobl
      @pulidobl Před 10 měsíci +2

      My spouse‘s philosophy…

    • @Mrs.LadeyBug
      @Mrs.LadeyBug Před 9 měsíci

      🐞 Lazybuggg, are we we related?!? Lol! Or at least, I can relate. 🙈 😔

    • @jackilynpyzocha662
      @jackilynpyzocha662 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Sounds like my dad; his problem, not ours.

  • @debrabarnhardt1103
    @debrabarnhardt1103 Před rokem +387

    Our broader culture endorses these systems and government is legislating them. The message in our schools, our workplaces, our institutions is " Don't complain, don't expect help and don't expect anyone to care. AND if you continue to annoy us with your petty problems, you will be slapped down." It isn't just toxic families and I hope that therapists and patients realize that.

    • @motan7864
      @motan7864 Před 10 měsíci +31

      I don't know where you're from, but in France, it's more like "I don't care about you, but I'll gladly pretend to care if I can take money from you"

    • @Pinky_Tingz
      @Pinky_Tingz Před 10 měsíci

      The thing is toxic families are the root of the issue in society. The people that makes the laws, rules, regulations, corporations, work environments, systems live in toxic family dynamics and came from toxic dynamics. Which I bet is why they strived to be in such power positions because according to them no one was/will ever make them feel powerless ever again. Hurt people hurt people, going around bleeding on people and spreading their misery like the disease it is. Hence the Anti-Love: "If I'm miserable everyone is going to miserable." archetype.

    • @bluesunquake
      @bluesunquake Před 10 měsíci +4

      Yes!!!

    • @Interdacted
      @Interdacted Před 10 měsíci +6

      I've been in therapy and all I remember from 10 years was, "Well, you have friends though right? So I did my job it's on you after you graduate."

    • @rizkiramadhan9266
      @rizkiramadhan9266 Před 9 měsíci

      I think number 7 is the one you mean, there's a reason we're stereotyped in foreign countries as these perfectionists who put pressure on our youths

  • @merida.a6078
    @merida.a6078 Před 2 lety +4022

    I'm still wrapping my mind around the fact that parentification isn't normal. It's such an embedded thing in my culture, people will applaud you for supposedly being mature for your age and understanding of your parent/s struggles. Like it's somehow a good thing to have lost your youth so young because you had to compensate for an absentee parent and an abusive single parent.

    • @panjimartiandaru3081
      @panjimartiandaru3081 Před 2 lety +185

      I felt this 😔
      And the worst thing is, then my other family expect me to always act as adult, especially to their own children who aren't that far in age to me.
      It's like, I don't have the right to be kid myself.

    • @supernova7848
      @supernova7848 Před 2 lety +19

      Absolutely!!

    • @Someone-qm3oc
      @Someone-qm3oc Před 2 lety +134

      This really hurts knowing how much I relate to this. I have two parents, and they treat me well, or it feels like that but at the same time, being super mature is just expected, especially from me. I have to do well in school, I have to organize my own schedule, I cant accidentally say the wrong thing without being shamed. I cant express emotion without being told I was imature. It got to the point that by the time I was 12, acting 15 wasn't enough. I had to be 18. And the worst part is that my brother is expected to act perfectly normal for his age, just because he was younger. Another part of it that I think really impacted this was that my brother was loud, roudy, and attention seeking, and I was a lot quieter. I have this huge pressure to do well, to take care of my brother, to organize myself and cause my parents minimal stresss, and it just places this huge burden on me.

    • @vwolf5
      @vwolf5 Před 2 lety +59

      Yep, I have to act more mature than my parents, and that's been like that since I was...maybe 6? (Of course I couldn't, but I was punished for that) and at 11 or so is when I became more mature than them, and I never realized that was not normal until one year ago or so...

    • @siryoucantdothat9743
      @siryoucantdothat9743 Před 2 lety +51

      Its toxic shame usually disguised as perfectionism just when the slightest mistake happen these people plunge into deep shameful feelings that there whole identity is disturbed … you can be perfect but not attached to it that you deny life itself and emotions its crazy and inhumane

  • @corneliastreet2491
    @corneliastreet2491 Před 3 lety +1665

    I think the model minority mentality feeds heavily into the whole “looks good on paper” thing. That’s common amongst a lot of wealth groups.

    • @ionbattery
      @ionbattery Před 3 lety +20

      absolutely!

    • @frankiesynth9065
      @frankiesynth9065 Před 3 lety +18

      Absolutely, having been raised in that environment I totally agree

    • @amywalker7575
      @amywalker7575 Před 3 lety +40

      What about PK's and TK's - preachers' kids and teachers' kids? That's another type of model minority. If you don't live up to their expectations, Hell help you.

    • @corneliastreet2491
      @corneliastreet2491 Před 3 lety +26

      @@amywalker7575 idk about preacher’s kids but like 75% of the teachers I know are great parents and have well-adjusted kids 😅 they deal with them all day, they know how to respect them and give them the room to make mistakes. Not all of them, of course.

    • @amywalker7575
      @amywalker7575 Před 3 lety +33

      @@corneliastreet2491 Unfortunately, my parents grew up in an era where teachers were the BOSSES and students were the WORKERS. That whole "spare the rod and spoil the child" thing? That was my family. All they had to do was look at me like they were threatening to spank me, and I'd crack like an egg.

  • @hannahcampbell6274
    @hannahcampbell6274 Před 11 měsíci +312

    I remember when I first started dating my husband, and when I went to dinner at his house to meet his family for the first time... It was such a completely opposite environment than what I was used to. I thought that his family relationships felt surreal and like they were putting up a front like my family did to make it seem like the "perfect" family, but no, they were all just genuinely good people and they actually got along, and my mom wondered why I preferred to spend time with his family and not with her.
    Edit: also, am I the only one that can relate to all 7 of these systems? I had all of these things going on in one example or another.

    • @madelinecameron8869
      @madelinecameron8869 Před 11 měsíci

      I got 4 out of 7!

    • @TheDaniela3112
      @TheDaniela3112 Před 11 měsíci +21

      This was my exact experience too! And it's so nerve wracking and humiliating to have to slowly let your partner know that your family isn't the same at all. One day few years back my boyfriend actually got emotional and shed a few tears asking why my mom doesn't like him when he tries his best to get on her good side. Then, last month he was staying over with me and my family. Him and I went shopping, and when we came to my house he was excitedly showing my parents what he bought and they just criticised everything he had to say. Later on he told me now he understands that I'm better off not telling them anything. It's kinda sad how naive he is around them.

    • @hannahcampbell6274
      @hannahcampbell6274 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@TheDaniela3112 oh I completely understand that! My husband was so anxious too because he wanted my family to like him so much, but at some point I just had to prioritize myself and my own happiness/relationships over theirs, cause at some point I realized that it's just impossible to please my family, everything I did was a disappointment no matter what.

    • @daninb8939
      @daninb8939 Před 11 měsíci +16

      Sometimes when my Partner visits, he looks at me all baffled and goes "why do they treat you like that?" and it's very sobering

    • @petalss5325
      @petalss5325 Před 10 měsíci +6

      oh wow 6 out of 7
      It's what I marvel at all the time; when my best friend talks abt her upbringing or her favorite family member. I love spending time with her and am slowly learning that I'm actually not that bad of a person to hang out with.

  • @annewhite9351
    @annewhite9351 Před rokem +197

    Anti-love and toxic/codependent are so familiar I could cry and scream at the same time. The struggle for sanity is a daily reality for me.

    • @SuperMrBlaze
      @SuperMrBlaze Před 23 dny

      "The struggle for sanity is a daily reality for me."
      How sad! Unfortunately, I can relate to this... 🙁

    • @cowboykxm
      @cowboykxm Před 17 dny

      Those are the ones that hit me as well! Sprinkle those two with a bit of Looks Good On Paper and you get this guy who somehow turned out alright

  • @abbycoen-taylor2472
    @abbycoen-taylor2472 Před 2 lety +920

    “You were sad. I took you shopping. Why are you still sad?”

    • @donjonmaister
      @donjonmaister Před 2 lety +87

      When parents think they can fix any problem with money.

    • @katec708
      @katec708 Před 2 lety +17

      Godddd this hits close to home lol

    • @LillyNotFlower
      @LillyNotFlower Před 2 lety +29

      OMG. THIS. My mom hit me and bought me 2 Airpods and some clothes. She thought that'd do.

    • @ijustlikebees
      @ijustlikebees Před 2 lety +9

      My father in a nutshell❤

    • @sriku1000
      @sriku1000 Před 2 lety

      A Calming video on How Bad parents are made. czcams.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/video.html

  • @siljemartins7447
    @siljemartins7447 Před 3 lety +1999

    When I told my parents to stop fighting:
    "we are just discussing, honey"
    *world word 3 is going on in the living room*

    • @camila-qr7mv
      @camila-qr7mv Před 3 lety +53

      when i tried it was either them telling me that if i did one of my "crazy person crisis" (they were panic atacks lol) they would put me in an '""insane asylum'"" (yikes) or most of the time straight up COMPLETLY ignore me 😃
      it was like i didnt existed like A GHOST, terrible 🤡
      the worst thing is that this occured recently, im 20 now, they will never learn and this fact blows my mind :)

    • @siljemartins7447
      @siljemartins7447 Před 3 lety +24

      @@camila-qr7mv aww I'm sorry hun, I have panic attacks too and know exactly what it feels like, sometimes friends can be better then blood relatives, we can choose our own family now😊 hope you are doing okay 😊

    • @elidiac5045
      @elidiac5045 Před 3 lety +24

      my mother and her boyfriend always corrected me and said "no it's just an argument/disagreement sweetie :) every couple goes through this :) we're just so similar"; it was one of the few times I didn't take their advice and kept on calling it what it was: a fight. I'm so sorry you had to go through that, I hope you know you that can trust your instincts! That's something I still have some trouble with bc of my experiences, but there's ways to heal from it

    • @siljemartins7447
      @siljemartins7447 Před 3 lety +7

      @@elidiac5045 we are a lot alike yes :) and I'm sorry you also had to go trough it as well, its so many of us with the same story, its rough and it is straight up fighting, I have always called it like I see it, I was never stupid enough to believe it was just "an argument" or "a discussion" when I was a kid. I used to wish I would never grow up, I didn't want to act like "an adult" (fighting and screaming) I'm just glad i turned out to be a good person. But I hope you are doing well too

    • @spookyblurry225
      @spookyblurry225 Před 2 lety +12

      My parents are just the same! They act as if they don't say the worst stuff to each other and make us feel as if we need to escape from the house

  • @Fuel6233
    @Fuel6233 Před 9 měsíci +73

    "I'm your parent, not your friend" this statement makes me so mad, that just INSTANTLY causes a disconnect between you and your kid, don't EVER say that to them, they'll become your enemy.
    good video.

    • @randallcauley9484
      @randallcauley9484 Před 4 měsíci +3

      yes, LOTS of abuse and neglect and terrible parenting is hidden in plain sight by these kinds of offhand 'accepted' comments. if other parents only knew how much normalizing these kinds of phrases is leaving so many kids in harms way (and "parental" units operating without thought)

    • @reddsmoke904
      @reddsmoke904 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Then have the nerve to wanna be friends as adults. Nah stay in a parent's place lol

    • @Akamatsu_kei
      @Akamatsu_kei Před 2 měsíci +5

      For real, and the sentence is not bad per se, but they don't *understand* it:
      It's not that parents can't get along with their kids, it's that parents need to take care of them and teach them to be humans and stay in the role of a tutor, a mentor, a PARENT before and above anything else.
      I hate how they misunderstood and started to use it to justify abuse.

    • @rayisrael6746
      @rayisrael6746 Před 7 dny

      THIS. "I'll never be your friend. I'm your mother."
      She let me know with that statement that she'd never emotionally be there for me. That it would always be obedience = safety and disobedience = contempt.
      My toxic dad at least taught me not to obey without question. I took it too far, but I was also a child. We can't be friends? We can't have a friendship outside of the parent/child dynamic? Yeah. It soured any relationship I might have had with her. And our religion backed it up.

  • @zed6095
    @zed6095 Před 11 měsíci +309

    My mother was apparently so traumatized by her dad that she was a machine. Get through the day somehow was her only mantra. I went through school with so many bullying events, flat out horrible things that no one ever, ever addressed. Chased through the hallways by mean girls, beaten up, raped, you name it. The rape was the easiest thing to get over to be honest. This was all at school! Not even talking about home lol. I gotta say I never thought I could heal and be a human just from free CZcams videos. But here I am walking talking and rocking. Thank you kind therapist. We heal and help each other.

    • @user-wg7li6rj5v
      @user-wg7li6rj5v Před 8 měsíci +6

      Hello. This whole thing is relatively new to me: i only accepted reality after a physical breakdown (massive weightloss and insomnia throughout a period of maybe a year) with a 3 day stay in intensive care and since am healing, reading a lot and found all the channels here. I am 37. Can you recommend recources? It would be highly appreciated. I had a horrible childhood and did a lot of excessive work, drugs and alcohol to "get well" and honestly thought I was just crazy and beyond help but things changed a lot - for the better. It still is very new and I am looking to adress those issues the right way. I also am sober for almost 2 years or so, which seems to have been the catalyst to understanding.. u think i know the bestsellers already (Dr. Mate, bessel van der kolk, some CZcams channels) but would love to learn more. Best regards, Robert

    • @wendylee7242
      @wendylee7242 Před 7 měsíci +4

      I'm so sorry you had to live through all that horror,god bless ,heal,and keep you....

    • @emmaLouise..
      @emmaLouise.. Před 7 měsíci +3

      You’re an inspiration! I’m so sorry you had to endure all that. May you have peace and love in your heart in your healing journey ❤❤

    • @prunusserrulata7686
      @prunusserrulata7686 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@Jbp-tbshI think what the commenter means by that is that compared to their other experiences, rape was the easiest to get over with. I mean, I got bullied in school and later sexually abused by my brother-in-law. And after that abuse, I think bullying is not that bad y'know

    • @jar8413
      @jar8413 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Amen!! I've had more personal growth in the past two years on CZcams than in my 49 years as a human!

  • @annahthegeminitalks7736
    @annahthegeminitalks7736 Před 3 lety +4484

    I really appreciate the advice to hold parents accountable for their behavior

    • @fuzzyecheveriaharmsii
      @fuzzyecheveriaharmsii Před 3 lety +69

      But how? If I would do that directly they would brake.
      I hope the restricted contact makes them think.
      (A couple years back it was no contact, but now I try a new form of relationship... but it feels like paddling back)

    • @fairygurl9269
      @fairygurl9269 Před 3 lety +51

      @@fuzzyecheveriaharmsii It is More Of an Personal Radical Acceptance of you accepting they Should be held Accountable Authentically ...its requires a grieving process with Some..
      Jerry Wise has good advice how to Self Differentiate in Non Polarized Ways Based on how Toxic your Family and your own Maladaptive Behaviors are.
      I was able to pull back from my Family of Origin to do Self Understanding Work and then I Could Reconnect with the Relationships I had with the Non Malevolent Members In Much Healthier and Truly Authentic Ways.

    • @fuzzyecheveriaharmsii
      @fuzzyecheveriaharmsii Před 3 lety +1

      @@fairygurl9269 thank you!
      But with some what?

    • @leonahthelioness5479
      @leonahthelioness5479 Před 3 lety +145

      My mother doesn't acknowledge anything she's done. She was a perfect mother with terrible kids who remember everything wrong. 😒

    • @MartineReed
      @MartineReed Před 3 lety +26

      Do you have any videos about how a toxic parent can try to make amends for all the damage they have done to their child?

  • @causticfaucet
    @causticfaucet Před 2 lety +1248

    “if you’re vulnerable or sensitive they get entertainment out of that” The summary of my entire childhood as the youngest.

    • @attheranch873
      @attheranch873 Před 2 lety +37

      Same here, but I am the oldest.

    • @mushuchicken8256
      @mushuchicken8256 Před 2 lety +20

      Middle child, same.

    • @texas1949
      @texas1949 Před 2 lety +46

      My brother and I are so sorry for the way we teased our baby sis. For some reason when we were all little, we told her she was found in a garbage can. She’s never forgotten it. And we, to this day, regret it and have no idea where it came from. 🤦‍♀️

    • @SLa-pb1gg
      @SLa-pb1gg Před 2 lety +17

      Mines too, as the youngest and only girl

    • @kierstyn7925
      @kierstyn7925 Před 2 lety +9

      middle child. same. youngest sister was actually raised to join in and became my worst bully for a few years

  • @kurisuchiinu1206
    @kurisuchiinu1206 Před rokem +159

    Number 1 resonates with me. Codependent doesn't want to take sides and just follow the Aggressor. When I stand up to the Aggressor, it looks like disrespect to the Aggressor or the Outsider, but since they are blind, they can't see what's actually happening. Aggressor can be two-faced, shows the good side to relatives, friends or colleagues but totally treats the family different.

    • @ScoiataeI
      @ScoiataeI Před rokem +13

      A perfect description of my dad

    • @joselynfulbright8128
      @joselynfulbright8128 Před rokem +10

      Omg you just described my mom perfectly. Always super nice when people were over but almost always in a bad mood otherwise and her drinking could make her violent at times.

    • @recoveringsoul755
      @recoveringsoul755 Před rokem +2

      And if the codependent tries to leave, to protect you, would you choose to stay with the aggressor? My child did. It's awful that they were even put in that position of choosing sides. It's not healthy and sets up child for future relationship problems

    • @LaraOlina
      @LaraOlina Před rokem +19

      oh my I relate so much. my dad making nasty remarks and comments until I loose my cool and scream at him only to then look like the "bad" person myself. And then having people comment that you shouldn't talk to your parents like that etc. Fills me with rage.

    • @dubaiedge
      @dubaiedge Před 11 měsíci +15

      @@LaraOlina it's called "reactive abuse," a tactic narcissists deliberately engage others I to make themselves the victim when they're the aggressor...

  • @TMichelle555
    @TMichelle555 Před 10 měsíci +67

    I just turned 30 and for some reason i started grieving my childhood. I had a mix of a couple of these systems but ultimately my mom was a raging narcissist and my dad was a belligerent alcoholic. They act like what i went through was normal or "not that bad" because they compared their lives to mine (and they were even more abused but still, i learned that that was minimizing and dismissive). I'm trying everyday to retrain my brain to not be a victim but to rise above it. It's hard but I'm hopeful

    • @time4peace726
      @time4peace726 Před 9 měsíci +4

      That’s about right- the age when you get a chance to look back and evaluate what happened and why. I remember this for myself. Exactly, the same. I did however address my parents around this age maybe 35, and they still denied it all and dismissed the damages. Actually, attacking with avoidance and verbal abuse. That was when I knew I was orphaned all along. My parents were strangers my entire childhood. Sad situation.

    • @kiaheat1920
      @kiaheat1920 Před 8 měsíci

      👊👊👊👊

    • @MrsLana92
      @MrsLana92 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I cut off the blood relatives who gave me severe issues a few years back, but my healing journey really only started after I turned 29. I've been in therapy for about 3 years. But even then I still get pangs of overwhelming emotion, I just know how to deal with it better, and I'm not drowning anymore - so to speak.
      I was driving home fairly recently and had to pull over because it hit me that I was completely robbed of a childhood and that I never had a mother. I had to take the time to let myself grieve not having a mum. That's part of the process - literally processing it.

    • @ede2362
      @ede2362 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I want to start therapy but I am always scared that my family life was "not traumatic enough". My father was depressed and constantly drinking not caring about us abusive etc but my mother and my sister are my everything I couldnt love anybody more than them so I am always confused like:"Others dont even have a good relationship with their siblings" :/

    • @MrsLana92
      @MrsLana92 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@ede2362 I was worried about that to start with as well, but after going through it I realised just HOW traumatic it was for me.
      There is no judgement between one trauma and another. They're both trauma. Take care of yourself and go, mate.
      Also just a bit of advice from my dad; "Therapists aren't all the same. You might not click with one but you will with another. It usually takes about 3 sessions to feel at ease with them, and if you don't trust them there's no harm in looking around for another. But you have to be comfortable enough with them to tell them *everything*."

  • @misslyntheena
    @misslyntheena Před 3 lety +1987

    The first one “Looks Good On Paper” really hit home - very religious parents who saw problems as failures and weaknesses. When we told our parents we all had mental issues my mum responded “oh so it’s all our fault?! You are so ungrateful - I must be such a bad mum that all my 7 children are depressed! And I thought you had a happy childhood“

    • @lonmurphy4698
      @lonmurphy4698 Před 3 lety +155

      Reading this is sorta cathartic for me, had a very similar experience. I’d say my upbringing was a bit of a mix of one and two. Mom and dad were both very religious, socially conservative, but we were working class. Dad worked a lot, so much that I really don’t have many memories of him until I was around high school age. Eventually dad got a new job and promoted and we were living in a nice suburb going to a prestigious school. Apparently all this material wealth, which I really didn’t experience growing up anyway, was supposed to make up for me essentially raising myself when I was young. Then they get mad and say I’m ungrateful any time I bring up my perspective.

    • @Deverdan
      @Deverdan Před 3 lety +79

      I relate the most about telling our parent we had mental issue, my mom literally said the same thing and then she wondered why i don't wanna be open to her

    • @bot5am
      @bot5am Před 3 lety +46

      Threads like this is why I haven't been pushed over to deploy my homicidal feelings. Thank all of you, here.

    • @brendenpischke6060
      @brendenpischke6060 Před 3 lety +5

      Yup, one more here.

    • @specialopsdave
      @specialopsdave Před 3 lety +15

      To be fair, what is a parent supposed to think when they hear that they have raised 7 mentally broken people? They blame themselves, of course.

  • @GlaukopisCal
    @GlaukopisCal Před 3 lety +2082

    It's funny how my family was pretty similar to the 'toxic divorce' model even though my parents never actually divorced. They just kept fighting and making up and talking shit about each other to their kids

    • @gato8008
      @gato8008 Před 2 lety +181

      holy crap, same thing with my parents. I often thought they would get a divorced soon, but guess I was wrong.

    • @speaktruth9989
      @speaktruth9989 Před 2 lety +108

      Same exactly with my parents and if it weren’t for the fact that they are very religious they would have gotten divorced but the word of God forbids divorce so they stayed together. Which was worse because they were always yelling and fighting and it was so toxic I was just hoping they would divorce already so I wouldn’t have to hear them screaming all the time but sadly I grew up in that toxic household of screams.

    • @basilstorm9461
      @basilstorm9461 Před 2 lety +58

      God this is such a mood ive been waiting for them to get a divorce for 12 years because they hate each other but they just keep going

    • @janicecass2713
      @janicecass2713 Před 2 lety +2

      Can i ask if you dont mind would you have preferred to get a divorce. Or do what they did or r doing.
      These are parents and i think if you have grown apart which happens, you sit them down and talk to them, let them know that they have a voice and both parents put their own feelings and emotions to one side and step up to the plate and be the adult they need to be, to make the transition for their kids so much easier.

    • @plutoisonf1re
      @plutoisonf1re Před 2 lety +4

      are we related? /j this sounds exactly like my parents O.O

  • @anamia345
    @anamia345 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I grew up in a environment full of hate and coldness. It fehlt like my parents are my enemys. Even today in my 40ies is hard to believe that someone really likes or loves me as I never felt this way in my childhood😢😢😢 Thank you for making me understand that it didnt just happend to me and that there is are professionell words for that: anti-love, chaotic and codependent parenting styles

  • @chainlinkington5278
    @chainlinkington5278 Před rokem +155

    Talking about the physical reaction to others fighting really hit me like a brick… for me hearing raised voices in another room of the house (if im in the basement and hear loud voices upstairs) makes my heart start pounding and adrenaline floods my system. My body is put into total alert mode and it takes me a while to relax when it happens.
    Also the part about not feeling like healthy marriages/relationships are real really hit me too. I remember every time id see my friends happily married parents i would always tell myself that they MUST be secretly fighting and miserable. To this day i still get that feeling from time to time when I see friends or family friends in relationships.
    Never went to therapy or have really talked to anyone about my parents divorce but after watching this video I think it might be time I talk to someone.

    • @andreamagyar5541
      @andreamagyar5541 Před měsícem

      It is called vitness abuse .

    • @michelefitzmaurice4610
      @michelefitzmaurice4610 Před měsícem +1

      I left a whole cart of food in the grocery store line because two customers were getting into an argument & as soon as they began raising their voices I panicked and left the store.
      I had 2 bratty siblings with horrible tempers & they would scream & say abusive things to one or both my parents … my parents would either give in or try to walk away.
      I can’t stand arguments to this day & avoid them at all cost.

  • @nordinreecendo512
    @nordinreecendo512 Před 3 lety +2135

    My girlfriend has a terribly abusive family. They only do the bare minimum when it comes to taking care of her, and whenever she comes to them with a problem, they call her selfish for "Making it all about her." She was even assaulted and traumatized, and her parents refused to get her the help she needed, and they made *her trauma* all about *them.* Her parents disgust me, and following her trauma, I had to do everything myself to help her. She lives abroad, but I still did more for her than her own mother and father did. I didn't really realize her family was abusive until my own father talked to me about his concerns seeing me isolate myself to focus on helping her. He said "It's great that you're there for her, but she should be able to rely on her parents for help," and I responded "Should or shouldn't, she can't. They refuse to help her." That was when it all clicked in my head that her parents were abusive. They don't hit her, they don't attack and harass her, they don't do anything like that, they simply don't seem to care about anyone but themselves, and that neglect is still abusive.
    Thank you for making this video, I truly believe this will help her when she sees this.

    • @Ven-if4rv
      @Ven-if4rv Před 3 lety +27

      similar situation here.

    • @poephila
      @poephila Před 3 lety +37

      It’s great that you are helping her! Take care of yourself in the process also. I hope you two do well 😊

    • @looweegee252
      @looweegee252 Před 3 lety +47

      That's called neglectful narcissism and it is a form of abuse. She's been abused.

    • @nordinreecendo512
      @nordinreecendo512 Před 3 lety +38

      @@looweegee252 *Being* abused. And yeah, I'm trying to make her realize that. It's just hard when she's still dependent on her parents, so she can't really do anything because they can just go "If you don't like it, you can move out."

    • @looweegee252
      @looweegee252 Před 3 lety +5

      @@nordinreecendo512 Uh whether or not she's still being abused doesn't change the fact that she's been abused. How would still being abused negate having been abused? Try to argue with helpful people less often.

  • @CrashleeAMW
    @CrashleeAMW Před 3 lety +943

    I didn’t realize just how much I needed to hear “you didn’t ask to be considered a burden” until now. Thank you for your videos

    • @gageinoc
      @gageinoc Před 3 lety +18

      Saw your comment before he actually got into any of his examples and thought it was very interesting.. I didn’t understand at all. Then he got to the single parent.. I never even realized that I might be on this list.. and he nailed so many of my issues that I personally struggle with on the daily..

    • @sarahscalpel561
      @sarahscalpel561 Před 3 lety +7

      Same lol but it’s still like here I am a burden on my parents and they felt they had to stick together for me and my bro on top of it like extra burden they could have been happier if they didn’t have to stick together for us

    • @Sharon-sw7mr
      @Sharon-sw7mr Před 3 lety +11

      @@sarahscalpel561 My mom said I begged her not to get a divorce and so she didn't for me. Not true, that never happened I wanted my parents to get divorced when I was a child. She didn't want to own her stuff, so she puts it on me.

    • @sriku1000
      @sriku1000 Před 2 lety

      A Calming video on How Bad Parents are made. czcams.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/video.html

  • @rubymars5493
    @rubymars5493 Před 8 měsíci +19

    Few months ago, I tried to explain to my parents my current struggles with constantly comparing myself to others and chasing things working so hard just to prove my value to the people around me. I told them it’s so emotional draining. And my mom responded: wow that means we did something right raising you up like this. At least it helps you succeed in your studies and your career….

  • @elimidd6626
    @elimidd6626 Před rokem +67

    I feel like my own family dynamic was a mix of a few of these.. definitely aggressor and codependent. My dad was verbally, mentally, and emotionally abusive, he'd yell at us for the slightest fuck up or even if we just annoyed him, I still have a memory of being in home depot, we had those little carts for kids and kept bumping him and he threatened to throw them across the store. My mom is generally good, but still was the beauty to my dad's beast, calming him down but never defending us, never telling him to apologize or comforting us. I also feel like there was a touch of perfect on paper, whenever I spoke up about my worsening mental health in my teens I was told I didn't go outside enough, or maybe if I exercised it would help, I was often made fun of for my "unusual" interests and just generally felt like the black sheep of the family. My brother on the other hand got a lot of stuff I never would've at his age, he got a TV in his room, when he told my parents he smoked weed they were like "what can yah do" when I'm sure I would've been yelled at.
    Idk, idk what I want to accomplish by writing this. It's hard to talk about my trauma bc on the surface we were a fairly functional and loving family, but clearly if I'm here, and if I relate to these, things weren't okay and I'm trying to understand my past.

    • @pattyrodriguez2
      @pattyrodriguez2 Před rokem +9

      I hear you. I was raised by a single mother and at almost 50 years of age I feel like she too had a bit of everything described here. Her upbringing was also horrific.
      But I tell you what you get by talking about it... I see you have a few likes, which means you're not alone. Also, speaking about things is in itself the beginning of processing and healing.
      I've decided I'll cut off my mother from my life because it doesn't matter what I do, she's never ok with it. She has a venomous mouth and I often think of her like a feral cat.
      I hope you heal in time, maybe you'll never heal completely, many of us don't, but you'll be in a much better place...
      So what's best for you.
      Sending you peace and love ❤

    • @KainsFleshlight
      @KainsFleshlight Před 7 měsíci

      @@pattyrodriguez2 cutting off parents or any relationship that isn't healthy for you is a good thing ,but as of right now in my own journey I'm beginning to think that a more powerful skill would be to try to gain access to the tools which would remove the feeling that we need the acceptance of our parents and what not ....alan robarge is my main go to for dealing with this stuff ..if im not mistaken he says something along the lines of us struggling due to our attachment injuries, we lack the tools needed in order to end those bad relationships as well as deal with the overwhelming amount of pain and grief felt when they do end
      I dont know what the hell in even saying in this comment any more lmao (being my own psychologist/ psychiatrist is shit lmao )
      At the end of these research sessions ...I usully end up saying...ehh fuck em .they don't give a shit about me ......then five min later I'm doing everything in my power to make them happy
      Lmao sighhhhhhhh

  • @amytan2019
    @amytan2019 Před 3 lety +3145

    This type of free content from professionals,you just can't fathom how much it helps a person like me who cannot access it if it were paid.
    I am from a country where it is not possible for me,a student, to pay for such information. I don't have a card whatsoever, nor can I get one ; cause to get a card and pay the tiny amount I first need to be rich and have a large amount in my bank account .
    This helps soooo much , I can't thank you enough. I hope more and more professionals come to these types of platforms and share their knowledge. I am sooo thankful.

    • @patrickteahanofficial
      @patrickteahanofficial  Před 3 lety +324

      🤍❤️

    • @SS-iu1zb
      @SS-iu1zb Před 3 lety +175

      Even when you have access to mental health care, it might take you quite a bit of trial and error to find the right therapist. This content is really good. Very spot on.

    • @sarahrosen4985
      @sarahrosen4985 Před 3 lety +11

      @@SS-iu1zb Hear! Hear!

    • @lelamaciolek1166
      @lelamaciolek1166 Před 3 lety +22

      I hear you. I didn't have even have internet while my marriage crashed 10 years ago. I'm able to learn now though because of videos like this.

    • @eduardochavacano
      @eduardochavacano Před 3 lety +10

      SS 98% are just going to be a waste of time. So if you have intelligent and honest friends, keep them!

  • @jungsuk888
    @jungsuk888 Před 3 lety +386

    That awkward moment when you are able to identify a bit of each of the 7 types in your own fmaily/life.

  • @Gingerroadrage
    @Gingerroadrage Před rokem +28

    Ahhhh yes, the all good on paper. I will say - while this was the case during childhood/teemage years, my mother seemed to recognize the issue in early adulthood and it became a free-for-all. It flipped and became "scream the disfunction from the rooftops if it makes you feel better!" That was very liberating!

    • @stephantom8237
      @stephantom8237 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Same! But the “scream the dysfunction from the rooftops” was preceded by-and prompted by-a toxic divorce, lol sooo the outpouring of “wow this is all so messed up” was kind of itself messed up, at least as I experienced it.

  • @luotto8193
    @luotto8193 Před rokem +84

    Wow my family was so anti-love + chaos, I was never supported and loved. That made me hyper emotional. It’s very sad when you have to be a parent for your parent. Still healing after a year and a half of therapy.

    • @c.schuster7353
      @c.schuster7353 Před rokem +4

      same here

    • @musicandpoetry_8
      @musicandpoetry_8 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Mine is perfection and anti-love..not sure how parents expect you to be achieving great lengths while they’re emotionally neglecting you and being hostile

    • @cocoxtina8366
      @cocoxtina8366 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I was always being left alone & neglected since I grew up wirh a single mom & had no one to protect me as a child! I still resent her till this day since she didn't care about my well-being. If everything would've been reported to authorities I would've also ended up in Foster Care☹️

  • @caitlingower8858
    @caitlingower8858 Před 2 lety +227

    i always feel like i'm pitying myself when i resonate with these toxic childhood videos, which in itself is probably a sign of a negative upbringing

    • @linkedinlove106
      @linkedinlove106 Před 2 lety +42

      Stoicism..."don't feel so sorry for yourself"..."what are you so upset about? You have everything you could ever want"...sound familiar?

    • @sriku1000
      @sriku1000 Před 2 lety +3

      A Calming video on How Bad parents are made. czcams.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/video.html

    • @alicia03
      @alicia03 Před 2 lety

      Same 🥲

    • @ms.anonymousinformer242
      @ms.anonymousinformer242 Před 2 lety +1

      @@linkedinlove106 wow that other comment and your reply to it, was a l awaking to that! I didn't know that was a problem but I do that too and it makes sense why.

    • @jennyjoyce8158
      @jennyjoyce8158 Před 2 lety

      These cycles go back generations in families

  • @coldcloakmusic6630
    @coldcloakmusic6630 Před 3 lety +416

    Oooff anti love hits hard. No compliments, no celebrating birthdays, no smiles, hugs, affection, or even basic conversation. I used to not understand people that were nice and bubbly, how to have a conversation with people, and the importance of self care. Take care of yourself folks, and remember you are loveable ❤️

    • @GabrielleTollerson
      @GabrielleTollerson Před 3 lety +10

      I tend to be a bubbly and nice person to hide my misery 😞 Knowing how I feel,I wouldn't want others to feel the same way,it's horrible

    • @Nakia11798
      @Nakia11798 Před 3 lety +10

      My family was never anti-love, but they were sure as hell awkward about love. It was more like silent love, they weren't affectionate at all. It made me look strangely at my aunt on my mother's side BC she is SO affectionate. I was envious, I realize now. I wanted my mom to love me like that too.

    • @marlons1
      @marlons1 Před 3 lety

      I had half love and anti love. My mom loved the heck out of me and I lacked it from my dad. That created its own problems.

    • @6maria94
      @6maria94 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Nakia11798 I've been through that too. Understanding the 5 love languages help, because it makes us understand that we just have different love languages than our parents and we were looking for love in things we can't expect from them. My love language is words affirmation, and my last is gifts. My parents NEVER express through words, and my mom's love language is giving gifts so I didn't feel loved until I understood that she buying things for me were a way of expression xD
      You might have the same love language as your aunt, and that's why you find her so affectionate :)

    • @shannonhensley2942
      @shannonhensley2942 Před 3 lety +2

      My bubbly self is what happens when I disassociate. I can't access any feelings or memories beyond tactile ones. So I come off as happy and ditzy when really I can't access myself.

  • @dennyintx.746
    @dennyintx.746 Před rokem +60

    Wow, my family modeled all those systems over time. I knew we were "off" but never realized how much of an impact it had. Probably why my brother and I never had children. Very grateful I have had the opportunity to get help to resolve the trauma and release the past.
    Hugs, to all the other who grew up like this. You all deserve so much more. Love and light.

  • @Dottie_Hinkle
    @Dottie_Hinkle Před rokem +48

    My family easily fits into many of these systems.
    My parents were divorced when I was born, and the mistake of my conception was never my fault, but I certainly felt that way.
    My mom didn't want to be 'trapped raising more kids while my dad partied.'. Her words.
    My dad, never wanted kids in the first place. He just wanted my mom and wanted us to go find our own lives. She never asked him if he wanted kids. He would leave, but he didn't want to pay child support. His words.
    My older sisters, never treated me like they gave a shit about me at all. All they ever did was scream at, hit and belittle me.
    I don't have a single family member who hasn't given me a bloody nose over something trivial. (For example:. Missing the school bus, or saying 'it's not healthy to order pizza every day of the week.)
    I would spend the night with friends, and not understand why they could have such a nice family dynamic... And mine ...was hell.
    I have been severely depressed since around 2nd or 3rd grade...when I started to realize that what was happening wasn't normal at all.
    I have major.....major adult life issues stemming from the experience.
    I wish I knew how to function better, but... At almost 40... I can't imagine that's a possibility. I just accepted that I'll never have a family of my own, because I push everyone away.
    I am making steps to break the cycle.... And now I am being called a bitch.
    It never ends.

    • @formerfundienowfree4235
      @formerfundienowfree4235 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I was bullied by 5 older sisters also. From a cumulative point of view that was almost worse than what my parents did which was leaving me unprotected and neglected. I don't think sibling abuse is acknowledged enough yeah it is far more prevalent than parent on child abuse.

    • @geraldineangelamurray3001
      @geraldineangelamurray3001 Před 6 měsíci

      Totally agree 100 percent

    • @JulieVDK01396
      @JulieVDK01396 Před měsícem

      Same... Im now at 27 working 100% on myself...and im a problem and my parents wants "everything to be like in the past..."....

  • @starstencahl8985
    @starstencahl8985 Před 2 lety +389

    Most toxic sentence: "Don't act like it's any different in other families"

    • @epiphany5
      @epiphany5 Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah I hear it all the time ☻☻☻

    • @RainbowFlowerCrow
      @RainbowFlowerCrow Před 2 lety +26

      "If I didn't love you, I wouldn't beat you". 🙄 That's one of my parent's classics

    • @adinashaina9977
      @adinashaina9977 Před 2 lety +8

      Toxic people can speak truth! As long as their statements work for them, in their favor. 😞

    • @RainbowFlowerCrow
      @RainbowFlowerCrow Před 2 lety +1

      @RainbowDreams30 hugs, fellow rainbow 🌈🌸💜

    • @caribbean9829
      @caribbean9829 Před 2 lety +2

      Similar to this is: "all mothers are like this"

  • @jackieweaver3884
    @jackieweaver3884 Před 3 lety +4008

    almost every asian family when he mentions traits of "good on paper" families: **nervous sweating**

    • @okaight7248
      @okaight7248 Před 3 lety +26

      📠

    • @VSM101
      @VSM101 Před 3 lety +19

      Speak for yourself lol

    • @VSM101
      @VSM101 Před 3 lety +8

      Healthy gammer gg

    • @theanonymousme6015
      @theanonymousme6015 Před 3 lety +93

      @@VSM101 alright but does it matter? It's as long their point was sent across 🗿

    • @Luboman411
      @Luboman411 Před 3 lety +143

      I'm from a Latino family, but I dated someone for a few years who was Chinese-American. Honestly, when I saw "Looks Good On Paper" I was, like, "That was Ning's family. Yikes!"

  • @rptck1928
    @rptck1928 Před 11 měsíci +17

    I really can’t believe how long it took me to realise that not being taught to clean up after myself is neglectful. Like I didn’t grow up miserable because I’m dramatic and controlling, I was miserable because I literally was not supposed to be in that environment and it’s not normal that my mother didn’t mind HERSELF being in that environment.

  • @gillb9222
    @gillb9222 Před rokem +48

    Found this hard to watch both as a child from an abusive family but also as a parent who knows that they have brought up children in an unhealthy environment. During it I was struggling so much but I'm starting to see how my own kids' childhood has been affected.Even more sadness, guilt and shame added to the childhood amounts BUT really hoping to build a better life for all of us.Thank you for sharing it

    • @susanhewitt6359
      @susanhewitt6359 Před 11 měsíci +16

      I so relate to your post, I was raised in a very toxic home, and unknowingly traumatized my kids growing up because of my own upbringing and addictions I was trying to overcome. Forgive yourself and be the parent they need now, you can't change the past but you can help them heal! Good luck 🤞

    • @foggylegg6362
      @foggylegg6362 Před 7 měsíci +2

      And apologize sincerely.

    • @katierojas8066
      @katierojas8066 Před 5 měsíci +1

      It’s never too late to do the repair work with our children. If my parents had been willing to do this I wouldn’t have gone no contact.

  • @cabellocorto5586
    @cabellocorto5586 Před 3 lety +345

    I was essentially my father's emotional punching bag and his therapist. Any time he got angry about anything he'd take it out on me, pointing out all my flaws and how he was so much of a better person than me because his life was harder, then he'd also talk to me about his problems and most disturbing inner thoughts and I had to try to counsel him. He also treated me more like his friend than his son except when it was convenient to lord power over me. Mix of chaotic family and toxic single parent.

    • @joshsimms5697
      @joshsimms5697 Před 3 lety +7

      Do you mind sharing some of the inner thoughts? I'm concerned for my niece who's 7 who's supposed to be moving into a seperate apartment with her malignant narcissistic father who I can sadly undoubtedly picture him doing something like this if he didn't have witnesses.

    • @astolat2262
      @astolat2262 Před 3 lety +13

      That... sounds exactly like my mother. Good luck to you ❤️

    • @Gaburierairuze
      @Gaburierairuze Před 3 lety +4

      It's as if you were talking about my mom. The thing is that she doesn't have a healthy relationship with my father, and according to her I'm "too much like him," so she's always punishing me when she's mad at him and I'm just left confused asking myself "what did I do? "
      It's the worst because i've internalized the feeling of "yeah, she's right it's my fault" to the point where I'm not sure if i actually did something wrong or dad just pissed her off. Then I think "hey, it's me, I always do something wrong so I probably had it coming ." It's
      hard breaking out of that state of mind.

    • @SuperHeroEnvy
      @SuperHeroEnvy Před 3 lety +5

      @@Gaburierairuze It definitely isn't you. Please hold that truth at your core. As a mother, I assure you, minor children aren't at fault for their parents' moods, problems, or struggles. You deserve better. You deserve love.

    • @cabellocorto5586
      @cabellocorto5586 Před 3 lety +5

      @@joshsimms5697 I can't share those inner thoughts, they were very personal to him. But they were violent a lot of times. My dad is a tormented man. In some ways I feel for him, and in others I'll never be able to forgive what he did to me. I'd say that the family should keep a close eye on your niece. Talk to her about what her relationship with her father is like. With me, I never spoke about it. Dysfunction became normalized to me, so I never told anyone I was being yelled at and excoriated verbally. Don't let it become normalized for her.

  • @remedy836
    @remedy836 Před 2 lety +509

    The ‘good on paper’ is so dangerous. I know that I didn’t receive the help I needed because of it. No one was in my corner or even believed I was being abused, because my family had it all put together. I can only imagine how many other people are in the same position.
    May we all work towards healing together

    • @okay5488
      @okay5488 Před 2 lety +6

      Savanna! Same!!!! Absolutely true. It’s so, so isolating

    • @x-mess
      @x-mess Před 2 lety +11

      Yessssss... when u have courage to speak up you learn it's in vain bc they justify them bc they can't see past the halo.

    • @morganazoe
      @morganazoe Před 2 lety +5

      Yes Savannah, thanks for mentioning this. I'm struggling to deal with this situation currently. Due to telling my extended family that this is the case I have been excommunicated.

    • @Solonneysa
      @Solonneysa Před 2 lety +17

      People vastly underestimate how many families only present well on the outside, but are a mess on the inside. It's the reason I cringe when I see people judging public figures when something goes public. *SO* many people imagine they're alone in their individual suffering. It's bizarre.

    • @alberteje66
      @alberteje66 Před 2 lety +5

      Same! The walls came crumbling down eventually, but not before the damage was done.

  • @limolnar
    @limolnar Před rokem +41

    Wow. My own family was a combination of Ships In The Night and Anti-Love. There was no sense of family or support, a constant feeling of survival, and this lasted through adulthood. Ultimately I decided in my late-40s that if I was going to be alone I might as well do so without the constant hostility and this led to estrangement from my family.

    • @affsteak3530
      @affsteak3530 Před 10 měsíci +6

      I'd describe the Ships in the Night and Anti-Love combo as, "Having kids is 'fine' until any of their needs actually inconveniences the adults."
      Don't be emotional, don't ask for money or rides, and minimize your presence in the house as much as possible.

  • @LiterallyJustMyThoughts
    @LiterallyJustMyThoughts Před rokem +17

    The parent using their kids as a confidant is seriously affecting me. I’m too selfless at times and have a hard time acknowledging and validating my own feelings. And im at a point where I’m almost feel like I can’t tell my mom how it feels bc I’m her confidant. The superhero apology makes sense. Thankfully my dad came and saved me. Go dad

  • @m0L3ify
    @m0L3ify Před 3 lety +1328

    Hell, I didn't even realize I grew up in a toxic family at all until I was 40. I was like "What do you mean this isn't normal?!?" 😂

    • @GeorgideMarne
      @GeorgideMarne Před 3 lety +84

      I knew it was really toxic and I left at 18, but sometimes struggle with things that I should have received and didn't. As in: "you guys had icecream for good grades?" "You guys had encouragement for leaving a bad job/guy?" You know the meme... 😑😑 that's me 🤦‍♀️

    • @monikaballah931
      @monikaballah931 Před 3 lety +4

      Me too

    • @RiannaNicole
      @RiannaNicole Před 3 lety +27

      I knew mine was toxic when my father accused me of stealing, and I left then, at 19. I didn’t realize how toxic he was until these last few years (I’m 26, for reference), and I dropped contact with him last year, out of the blue, because I couldn’t handle the tentacles, in a way, that he had on my mental health. He went to everyone but me, asking how I was, or what went wrong.
      Even though he’s a “Facebook friend”, he tapped out of trying to be controlling of me, to the point where he didn’t know my partner and I had adopted a dog. Which I’m grateful for, and I’m still processing not feeling guilty about.
      I didn’t realize how narcissistic he was, until I dropped contact. Thank goodness I’m working on untangling it.
      Sorry for the long tangent, but yes, I feel the same way!

    • @m0L3ify
      @m0L3ify Před 3 lety +18

      @@RiannaNicole It's so hard to see it when you're in it, especially if you were groomed from birth to accept it. I'm glad you're in a better place now! :)

    • @seir323
      @seir323 Před 3 lety +42

      I was in my late 20s? in therapy, and hearing my therapist be like 'wow, that sounds like it was a really hard, and let's deal with the trauma from that' was like "wait, what? That's traumatic??" I always assumed because I wasn't physically or sexually abused, I was 'ok.' Emotional abuse and trauma is real, y'all.

  • @marlokalle9220
    @marlokalle9220 Před 3 lety +1034

    Patrick: "You can be from multiple systems"
    Me: "Ah yes. All of the above"

    • @speaktruth9989
      @speaktruth9989 Před 2 lety +8

      Same

    • @EdieDawnJay
      @EdieDawnJay Před 2 lety +60

      Too bad this isn't like gathering the infinity stones or a lot of us here would have some serious power on our hands 😂 nope, just crippled mental health

    • @aintnobodylikeu
      @aintnobodylikeu Před 2 lety +1

      PLSSSSS

    • @wombatcube
      @wombatcube Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah other than the adoption & single-parent....it felt like every system was my system. I've pushed so much of the feelings away that I'm like bawling a lil bit tonight....but I have to remind myself (and maybe you do as well) that...we're not the ones at fault. Whoever hurt us dealt with their own issues when they saw us, but that wasn't because we're monsters. It's something I recently came to conclude like in a tangible sense in therapy....my mom wasn't finding it hard to love me because of me, she didn't love me because her own issues....issues not involving me at all. Pretty sure a lot of folks can say "Yeah...I know that!" but really taking that sentiment to heart, really bringing it up when you feel like "Well...I guess I deserved that treatment. No wonder!" .....that is a process. I need to go back and take notes about the part where he said what to focus on for recovery lol I wasn't able to process it in one pass lmao!

    • @zaraandrews600
      @zaraandrews600 Před 2 lety +2

      That's exactly what I thought when I got to the end xD

  • @Grey_Warden_Invasion
    @Grey_Warden_Invasion Před 11 měsíci +14

    When I was still a child and a teen I seemed to have come across as pretty responsible and mature for my age. Then I became the opposite. In my 20s I felt like I was a child who needed to have a job for some reason (I also wasn't able to keep a job for long at that age) and now in my 30s I feel like a teenager.

    • @Natalia-fr5pd
      @Natalia-fr5pd Před měsícem

      I have the same. What can we do about it?

  • @enatp6448
    @enatp6448 Před rokem +68

    I really appreciate that you don't just describe these family types but you do it compassionately and you provide some guidance with what to do with the information. Versus some CZcamsrs, with very high credentials, provide very charged info about narcissism or toxic families and then leave the listener with a lot of intense information. Good stuff.

  • @tessarae9127
    @tessarae9127 Před 3 lety +3125

    TIMESTAMPS (thumbs up if helpful)
    7. Looks Good On Paper ~ 3:00
    6. Ships In The Night ~ 6:20
    5. Anti-Love ~ 8:38
    4. Chaos System ~ 11:44
    3. Toxic Divorce ~ 14:45
    2. Toxic Single Parent ~ 19:10
    1. Aggressor + Codependent ~ 22:04
    0. Foster Care / Adopted ~ 24:52

  • @juliekswanson
    @juliekswanson Před rokem +993

    I was completely robbed of a childhood-my parents HATED providing for me or treating me like a child.
    My mother was the youngest in a large family-pampered and coddled and catered to and oh so “special.” I was the oldest and in their family traditions the oldest daughter was basically a domestic servant who reared the children and that’s exactly what they did to me. I remember her mother telling me I needed to help my mother around the house when I was about eight. My whole childhood revolved around meeting the needs of my endlessly selfish, childish mother.

    • @yasminmelbourne6239
      @yasminmelbourne6239 Před rokem +39

      My mother’s family had 4 siblings, she loved her brothers but treated her younger sister (my aunt) like dog crap.
      My sister is on a pedestal and I the youngest is expected to serve the family. It was never relevant to me until I hit my 50s. Such an eye opener. My aunt was a home maker, cared to her husband and parents. My mother was ungrateful for her sacrifice and she will do this to me.

    • @sandrixhozart7838
      @sandrixhozart7838 Před rokem

      What happened to my sister her escape was my cousins needed to b babbysittin

    • @tabathathomas6279
      @tabathathomas6279 Před 11 měsíci +2

      I feel this whole comment. My mom was her twin. So sorry.

    • @shalalala868
      @shalalala868 Před 11 měsíci +3

      WOW..I went through something similar

    • @labrigful
      @labrigful Před 11 měsíci +6

      Thanks for sharing. Children should all help around the house the best they can, but I know what you mean about not helping mom, but being a servant and maid in your own home. Not the same! I sometimes sub in primary school class, so I will have to be aware of this when teaching lessons about helping mom and dad at home.
      I experienced some of that and it's resulted in me being too lenient with my children. I feel guilt for asking to them to do a single chore. I know that's not healthy either.

  • @nicklasdincer6720
    @nicklasdincer6720 Před rokem +21

    This is such a massive issue in the society, i can imagine the impact of toxic / narcisistic people to be a problem equal to that of lets say crime, yet it feels so unacknoledged and underrated. The torture and the consequences for the life of a victim in this case should be treated, on the damage scale, equally as murder. And people that inflict this damage to their victimrs would also kill without hesiation, if it was not forbidden by the law.

  • @zriyazira
    @zriyazira Před rokem +38

    Watching this, I have realized my family was really toxic and had a weird structure. I lost my mom at four and my dad remarried not even a year later. His new wife was incredibly abusive from the start despite me wanting a motherly figure. I realized from quickly not to love her and just to deal with her. My dad was married to her for over 13 years so essentially my whole childhood. I always knew and could recognize she was the toxic person but it was harder for me to realize or accept my dad was. I always thought he 1. didn't know the extent of the abuse (which I found out later was false) and 2. he was little broken emotionally himself and struggled to know a healthy family structure. I now realize he not only allowed the abuse to continue despite obviously sign (ex. he saw my older sister getting choked out by my step mom, me and my sister never had enough stuff while my step sisters did which include clothes, food, etc.) he was also incredibly emotionally abusive. I never got rewarded for good behavior and I was only punished for bad behavior. I was constantly gaslight and guilttripped to do things he wanted me to do (ex. I was told I fail at life if I didn't get more scholarships for college despite having a full ride scholarship already.) I was also forced to be a mediator but I had to toe the line between honest truth and making both sides appear equal like a pro and con situation but constantly (ex. xyz did this but abc said this and this happened). I recently confronted him about this and he not only thinks I'm deflecting my emotions on to him but he has straight denied certain realities of the situation if it made him look bad (ex. he said some one stole my lunch money throughout my schooling and that's why I often didn't have enough money.) He also couldn't get past his own emotions (it was all about his struggles) and I realized my emotions never matter and likely never will. I was just validation for him and probably something a kin to a pet (though I'm not sure he even realizes that). I am thinking of writing him one last time for closure but I also think it is a waste of my time and energy since I know he will never truly listen to me.

    • @zriyazira
      @zriyazira Před rokem +3

      Also, I'd like to add my dad was the breadwinner and despite him saying he would be bankrupted without my step mom, he could have supported us by himself. But he wanted the ideal family and it was never ideal. He also divorced my step not even a year after I left the house so he couldn't handle all that burden falling onto himself.

    • @bluesunquake
      @bluesunquake Před 10 měsíci +4

      He won't give you closure. He'll probably hurt you. I tried it twice.
      It might be what you need to let him go, though.

  • @hannahhannah4048
    @hannahhannah4048 Před 3 lety +1460

    I always told myself my childhood wasn't that bad. And it wasn't that bad. I just thought I had issues and had no idea why. I can't believe the things you have said in your videos, it's like you watched a movie of my childhood. Now I know why I have these hang ups and feel I can start to work through them. Thank you for your videos!

    • @wholewellnesswithann
      @wholewellnesswithann Před 3 lety +162

      Same. Having a childhood that “wasn’t that bad” does NOT mean you had a healthy childhood filled with love, respect, affection, attention, protection, etc. I’m with you on this. I’m 47 and just learning that my toxic family system was ABUSE. Keep going on your healthy journey! It’s done wonders for me over the past year. Good luck!

    • @myosotismalva
      @myosotismalva Před 3 lety +23

      It's an eye opener.

    • @elishacanny8793
      @elishacanny8793 Před 3 lety +4

      @@wholewellnesswithann same!

    • @ashleeskhan4075
      @ashleeskhan4075 Před 3 lety +4

      Same girl same.

    • @mouna8007
      @mouna8007 Před 3 lety +48

      It's difficult to admit to oneself that a parent was an abuser. It feels like you let go of a fairy tale, or you are renouncing your responsibility or a promise you gave for your parent like a betrayer. To see things as they were took me decades.

  • @Salty_Bee
    @Salty_Bee Před 3 lety +716

    How bad was my childhood that I relate to every one of these examples, lol. Anti-love and toxic divorce were the two that hit the hardest. Some ppl should never have kids.

    • @missai.madrid892
      @missai.madrid892 Před 2 lety +9

      I’m so sorry luv, keep fighting !! 😁 u got this

    • @Skeletor8387
      @Skeletor8387 Před 2 lety +3

      SAME HAHA except anti-love and good on paper

    • @Skeletor8387
      @Skeletor8387 Před 2 lety +1

      * especially

    • @speaktruth9989
      @speaktruth9989 Před 2 lety +5

      Omg same especially Anti-love and good on paper as well

    • @lovelace8702
      @lovelace8702 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah anti love, chaos and some stuff here n there. I knew it was bad but this made it hit home that it was about as bad as it can get without actually murderering me. My soul was destroyed and Im working hard all alone to try and fix it. I do believe I can do it but it will take a very long time. So no relationships to detract me. That can only go one way toxic. I cannot heal in that environment. I wish you all the best in your recovery

  • @mchammer5592
    @mchammer5592 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Been a teacher for 20 years now, working with hundreds of kids and even more parents. Everyone asks what the secret sauce is (ie what is the secret to success in the best kids). It’s so funny because the best, most successful, well adjusted kids, come from so many different kinds of families/social classes/etc. the only constant I’ve seen is the parents, continually, and sincerely TRY. They screw up, but then the get up and try again. They focus on helping the kids though each challenge and constantly adapt. The result is usually kids who can say my parents didn’t do it all right, but I accept and forgive them for their mistakes, and am grateful for the work they did and what they got right.

  • @susiebrighouse37
    @susiebrighouse37 Před rokem +30

    Consistently told as an adult by family that I didn’t have it as bad as others so thinking my struggles are my fault, and have been feeling confused and like a bad person because I seem to have involuntarily just checked out from them all nowadays. This video came on autoplay and I saw my family in 3 of the different toxic systems and feeling that weird combo of being shocked, but not surprised? Think this video might be the kick I finally needed to go explore some therapy, appreciate it ❤

  • @tchaika222
    @tchaika222 Před 2 lety +738

    I went on a student exchange in Germany when I was 16. Sure, a learned a bit of German, but more importantly I got to live in a healthy family system away from my own toxic family for a whole three months. I am only beginning to realize what a blessing it was just to know so early that another kind of life was possible, even if I didn't understand that my family was toxic at the time.

    • @CatBarefield
      @CatBarefield Před 2 lety +54

      I had the exact same experience. I was UNCONSOLABLE when i had to leave my beautiful German family in Bavaria… i didnt want to go back to my deadbeat mother and alcoholic stepfather.

    • @jessieswims115
      @jessieswims115 Před 2 lety +32

      Had a similar opportunity, but I was overwhelmed by how wholesome the family was and instead of engaging and learning what I could, I was anxious and self-isolated. I will always regret it.

    • @BetteDavis19
      @BetteDavis19 Před 2 lety +11

      fuck i wanna sign up just to live with another family lol

    • @Anita-dc6ks
      @Anita-dc6ks Před 2 lety +12

      I'm the oldest. From 12 years ol age I was sent away to stay with extended family, student exchange, people who somehow my mother knew from church. Strangers usually to me. In Germany, France, Ireland. Even the us.
      I thought it was normal. Now I know that it was just to get rid.
      BUT more recently I've realised that these were the periods I not only enjoyed/grew the most - and can actually remember in detail. Unlike my home life . I disassociated at home. Can't remember much at all.

    • @shibolinemress8913
      @shibolinemress8913 Před 2 lety +22

      When I was at university, my roommate invited me to spend one Thanksgiving weekend with her family. They were wonderful and I really enjoyed the loving dynamic between each family member. Toward the end of the visit, her dad gently asked me about my family relationships. Turns out he'd sensed almost right from the start that my relationship with my own dad was pretty messed up at the time, just based on my subconscious reactions to him. He very kindly offered advice and support, and I've never forgotten that.

  • @NDB82
    @NDB82 Před 3 lety +135

    I grew up in a cult and once I was grown and able to move out, I looked back and saw the toxicity. Very unhealthy!

    • @Margaretj13
      @Margaretj13 Před 3 lety +7

      No pressure to answer, but can i ask what cult you were raised in? I don’t know if that is a weird or inappropriate question to ask, if it is, I am sorry!

    • @heathermercer2826
      @heathermercer2826 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Margaretj13 my sister and I were raised in one as well. It’s called Christianity.

    • @crosshalt8499
      @crosshalt8499 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Margaretj13 For me it was Islam. Very backwards form of Christianity in hindsight (also after talking to Christian individuals), powered by shame and backed by a toxic sense of community and other-ing

  • @1lyxw
    @1lyxw Před 7 měsíci +4

    I knew my family life was messed up but watching this has made me realize that I relate to 5 of these toxic family systems in one way or another… that’s crazy

  • @turismofoegaming8806
    @turismofoegaming8806 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I grew up on a junkyard as a child and sustained head injuries as early as 16 months of age all the way up until 11 that nearly killed me!!
    Fast forward a few years to when I was 17 and I had to make the decision to pull my own mother off of life support for her own good-
    This resulted in me having to go stay with my grandmother on my father side who has always been a toxic individual especially where her love is concerned!
    She has always been very manipulative and controlling and will literally lie to my face and then act like I was the one that lied and turn things around all the time and it’s just completely toxic! It’s also toxic when I am the most brutally honest person in the family because of the life I had, and the fact that she treats me like I’m somebody that I am not!
    Either way, I seen the title of this video and clicked on it right away due to the fact that I’m interested to learn why my grandmother is this way, why is she the type of person that will do something to punish me and then criticize me for dealing with the fallout of her decision?!?
    Or why she would use her love against me and not tell me “I love you“ if we had just had an argument or if I was asking her why she did me a certain way? But at the end of all of it because of what I experienced in childhood, I know that tomorrow is not promised and as such I always let you know that I love you even if you just cussed me out!

  • @tommybro5313
    @tommybro5313 Před 3 lety +434

    Not every parents deserve children.

    • @j4345
      @j4345 Před 2 lety +20

      But every child deserves a parent

  • @briafae
    @briafae Před rokem +1910

    "Hey mom, I watched this video about different unhealthy family dynamics and I learned a lot about how our family can grow and learn to be...."
    "Yeah I know, we are all just horrible"
    Love this...

    • @bri5018
      @bri5018 Před rokem +151

      It probably isn’t the healthiest thing in the world, but I figured out how to combat this with my own parents. Get on their good side (takes a long time), and then whenever they do something toxic, point it out to them posing as coming from a place of concern, and focusing nearly entirely on how it would negatively affect them. That’s the key- make it their problem, so that’s when they’ll fix it. If you make it seem like the drawback is just hurting another person, they won’t care, because clearly they haven’t cared enough to change their behavior thus far. Then, all that matters is gently steering them towards the best solution by pointing out the cons of their alternative solutions (if they are bad- if they’re good, then point out the pros!), and then only pointing out the pros of the “correct” solution. Maybe mention a singular con, but only if it’s inconsequential and doesn’t affect much to them. Slowly their behavior will change and then you can pretend that they did it because they love you and your siblings, not because you coerced them into change 🥲
      I have to stress though- ONLY do this for good, and if your parent is really that defensive/touchy. You want to influence them while their guard is down. This takes years though- but sometimes it can even lead to them becoming self aware of their past behaviors and actually choosing to go to therapy

    • @abelhapedras
      @abelhapedras Před rokem +4

      ​@@bri5018 I do this too. it's still very difficult, but oh well.

    • @chefbutterrrr
      @chefbutterrrr Před rokem +12

      ​@@bri5018 this is manipulative behavior, that's not healthy.

    • @twobirds5921
      @twobirds5921 Před rokem +23

      @@chefbutterrrr I feel like this is how they cope

    • @bananian
      @bananian Před rokem +1

      At least they're honest lol

  • @SPIRITWILDCHILD28
    @SPIRITWILDCHILD28 Před rokem +14

    My sister and I were illegitimate in the '50s. When my mother married when we were 3 and 4 we were treated like stepchildren by her, our own birth mother. This continued well into our adult life. So painful, such lasting trauma for the 2 of us.

  • @vincentmarzetti8912
    @vincentmarzetti8912 Před 9 měsíci +12

    My family environment was a mix of the "Looks Good on Paper" and "Anti-Love" types Patrick outlines in the video. There was almost like a weird competition going on to see how anti-love my parents could be and still look OK to the outside world. It was heavy duty - and not made easier by me being born highly sensitive, creative, and introverted. A quick extract from a long, long list of spectacular examples of dysfunction: When I was 17, I entered my first serious depression (my distress was ignored). I tried to communicate with my mother how I was feeling and that I was really struggling - I chose to call her on the phone because I was too scared to risk an in-person meeting. She sneered at me and said these words: "People like you commit suicide." Needless to say, I have had a troubled life. I am 60 now and still deal with old stuff on a daily basis in various forms. Some days I am even happy to be alive. Recovery is definitely possible.

  • @ShilohBluecube
    @ShilohBluecube Před 3 lety +977

    My experience with my mother has made me terrified to ever have children. I’m asexual and gay so if I do plan to have kids it will not be by accident.
    I’m just terrified of treating my child how my mother treated me, or how I treated my sister’s because of how she treated me.
    It also has me scared for my partner, I don’t want to hurt them without realizing how I’m acting.

    • @xatz8527
      @xatz8527 Před 3 lety +32

      I felt the same. I have a smallie who takes me for granted and I love it. He doesn't know that love can be limited or transactional and his confidence is incredible. All you can do is be aware. If you want children down the line its perfectly possible to break a generational trend . You deserve love and happiness whatever you decide to do with your life. No need to take your moms baggage with you. ❤ I wish you all the absolute best things in the world for your future!

    • @ShilohBluecube
      @ShilohBluecube Před 3 lety +22

      @@xatz8527 oml, thank you so much! you have no idea how much it means to me that you took time to write this comment

    • @xatz8527
      @xatz8527 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ShilohBluecube no worries at all x

    • @jojo-xk8ri
      @jojo-xk8ri Před 3 lety

      i feel the same

    • @dylan4142
      @dylan4142 Před 3 lety +1

      hi unrelated but whats the flag on the left of your pfp?

  • @rakelmacc5325
    @rakelmacc5325 Před 3 lety +121

    I grew up with a narcissistic father and dependant mother that enabled his narcissism and failed to protect us.

    • @chelsealex1948
      @chelsealex1948 Před 3 lety +2

      Same. It’s horrible still to this day. Thank god I found this video 😭

    • @rakelmacc5325
      @rakelmacc5325 Před 3 lety

      @@chelsealex1948 all I can say from experience is that, at first it seems harsh and wrong. But the long term benefit of not having to carry their burden is life changing. And my family is all the better for it. I am all the better for it.

    • @kurohayashi4465
      @kurohayashi4465 Před 3 lety +2

      Me to. Both my parents still deny any abuse ever happened.

    • @Swashbucklebuckle
      @Swashbucklebuckle Před 3 lety +2

      THAT right there sounds like my mother's parents and well... she didn't do such a good job raising me and my brother either. She has borderline and is always much too occupied with her own emotions, always in the victim role and constantly(!) fighting with my father about anything and everything on a daily(!) basis for now more than 35 years...

  • @lilitunoirrr2601
    @lilitunoirrr2601 Před rokem +33

    I can relate to the Anti-love, Chaos System, Toxic divorce and toxic single parent. I'm the oldest of 3 siblings, my biological dad walked out when i was a baby and i've still never met him. My mum got with some other guy months later who i was raised to call my dad. Both my younger siblings are his. My "dad" was an alcoholic that would cheat all the time, and then they started doing it to each other until they broke up (divorce). He was never really present as a father to me or my siblings and would complain about having to be a dad all the time before the divorce. So after, he was even more absent, other than taking us on his allocated weekends he never really helped any other way and would complain if he had too. I remember my mum running away for a week and leaving us with some random lady, who called "dad" and when he came and was told about it he just was like, nope, im not taking care of them and just walks out to his car and went with no issue, didn't even look back. This same "dad" SA'D me and r*ped me from the age of 14 until i was 18....because i wasn't his biological kid i guess. I've never told my family cause they will all just victim blame me. My childhood was filled with being told that I wasn't good enough and being told that i'm not smart enough to do anything I wanted to do, while my brother and sister were the golden children. When my mum moved on to a new guy, he just brought a lot of domestic violence. There was a lot of chaos with that relationship, i would get home from school to an empty house and they would be at the pub all night as one example. I never felt loved - I was always treated like I was bad and selfish if i didn't think of others before myself (all while no one thought of me). a lot of my struggles and hurts were treated as a joke. All through this my mum, my only biological parent would treat me like i was a burden she never wanted and that i should be thankful she didn't abort me (she said that to me). theres so so much more. I've struggled my whole adult life with feeling worthless, my family still try and control my emotional intelligence so i feel like this. I've went through dv as an adult in my own toxic romantic relationships. I am so anxious even about working because i feel uneasy around people, like they'll hurt me and put me down too. I'm trying to better myself so i can leave my family and find peace and happiness because now that i'm in my 30's and nothing has changed, i realise they never will. I want better for myself.

    • @AdamWestish
      @AdamWestish Před rokem +7

      it can be hard to cut off contact, glad that you did that.

    • @bluesunquake
      @bluesunquake Před 10 měsíci +3

      I'm so sorry you were hurt that badly.

    • @bidheadedsophia
      @bidheadedsophia Před 8 měsíci

      Almost the same except I’m 53 and have 3 younger siblings!
      I wish you good luck on your path to healing.

  • @97JG
    @97JG Před rokem +5

    I come from an Anti-Love family (not immediate family but aunts, uncles, etc.) and it blows my mind how cold, boring and rude people can be. I’m always kind, prioritize my happiness and peace, and love to show love.
    Wish them the best but I’m cool with not receiving it from them… Excited to build my own family one day and have a house full of love - being careful of not becoming a Looks Good on Paper family

  • @Alyrulz421
    @Alyrulz421 Před 3 lety +407

    My mother was extremely overly critical and unreasonable, she got SO MAD when I didn't just automatically understand how to do my own laundry at 11 years old, told me to "figure it out" and just walked away. She'd snap her fingers in my face, hit me, scream at me, simply for daring to not understand things as if I did it on purpose somehow. I'm now worried that I accidentally picked a partner that treats me the exact same way. If I don't hear instructions the first time or do something perfect the first time I'm met with the *exact* same anger (sans physical violence, but screaming ect.) and it's extremely triggering. I'm really not sure what to do now after this revelation, I live with my partner

    • @sheenawilder135
      @sheenawilder135 Před 3 lety +74

      It's good that you recognize it and are aware now. You might be re-living your trauma. Maybe you can have a conversation with them about how this is triggering, or work your way into leaving the situation. I ended up leaving an emotionally abusive partner I lived with, but it took some help along the way. Don't be afraid to ask others for help and perspective into the situation.

    • @NicholsKT
      @NicholsKT Před 3 lety +52

      Start plotting your escape

    • @lmoynihanart
      @lmoynihanart Před 3 lety +50

      All too often those of us who grew up in abusive households become a magnet for people who will abuse us in the similar ways. You don't deserve to be treated badly . You need to consider your future because you matter. If needs be, leave him, get counselling, and break the cycle. Get yourself a better quality of life.

    • @isthataspider7410
      @isthataspider7410 Před 3 lety +20

      That is literal abuse, I hope you find a way to get out of the relationship.

    • @misaetmi
      @misaetmi Před 3 lety +14

      That treatment is abusive and not acceptable. I don't need to hear any more context to know that definitively.
      People can be abusive on purpose or accidentally. Some people can control themselves and choose not to. Others can't control themselves. None of that changes the amount of trauma it will give you.
      Even if someone is trying their best or their intentions are good, that behavior still remains abusive and is traumatizing.
      Sometimes behavior is contextual - one of their past partners could tolerate outbursts just fine, it didn't impact them. That doesn't mean that behavior isn't abusive to a different partner who has different triggers. It can still be abusive.
      Said all that to say, it's not black and white. Don't try to justify abuse away just because it's not all bad. It's your job to take care of yourself first.
      I don't want to sound like I'm blaming you here (obviously the other person should just not behave that way), but pragmatically as an adult you choose what situations to experience and which situations to get rid of*.
      *for the MOST part
      If you're in a place where you can easily tolerate or help someone else's behavior, great. But if you're not, don't. It's not your responsibility or your fault at the end of the day. We're all responsible for ourselves.
      tldr move out when you can

  • @jamesbow5916
    @jamesbow5916 Před 3 lety +493

    I have several friends who grew up in the "looks good on paper" household. They all share several unique traits. They know how to model kindness and empathy (which is often more like sympathy), but it isn't genuine. They don't know how to be intimate as they tend to shut down when emotional discussions arise. They might be good listeners, but they don't know how to share intimacy in return. They are completely "armored up" emotionally and will never take emotional risks. Their greatest sources of comfort is that they have done the right thing, their lives are NOT messy emotionally/relationally/aesthetically, and they have rarely been hurt emotionally.

    • @kingquan3826
      @kingquan3826 Před 3 lety +20

      Omg you literally just described my ex and their family problems.

    • @creoagency1882
      @creoagency1882 Před 3 lety +39

      True. I know similar people- they also tend to be high achievers and religious but hurt many people in getting to attain all the achievements. Most move on without care, and pretend their families are amazing and if you openly speak about yours- they show the "sympathy" but never talk about theirs. They have victim mentality and blame games. They usually are takers, and think pain is completely normal and nobody should care to heal. Everyone needs to heal, except them haha...

    • @jamesbow5916
      @jamesbow5916 Před 3 lety +6

      @@electricfishfan7159 That is fascinating. Is this more common of children from homes that experience divorce when the children are younger?

    • @talea9593
      @talea9593 Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like my cousins. My aunt is all about having the prefect family.

    • @talea9593
      @talea9593 Před 3 lety +13

      @@bmccameron7642 He's talking straight facts. But if you want to view your toxic upbringing in a way that makes you a victim that can't achieve anything then by all means, continue.

  • @jeanne21112
    @jeanne21112 Před rokem +8

    #4. It made sense to hear it. Never unpacked, no stability. Had moved 30x. Was working full time in high school to make sure I could meet my own needs. My mom left 12x when I was a kid, just would disappear and come back a few weeks or months later.

  • @ambersantodomingo5006
    @ambersantodomingo5006 Před rokem +6

    I grew up in the Chaos system. I am chaotic as an adult and I hate having daily routine. As a mom I am desperate to adapt to a routine to help my kids have a better life. I had no idea how much help I needed until I saw myself repeating my mom's and dad's ways of dealing with and communicating things.

  • @Lahlahsastar
    @Lahlahsastar Před 3 lety +209

    When I started to tell people about my life at home (which I was told not to), people have either gotten really angry, very shocked or cried. I never knew my life was not normal, so I just took everything very lightly even though it was destroying me. What’s funny is my life is a mix of about three of these.

    • @bluepsiongamer4909
      @bluepsiongamer4909 Před 3 lety +21

      It is really strange to talk about your family with other people. I know the statistics but I don't actually believe there are families where children are not physically struck or yelled at. People can tell me and I just don't believe them. I got a dog last year and it is the first dog I've ever gotten as a five week old puppy. Now a year old he's fearless, affectionate and well trained. He is so much more trusting then the shelter dogs I usually take home (don't get me wrong, shelter dogs are awesome). I think it is because I never was nasty with him and never would think of striking him. He's not even afraid of brooms or rolled up newspapers! ...So I try to think of him when I think about the possibility that some kids are raised without violence.

    • @monochromedream-eatingbaku
      @monochromedream-eatingbaku Před 3 lety +11

      Right? I always talk about my childhood very lightly, and people always give me these looks. It's shocking, because I just assumed that it was normal, especially since my extended family was the same as my parents. Or even when I talk about my school life and my peers, people stare at me in shock. I just go "What? It's a funny story! That never happened to you?" and they're like "Uh...no?" and it's super weird to me. I feel like it has to be funny though, both my family life and school life, because otherwise it'd be just sad, so it has to be a funny story, you know? Like, everyone's childhood was funny, they have funny stories, so I want my childhood to be funny too, I want to look at it with laughter, even if I have to laugh at something fucked up.

    • @solala1312
      @solala1312 Před 3 lety +4

      I lied so much as a child. my addiction ridden family expected loyalty from us kids, even though there was none in return. their criminal lifestyle forced me to be secretive and silent for so many years. to this day I feel guilt when telling the truth about my past.

    • @kaitlynabellar7625
      @kaitlynabellar7625 Před 3 lety

      yeah the moment of realization when you figure out your life is not normal....

    • @solala1312
      @solala1312 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TejubescDM pain is no competition and your perspective is vailid no matter what! there will always be people "who have it worse" but this mindset does not help those people or yourself. you have every right to get help and get better!

  • @FionavanDahl
    @FionavanDahl Před 3 lety +330

    22:30 Ah yes, the codependent, or as you call them, the "I just work here" parent.

    • @xoxdid
      @xoxdid Před 3 lety

      Couldn't have said it better

  • @belletoro3100
    @belletoro3100 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I’m definitely a little chaos, a touch toxic divorce, and a smidge toxic single parent on top of being raised as a member of the “working poor” class, so I was a latchkey kid with free lunches and dirty shoes. My mom tried her best but she’s neurotic. I get anxious from disorder and when things are unplanned. I always need to have “backups” ie: plenty of food, clothes, shampoo, batteries, car filled with gas, etc. My own marriage is suffering now due to communication issues.

  • @syntacc8462
    @syntacc8462 Před rokem +9

    I grew up in a chaotic family and you spelled it out exactly without ever having met me, I am 24, I struggle to make friends and be in groups. My house decor is disjointed, I have developed involuntary dissociation (secondary structural), I have symptoms of ADHD from having to be on edge from moving 2-4 times a year when i was with my parents. Moving is incredibly disorienting now, I don't even feel like i live in my house. They were opiate addicts and you said it right, it's like being a pet. I lived like a neglected dog that was kenneled for 12 years.
    I am going through personal developments I should have had at 13-18 but couldn't because I had zero support, I had to wait until i could be the adult with the money to provide myself with the support I needed to reach development goals like socializing, understanding finances, taking care of myself. I was a child trying to raise myself but no child will ever be prepared to parent. I am behind my peers, I am still trying to get an undergrad while recovering from the consequences of the extreme neglect. I feel like i was robbed of many years, like I didn't even start living until I was 22.. It was deeply damaging and I walk with the consequences every second of every day.
    I have a hard time conceptualizing my home as mine. I still live at my desk a lot because I am not used to interacting with the physical world, I grew up on the internet. I also eneded up being adopted, and I struggle to move my body a lot because I am so unused to it. I live in my head all the time.
    I meet so few people who understand this type of hardship. If you read this do you know of books about life like this ? or memoirs?

    • @janetdodson3529
      @janetdodson3529 Před 8 měsíci

      You could explore John Bradshaw's books. Homecoming comes to mind. Take care. You deserve to learn to self care.

    • @TRey5o5
      @TRey5o5 Před 8 měsíci

      you saying they stunted your growth because of lack of support really hit home for me. i completely understand were your coming from. and it rlly hurts when they try and throw it in your face like it was your fault/or take zero accountability(well at least from me experience)

  • @thomaskeets3194
    @thomaskeets3194 Před 2 lety +1466

    As a teacher, I have experience interacting with many families and can easily identify each archetype. This helps to develop a better understanding of what children may be experiencing/internalizing. I also appreciate that you included foster children too. Their plight often goes unnoticed.

    • @coraline3532
      @coraline3532 Před 2 lety +53

      wow .. world needs more great teachers like U

    • @dnk4559
      @dnk4559 Před 2 lety +60

      Thank you Thomas Keets for being willing to do this. I will always be thankful for my teacher Mr. Emerick who took me home when my alcoholic mother forgot to pick me up, who protected me when other kids bullied me because I was not dressed properly and smelled. He saw me and was kind to me. He showed me there are good people in this world. Other teachers, at best, pretended like I didn’t exist.
      You are making a huge difference in some child’s life. I have never been able to find Mr. Emerick(spelling?) to thank him but I give me thanks to you!

    • @thomaskeets3194
      @thomaskeets3194 Před 2 lety +38

      @@dnk4559,
      Thank you for your heartfelt response. It's very much appreciated. I believe “Mr. Emrick” would be proud to know how appreciative and reflective you have become. Know that you are worthy of every blessing that comes your way, and I wish you many.

    • @dnk4559
      @dnk4559 Před 2 lety +18

      @@thomaskeets3194 Thank you so much!

    • @angelabeatty6538
      @angelabeatty6538 Před 2 lety +11

      Me too. I feel like a therapist many days. Thankful to work with precious students

  • @Misterydwn
    @Misterydwn Před 3 lety +667

    I can't put into words how absolutely ****validated**** I feel rn. THANK YOU from the bottom of my heart, thank you. I grew up in the anti-love family. No one has ever fully understood or believed me when I said I grew up not loved and hated. Hearing someone else put it in words so perfectly is validating alone, but coming from a trauma therapist is so comforting and really, thank you!!!

    • @itgetter9
      @itgetter9 Před 3 lety +27

      I had a romantic partner who, when little, was told by their mom: "No one will ever love you." Once you've heard such cruelty from a parent at such a tender age, you really face a huge uphill climb. I hope you find love because you deserve it.

    • @Kas_Styles
      @Kas_Styles Před 3 lety +4

      💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💗

    • @blickiminjaj9162
      @blickiminjaj9162 Před 3 lety +3

      Stay strong and head up sis

    • @guyss6611
      @guyss6611 Před 3 lety +3

      Me too 😢... This video saved me...

    • @Bakerygo
      @Bakerygo Před 3 lety +3

      I believe you, because I know how frustrating it is to not being believed.

  • @plantstho6599
    @plantstho6599 Před rokem +3

    Nobody ever looks at the structure of society and how it effects our personal and familial growth. Never once does this come into question.

  • @RosenBlanche84
    @RosenBlanche84 Před rokem +6

    7 is an underrated difficulty. Especially if you’re born into a family who has money or a certain amount of affluence… you’re expected to do just like them with so many strings attached, even if say, the presence of more money makes it easier to buy things. It’s difficult to unlearn finding your value in titles, certificates, or material objects when it was all you were raised to know. In reality it may have been what you settled for because no one around you knew how to be real and show affection. They say money can’t buy love… and it’s true. Love is a way of life - not a thing we can own. Good luck to anyone on any of these journeys.

  • @jordanoliver8429
    @jordanoliver8429 Před 3 lety +237

    i personally experienced a mix of “looks good on paper” and “anti-love” which resulted in me having a fun combination of extremely high standards and hatred for myself. i have struggled for years to believe that i am a good person, that i am worth loving, and that i still will be loved even if i make a mistake. as an adult i’m very sensitive, and at the first sign that anyone is disappointed or upset with me i completely crumble. but having moved away from my parents & getting therapy, things are definitely getting better. so to anyone out there experiencing something similar- you are good and you are worth loving, even if you don’t always feel like it. the inherent value you have will not go away because you don’t live up to a standard. and finally, it’s okay to be upset that you were taught the opposite. it’s okay to be angry. you deserve to acknowledge that how you were raised was wrong, and you deserve to heal from it.

    • @soysaucetina
      @soysaucetina Před 3 lety +1

      i am also a mix of those two twinz 🥰 haate this for us lmao

    • @Elya08
      @Elya08 Před 3 lety +3

      Thank you for saying this. I’m literally crying right now because I’m so stressed. I have CPTSD, and it’s kicking my butt today. I definitely struggle with feeling like I’m not a good person, perfectionism, and with wondering if I’m worth loving. Today especially. But when I saw this, the tears started rolling and I felt so angry… So angry for the emotional and sometimes physical neglect, so angry for the sibling violence I witnessed and experienced, so angry for my older brother repeatedly sexually abusing me… so scared and angry for all the health issues and unexpected traumatic events I’ve lived through. I am just so angry… and tired.
      And that’s okay. It’s okay that I’m freaking angry for not having the safety and security, the emotional love and connections I should have had growing up, because now that I see what I’ve lived through, maybe for the first time, I can finally heal these wounds.
      Maybe… I can learn to thrive and overcome the odds, because I’ve already survived, so I know I’m resilient and resourceful. Now I just need to learn better coping and life skills that I didn’t get to while growing up.

    • @darkmoore05
      @darkmoore05 Před 3 lety +4

      This. So much. For me, love was never unconditional and I often feel unlovable. It's the one thing I have sworn to myself my kids would never feel like. I tell them I love them, no matter what, all the time. And I mean it. I'm not a perfect mom by a long shot, but my kids know I'm in their corner and nothing they can do or say will make me stop loving them. There are no conditions to meet, no hoops to jump through. They deserve the kind of love I didn't get to have.

    • @matheussanthiago9685
      @matheussanthiago9685 Před 3 lety +2

      just as I was about to move out of my parent's house pandemic hit?
      I lost the two jobs I held as my last resource to land on my feet
      and had to postpone this ultimate goal to the foreseeable future
      if anyone ask how haven't I gone mad I have no answer
      I probably did, but just continue to live with some degree of normalcy
      just waiting for the unconscious demon to wake up and screw me again

  • @etaokha4164
    @etaokha4164 Před 2 lety +102

    My mother's favourite words was "I brought you here and you'll be nothing without me" 😂. I proofed her wrong. I walked away from my dysfunctional family and narc mother and got my own home and started my own family and moved on with my happy life without them.

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Good on you

    • @livandmaddieftwrobloxnoobs8518
      @livandmaddieftwrobloxnoobs8518 Před 11 měsíci

      Yeah, but watch that you don’t become like your mother. Your mother was probably toxic because her parents were, and the past generations can really predict how you’ll raise your child.

    • @preciousdado5113
      @preciousdado5113 Před 11 měsíci

      Happy for you. Not because it is Blood we will tolerate abuse and dispespect

  • @jennadabomb
    @jennadabomb Před 10 měsíci +6

    Because neither of my parents hit me I thought i had an okay childhood for sooo long. But watching this I felt like at least 3 of these described my upbringing

  • @vmrb1234
    @vmrb1234 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I didn’t realize I buried so many childhood emotions. Some of these truly resonate with how I parent currently. I wish I had this info sooner I hoped that I would have avoided many of my mistakes.

  • @eyreheadi
    @eyreheadi Před 2 lety +1010

    I've gone to therapists off and on over the years, giving them a really solid try each time (six months or more). None were able to identify the dysfunction of my family as clearly and concisely as this dude on youtube whom I've never met, and all within ten minutes.

    • @JordanKerk99
      @JordanKerk99 Před 2 lety +37

      It's not really the therapist's job to do that. You go to them with what is bothering you and they help guide you through it. Their job isn't to predict your past traumas. Their job would be, for example, to discuss the parts of this video that resonated with you personally, after you bring it up to them.

    • @julesfalcone
      @julesfalcone Před 2 lety +145

      @@JordanKerk99 after years of therapy he should have received more than the info in this video.

    • @attheranch873
      @attheranch873 Před 2 lety +63

      @@JordanKerk99 The right therapist can do it, mine did. It’s best we’rewhen looking for a therapist to find one who specializes in family systems.

    • @cherylfleming5791
      @cherylfleming5791 Před 2 lety +5

      I spent 7 and a half yrs this last time and no one could help me..no one. I give up..

    • @eyreheadi
      @eyreheadi Před 2 lety +121

      @@JordanKerk99 Why should I pay someone $150 an hour if they don't even have the basic insight to say, "Hey, that thing your parents did is pretty fucked up"? If I just want someone to stare and nod at me while I elucidate exactly how and why and to what degree my family was dysfunctional, I can put a blowup doll in a rocking chair without the hourly rate. You seem to be unaware of the fact that growing up in a dysfunctional family means that you take a lot of this crap for granted as "normal" because 1. as a kid you have no other frame of reference and 2. chances are you've been consistently gaslit not to trust your own experiences.

  • @greatcrispy1
    @greatcrispy1 Před 3 lety +138

    Everything was like "maybe?" Until the single parent, which my parents aren't divorced, but my father was so neglectful and uninvolved that my mother was raising 4 children, working, and running the house on her own, so the "you didn't ask to be a burden, and being treated as a confidant was really spot on

  • @loisdahl3839
    @loisdahl3839 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Thank you again for finally giving me the actual insight I never got from conventional therapy!! Amazing! I’m calling my “family” anti-love. I in particular was scapegoated because of two offenses I committed against them at birth: I wasn’t a boy, and was unusually dark-complected as opposed to them or any other family member. My mother couldn’t insult me enough, it was constant and non-stop with her insults: “I don’t know what’s wrong with you”, “You think you love your kids but sometimes you don’t know”, “I love my kids, but I’m not blind”, and finally really laid it on the line with “You know, Lois, we didn’t think we’d be raising kids at our age, we thought we’d be retired and enjoying ourselves!” And when I told her I was seeing a (useless) “therapist”: I “can’t IMAGINE what I did wrong!”😨

    • @loisdahl3839
      @loisdahl3839 Před 7 měsíci

      I just sent Patrick a post nearly identical to yours! I too saw a “psychologist” for years without feeling any real improvement whatsoever. Astounding! But now, finally - here it is!!

  • @ec8968
    @ec8968 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I think I had the toxic single parent. My mother died, my dad had CPTSD that mostly made him depressed as opposed to aggressive, though he could be verbally aggressive at times. He wasn't emotionally present and intellectualized many problems or simply shut down when he felt something was a hassle.
    My bf had the aggressor+codependent dynamic. We are working through our respective traumas together as much as we can.

  • @BestBetterBestest
    @BestBetterBestest Před 2 lety +290

    I never even realized my family was toxic until we all moved into a 1 bedroom apartment together, and suddenly I realized with horror that I couldn't stand to be around my own family for more than minutes at a time.

    • @kfrenchiiee
      @kfrenchiiee Před 2 lety +15

      I'm currently living in that hell

    • @yazminelle8331
      @yazminelle8331 Před 2 lety +4

      That's my husband and his sister...can stand each other 1 week maximum !
      In my case, me and my sister...get along better once we grow up...as children we were fighting for toys or whatever all the time ....😂🤣😂

    • @fernandorodriguez6941
      @fernandorodriguez6941 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/Q5QIFizWCsE/video.html

    • @y_483
      @y_483 Před 2 lety

      @@kfrenchiiee same here 😩

    • @wanderlovesus7777
      @wanderlovesus7777 Před 2 lety +3

      @@yazminelle8331 I can’t stand my sister in-law she’s so toxic!
      She’s very narcissistic, vain and a drama queen. I’m always hearing that she has an issue with someone, and yet plays the victim to her parents..

  • @jennyfox1398
    @jennyfox1398 Před 3 lety +828

    I wish I could have this guy as my therapist. *Chaos, toxic divorce and agressor+codependent* Moved probably 20 times. Still haven't unpacked after 2 years. Codependency, rage, guilt, shame, confusion, lack of direction etc.
    For those reading this. It gets better with work and time. Dont give up.
    You are not irreparably broken.
    I cannot beleive I've never read or heard about this. After so books and videos never has anyone given this information. This guy deserves a freaking 🏅 medal!

    • @LexiA0327
      @LexiA0327 Před 3 lety +8

      I had the same three I didn’t realize how many people had the same issues that I did.You didn’t deserve any of it healing starts now.Hugs.🥰

    • @jennyfox1398
      @jennyfox1398 Před 3 lety +5

      @@LexiA0327 thank you so much for the support. I'm so sorry you had to experience those things in your life. I hope you find all the support and live the world has to offer❤ You are valuable. Hugs back

    • @Dr.RBZultrarunningnewbie
      @Dr.RBZultrarunningnewbie Před 3 lety +1

      @@jennyfox1398 p

    • @breakingpoint3893
      @breakingpoint3893 Před 3 lety +9

      me too I don't know why it's so hard for us to find therapists that are this knowledgeable for ourselves, I wanna get a new one. There's a book on Amazon that is called complex PTSD, it's a blue book with puzzle pieces on it, and there's a matching workbook to go with it, so far I'm really liking it. at the end of each chapter it gives you a coping skill to try, and it can be a little triggering to read but it's worth going the extra mile for. I hope you are doing good as well and thank you for the encouragement!

    • @jennyfox1398
      @jennyfox1398 Před 3 lety +2

      @@breakingpoint3893 it is weird. Why is cptsd and ptsd so mystifying for theralists. Its like most cant even identify it. Everyone I've ever met with ptsd was misdiagnosed at some point, including myself. Thanks for the tip on the book. I'd picked it up and was hesitant because I just didn't know if it would help. I'm so glad to hear it does! Thank you. I'm lucky and can somewhat function now thanks to emdr. It turned my life around big time.
      I hope you find love, support and an awesome therapist. Dont give up! Big hug from a sister with cptsd!

  • @spb8039
    @spb8039 Před rokem +8

    Is there a video on the rage that survivors of childhood abuse carry? The PTSD associated with surviving your family and the distrust of every and anyone who remotely resembles the abuse that was inflicted in the past?

  • @dgsmith9969
    @dgsmith9969 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Perfection, Ships in the Night, Anti-Love Family, Aggressor/Co-dependent switching off - All of these.

  • @epicsnail14
    @epicsnail14 Před 3 lety +38

    My family treated this video like a checklist

  • @notpub
    @notpub Před 3 lety +675

    The first time I was allowed to go over to a friend's house and stay the night I was 11. When I witnessed how genuinely warm this family was with one another, I was shocked. Literally shocked. I had never seen anything like this. I could not believe that the other kids in my friend's family (including my friend) were allowed to express their unedited ideas without interruption, sneering, yelling, or retribution if it didn't match their parent's ideas on the subject. I couldn't believe the adults limited themselves to just one glass of wine with dinner. I could not believe they had such a beautiful table layout with matching silverware and fresh flowers and dishes that people passed to one another in turns. It seemed odd that everyone did something to clean up the table afterwards, including the Dad doing dishes and loading the dishwasher.... I thought that my family's 'AntiiLove"/'Chaos" Dynamic was normal. My question is: What percentage of people do you think come from acutely dysfunctional families? Is it 1 in 5? 3 of 10? By acutely dysfunctional I mean beatings, neglect, silent treatments, using children as slave labor, patriarchal subservience, yelling, moving multiple times, codependency, and the like. Thanks!

    • @bluegum6438
      @bluegum6438 Před 3 lety +33

      I think usually when you meet a complete a-hole they are somebody who has suffered all their life and been shown a dysfunctional model of interaction with others... I would also be really interested to know how many people are raised in these environments.

    • @notpub
      @notpub Před 3 lety +30

      @@bluegum6438 My Dad used to say: "There's an asshole in every group of people. If you can't figure out who it is, then it's YOU."

    • @casualviewer_
      @casualviewer_ Před 2 lety +24

      I had something similar, which made me fully realize how toxic the situation I was in was. I remember going to a friend's place, and her and her mom were "fighting". Their fighting was being respectful and maybe a little passive aggressive. But they gave each other space and handled it like adults. Now, I was devastated at this. For my situation, their worst fighting day was my best day ever with my parent. Our fights would escalated to me breaking a chair over their knees to get them off of me. I was absolutely shocked to see what normalcy looked like.

    • @notpub
      @notpub Před 2 lety +8

      @@TejubescDM I think what you describe is imperfect, but within normal limits. My family of origin, on the other hand, is toxic as the day is long.

    • @badgerfern6469
      @badgerfern6469 Před 2 lety +28

      The dad doing dishes hits hard

  • @abookwormcalledisa
    @abookwormcalledisa Před 11 měsíci +3

    It was a mix of anti-love and chaos systems for me. I always became close with my friends' families and I think that is what really saved me and allowed me to get to a good place in life.

  • @dawnmanthey7202
    @dawnmanthey7202 Před 4 dny

    Thank you for including the Foster child... its a unique life issue filled with abandonment and constant chaos, complete upheaval, and in my case, given no choice and a state of unwanted powerlessness. So much pain from so many sources...