Raging, Blaming, & Justifying Your Behavior Won’t Heal Relationships

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Part of healing from trauma is getting to the point where you can HONESTLY take responsibility for your behaviors (and trauma can activate some harsh behavior!). But just because bad things happened to you in the past, doesn’t mean it’s OK to lash out, or cop out, or try to control other people. Blaming other people, or “parts” of yourself is only going to push the people you’ve further away. If you want good relationships with other people, you’re going to have to do the hard work of honestly facing yourself - not just the way you were hurt, but the way you hurt others -and taking steps to change.In this video I respond to a letter from a woman who wants a better relationship with her daughter, who keeps blocking contact with her.
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Пікірлер: 125

  • @user-nr7bj3qq1y
    @user-nr7bj3qq1y4 ай бұрын

    I am an attachment based and family constellations therapist, I am consistently blown away by how deeply Anna understands attachment and family systems. I always send clients to her. She is the real deal ❤

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you! If you'd ever be open to sharing this in a way we can add to our website, we'd be honored. Just in case you would, you can reach my team at hello@crappychildhoodfairy.com

  • @mayamachine

    @mayamachine

    4 ай бұрын

    yes, agreed, I recommend this channel as well.

  • @carole9409

    @carole9409

    4 ай бұрын

    What is the fear and resentments rules? Or link please

  • @Rockerlady

    @Rockerlady

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@CrappyChildhoodFairyHello. Are the letters you read hand written or email? Just curious 😊

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    @rockerlady email. The address is in the description section.

  • @nicolameikle8737
    @nicolameikle87374 ай бұрын

    Waking up to the fact you weren’t a good parent but a dysfunctional one due to your trauma absolutely breaks your soul 😢

  • @tracy3812

    @tracy3812

    4 ай бұрын

    It’s one of the reasons I never had kids.

  • @onetuliptree

    @onetuliptree

    4 ай бұрын

    The kindest thing you can do is to heal yourself.

  • @nicolameikle8737

    @nicolameikle8737

    4 ай бұрын

    @@onetuliptree i am.. my x2 adult children & I now know the whys the how’s etc etc of who I was and how that affected them.. every day is a lesson & a journey

  • @nicolameikle8737

    @nicolameikle8737

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tracy3812 I was a very young mother .. definitely not ideal .. especially when it took me to my 40’s to work out why I was the way I was 💔

  • @tracy3812

    @tracy3812

    4 ай бұрын

    @@nicolameikle8737 I can only imagine! But let’s focus on the fact that you did get everything sorted.

  • @dervlam4698
    @dervlam46984 ай бұрын

    I’ve recently cut contact with my mom (I’m 31), and my mom also acts like she doesn’t understand/doesn’t know what the problem is, despite my trying to have conversations with her about it a dozen times over 10 years. Her meddling, controlling, and hypercritical behavior only increased as I became an independent adult. That’s what solidified my decision to become estranged.

  • @mayamachine

    @mayamachine

    4 ай бұрын

    good for you, I went no contract over 20 years ago. It was hard but the best thing I could have done. good for you.

  • @bebopbonsai

    @bebopbonsai

    4 ай бұрын

    I’m 43 and I have been through this. I have spent most of my adult life not in contact with my mother. She missed out on so many things, including my two children and my decades-long (still goin strong) relationship with an amazing woman, as well as an entire career, and the beginning of a second career. She always liked me more when I was struggling, and never missed a chance to criticize and belittle me. She talked shit about me any chance she got, always making herself out to be the innocent victim to my “bad son”. She is alone in her old age. No friends, no family left that she hasn’t cut out or destroyed her relationship with. It sucks, but I’m way happier without her in my life. I’m more productive, confident, and authentic. For so many years I tried. I begged her to attend therapy with me and offered to pay for it. Always ended badly, and after a while I stopped thinking it was my fault. As a father, I know how hard it is, but I cannot imagine ever treating my children the way I was treated. Good on you. Stay strong. Stay in your power. Edit: no, she never agreed to counseling or family therapy with me, because according to her, I’m an awful man and I would lie to the therapist to make her look bad, and that the therapist would believe me over her.

  • @elizabethfindlay5752

    @elizabethfindlay5752

    3 ай бұрын

    Sounds similar to my story. It's hard but well worth it when your parent doesn't want to own their mistakes. I want to move past it but not without a proper conversation first. Ignoring it and sending a card of how much she misses me won't cut it. Will they ever wake up to their self-destruction?

  • @djer05010401
    @djer050104014 ай бұрын

    Writer, I am 43 and I cut off contact with my mother a couple of years ago. For what it's worth, having a healthy relationship with my partner and working on having healthy relationships with my kids opened my eyes to a lot of issues with my mother that I wasn't really focused on before. It was like once I knew what good love felt like, and how a good enough mother prioritized and supported her kids, all of the unhealthy issues with my mother stood out in stark contrast in a way they hadn't before, because our difficult relationship had just been "normal" to me. Please don't blame other people in your daughter's life for the boundaries she has chosen to set with you. Her perspective will shift as she grows, and that's to be expected. The job of being a parent is never done.

  • @bebopbonsai

    @bebopbonsai

    4 ай бұрын

    I’m 43 too. I had a similar journey, including parenthood and realizing how unstable and unpredictable things were my entire young life. If our parents can get regulated and see themselves the way others see them, yeah, they can come around. I’d love to agree with you that the writer should give it time. But, all too often older people are so stuck in their ways that the only way they can preserve their fragile or broken self is to live in delusion and deny the reality of who they are and what they have done.

  • @MalistaChristy

    @MalistaChristy

    4 ай бұрын

    This is so true. Dont blame others when the children want to cut off their toxic parents..u reap what u sow..other people only a tester and amplifyers of what the parents did to their children..

  • @britt5650
    @britt56504 ай бұрын

    Id be willing to bet that her daughter started to understand what a secure relationship means from her boyfriend/ his family. A similar situation happened to me and the realization that families with healthy boundaries exist made me really resent my mom for not even trying and refusing to take any accountability. I grew up having no boundaries. I thought it was normal only to get into awful relationships and believing that loving someone means staying with them no matter what. If you are reading this OP, at least take satisfaction in knowing your daughter is learning how to protect herself and be an emotionally well regulated adult. You also have trauma and it is possible for you to break the cycle. For now, the best thing is to give her time and respect her boundaries. You are worthy of love but the love you are seeking from your daughter can only come from yourself.

  • @user-tq4fm4he8i
    @user-tq4fm4he8i4 ай бұрын

    The writer sounds resentful at her daughter. Like she's secretly blaming her daughter for being unreasonable. That comes from a feeling of not having been seen oneself. But that is no excuse to pass it on to your child.

  • @Thomassina1
    @Thomassina14 ай бұрын

    My cousin could hv written this letter. Her sweet-natured and talented daughter left the house at 19, eschewed a promising education/career to marry the first nice guy she met. His family love her; with that new-found security and acceptance she started to pull away completely from her mother (my cousin) who was furious and heartbroken. I recall holiday dinners ruined when my cousin would rage at her husband, and son, over trivial things; they were helping out but did it the wrong way, etc. Everyone would sit there in stony silence feeling sorry for the family held captive. Humiliating. One such time I got ready to leave, the daughter pleaded with me to stay, said she always does this and to ignore it. I remember the resolute look on her face thinking there will be a price for this one day. And there was.

  • @artlover625
    @artlover6254 ай бұрын

    I have a mother that rages, blame and justifies her behavior. I cut off contact with her as soon as I turned 18 and was able to go to college. My mother treats people really badly, she has no friends, she creates confusion and conflict with people everywhere she goes. But she behaved like she was genuinely confused that I was relieved to get out of her house. To the letter writer, you might not really be reflecting on all the things she watched you do and how that had already shaped her opinion of you. Even if you hadn't raged at her when she was young, seeing you do it to others leaves an imprint. It comes across like you are a dangerous person and like you're a ticking time bomb. You might be kind to her today but if she does something you don't like or you're just in a mood and turn your focus to her she's going to feel the boom. The problem with blaming and justifying is also it makes the other person feel dismissed and silenced. They can't even tell you when you've done something they don't like because you start blaming other things or saying you are justified because of this or that. For me when I am around people that do those things I don't stay in the relationship because it feels pointless. If I can't express myself and be heard and you could start raging at any moment, it's a dangerous combo. This is not to make you feel discouraged though, it's to say it's important to consider the person on the other side and if you can start actively doing that by reflecting on the situations and making different choices like, pausing to think before you speak - you can avoid some critical comments getting out. And if you can have a conversation with her where you can say, "I was thinking about this thing and I didn't realize how that must have been for you. Do you mind telling me how you felt? I'm interested in how you feel." That could make a big difference, especially if you can hear her out and not blame or justify your part. Just listen, take it in, and maybe apologize.

  • @user-tq4fm4he8i

    @user-tq4fm4he8i

    4 ай бұрын

    Well said

  • @meganromano9582

    @meganromano9582

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes!!!

  • @lilithowl
    @lilithowl4 ай бұрын

    BAM! Once again Fairy hits the nail on the head with unerring accuracy. And without any unkindness or disrespect. Her gift. For me the giant red flag and 'aha' moment came when the letter writer said she had been *angry* about her university -aged daughter getting tattoos. And that she had expressed that anger. Lots of parents don't *like* the tattoos (or piercings, haircuts, etc) that their kids get, even as adults. But to be *angry* about it reveals a real problem - especially when it doesn't affect you in any way, and when your child is enough of an adult to be at university. It is none of our business how other adults decorate their bodies, including our own offspring. It's nothing we need to 'respect'. So it tells me this writer has big problems with boundaries, leading to controlling behaviour - and unreasonable and disproportionate responses towards any resistance to this control. As the letter went on I became more convinced of this, and Fairy confirmed it. I agree with Anna that a lack of insight is the stumbling block to really setting off down the road of healing (of herself) and of genuine reconciliation (with her daughter - hopefully). The letter writer has been hurt in her past, and for this I have compassion, especially as it very much affects her present. I hope the she can heed Fairy's advice and start to free herself (and her daughter) from the long shadows of her past. She is clearly someone who wants to do this, and I wish her all the best. ❤️

  • @adcap631
    @adcap6314 ай бұрын

    You get to the heart of it so well. My mother used to tell me, accusingly, that she knew she was a bad mother but it 'wasn't easy'. Early in life I became her 'kind' sidekick to reassure her that she was a good mum. This was the birth place of my fawning. Actually she was a terrible mother, and to find my truth I had to push her away. I tried forgiveness, sounded great but simply meant I found a deeper place to hide my pain. Later in life, I found my addiction to fawning, (with the resentment that I wasn't being appreciated). It is up to me to understand, heal and change. Acceptance has replaced forgiveness. Still exhausting but very empowering

  • @AnitaBetterScreenname
    @AnitaBetterScreenname4 ай бұрын

    I'm getting a sense of manipulation from "Lisa" She is not accepting responsibility for her actions and behaviors. Personally, "raging" or yelling at me would lead me to push that toxic person out of my life.

  • @melissamaya1066
    @melissamaya10663 ай бұрын

    Dear Fairy: I am "Lisa." I agree with everything you said. I passed onto my daughter the idea that she needed to be perfect to win affection. And that if I really healed, I would have more confidence in myself. The fact that I still struggle with insecurities is telling. I like your advice to stop separating my inner child from me. It was a metaphor to refer to CPTSD. The inner child represents the trauma I experienced. I get that healing oneself takes accepting responsibility. But, as you reveal, it is more than just accepting responsibility. I hadn't realized how damaging justifying my behavior has been to my relationship with others, and to myself. What I take from this video is a better understanding of the situation from my daughter's perspective. I need to respect her boundaries. And, even though I didn't think I was making excuses for the abuse I myself caused, I actually was making excuses. I am very grateful to the comments from the viewers, who really help me see things from my daughter's perspective. Though I disagree with some personal judgements into my character (I am not BPD, a Karen, alcoholic, drug addict, or family terrorist), many responders struck chords in me from their unabashed raw insight that I will explore further on my path to improving my self. I am grateful that your platform allows one to be seen from objective eyes, from different angles, for which to gather personal insight for growth.

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    3 ай бұрын

    Wow, I applaud your courage and willingness to try new things! And yes, a few of the comments can be truly nasty (take it from me, who has been called every negative thing in the book!) but your willingness to share your story so that others can learn and benefit here is a great gift. Thank you!

  • @ThePhoenixBroadcast
    @ThePhoenixBroadcast4 ай бұрын

    Ouch, hard truth. I feel like this video was made for me. I’ve gotta lower my defense, not mind read … (bc it’s usually not positive ) Thank you, this is a very needed reminder. ❤❤

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    You got this! -Calista@TeamFairy

  • @ThePhoenixBroadcast

    @ThePhoenixBroadcast

    3 ай бұрын

    @@CrappyChildhoodFairy thank you! ❤️

  • @justdawndb
    @justdawndb4 ай бұрын

    Oh boy, this was a doozy! I found myself wondering almost immediately if "Lisa" uses alcohol. As one who wasn't the best parent either, this letter brought the sadness and regret from when my kid & stepkids were young 😢. I now know i didn't do the best i could....we can tell ourselves that all day long, is it true though! I was extremely damaged and selfish (retrospectively) and not present as i could have been. Therein lies the hurt that so many adult children live with - we were caught up in our own stuff. One can admit it or not....BUT...those dear one's we raised deserve our acknowledgement of what they were slighted. I know i did so much better than all the people that "raised" me, still it could have been so much better. It hurts deeply, yet one thing thats most important for me is accountability - My daughter & stepkids hold very little animosity towards me and in fact do love me, for this im so very grateful. I would surely despise myself if i couldn't admit my wrongs..... maybe others can relate. ❤ Thank you so much Anna - always great! Its helpful to see ourselves in others in all the good & bad!

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this :) -Calista@TeamFairy

  • @melissamaya1066

    @melissamaya1066

    3 ай бұрын

    I am the writer. I do not use alcohol, never have. I used anger to escape pain and disappointment. It was the one tool I had up until recently. This public analysis has been a very treasured wake up call and I appreciate everyone's feedback.

  • @tamarahollenbeck2988
    @tamarahollenbeck29884 ай бұрын

    Me too! My children refused to include. me in their lives. I'm 69 yo and alone. I was neglected and abused as a child, and tried to be the mother I always wanted. I had never heard of C-pssd until a couple of years ago. I am working the steps, but, I wonder, at my age, and with nothing left, why bother?

  • @hopeandcoffee97

    @hopeandcoffee97

    4 ай бұрын

    Mam please do not give up, i have a strained relation with my parents who are your age and even though distance is necessary i am happy that they're finding clarity and happiness as people in their own right. my mum's own personality has blossomed and she is now more carefree and independent, our relationship bettered only after she found herself as a person and stopped worrying and obsessing over the kids. we are born to have a full life, not just be parents and kids but be a full person in our own right with our own journey. i hope you heal and can find joy and meaning.

  • @tamarahollenbeck2988

    @tamarahollenbeck2988

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mimimi3155 Thank you!

  • @jenniferlanders5741

    @jenniferlanders5741

    4 ай бұрын

    Sending you love. I fully understand your share, as I am in similar family connection, or lack of. Every bit we do for ourselves is worth every minute. It just has to be.

  • @mayamachine

    @mayamachine

    4 ай бұрын

    why bother? because your worth it.

  • @sl-te2xh

    @sl-te2xh

    4 ай бұрын

    Keep trying, never give up on your kids, that will keep you going. Region is a blessing... Believe in yourself..heal yourself and keep going with your kids...you are worth it

  • @smartypants6198
    @smartypants61984 ай бұрын

    Anna I give you a round of applause for encouraging taking responsibility

  • @LisaCheek-sz1jc
    @LisaCheek-sz1jc4 ай бұрын

    This video really hit home for me. A few exceptions but I am guilty of raging and not apologizing or acknowledging my fits. Watching this video helped me to see the abuse i have put in my daughter. I reached outt her and apologized. The letter seems so choppy that i had a hard tme following it. The fact that the writer blames her inner child for ANYTHING seems odd. How does that even make sense

  • @cindyc
    @cindyc4 ай бұрын

    Thinking DBT might be helpful to this individual. Anything that can make them pause before blowing like a powder keg. Being truly mindful and aware.

  • @wildedibles819
    @wildedibles8193 ай бұрын

    Trying to break cycles is life long keep working on it and we can enjoy life better we all can

  • @ianreclusado
    @ianreclusado3 ай бұрын

    Just wanted to offer an additional/alternative take on the inner child thing. The thing about perfectionist inner children is that the “perfect ideal” that they hold up to seemingly beat us with was their/your original idea of what it means to be an adult. This might come from having been made responsible for things as a child that you could not be responsible for and weren’t ready to handle. So the child self dreams up this ideal to try to be understand the kind of “adult” you need to be in order to be safe. And, the fear that led to those perfectionistic tendencies still exists in our systems as PTSD. As adults in therapy, we can think that we just need to bring this child self “into the light” or get it to somehow just stop telling us these things. This doesn’t ever really work and we can get frustrated, and most likely this frustration is the same frustration that was directed at us as children for not being adult enough. And so it just triggers the PTSD perfectionism again. What our inner child needs is an adult to take responsibility for their feelings, not to be further blamed for not being good enough. as the adult we can do this by not giving in to the child’s feelings and letting those feelings run us, but also not pushing away the child’s feelings. We need to hold them they way the child never could, and to hold the child in the way we never were. The inner child needs care first not correction. One way you can do this is when you feel the panic rising or hear the perfectionist voice, notice where the fear or tension arises in your body, and attend to it, hold space for it, the way you would want to hold a frightened child. This is a difficult skill to get good at, but you can practice any time that perfectionistic anxiety comes up. And you can make friends with your inner child this way so that it begins to feel safe and let’s go of the perfectionist defense strategy. Also, I have to wonder whether working on a better relationship with this inner child part might help create an easier relationship with your actual child, your daughter. It’s hard to say for sure, just from this small peak into your world, but given that both issues came up together in this letter, there is a chance working with the inner struggle might help with easing the outer struggle. Good luck!

  • @hopeandcoffee97
    @hopeandcoffee974 ай бұрын

    Hope the questioner heals and finds mindfulness and patience. The inner child metaphor scares me in general,my abusive sibling would always act like she was innocent as a baby who never had enough of this or that, would even baby talk when she wasn't totally blowing up over me, sabotaging me out of envy and isolating me from outside,healthy influences by feeding me low self esteem messaging,constantly. Never adopted it for myself for the same reason. I love being a grown up,I love the idea of accountability and apologising when wrong, behaving one's age. When I'm older hope I'm someone wise, reliable and savvy, helping those younger and naive-much like Anna.

  • @jt4945
    @jt49454 ай бұрын

    I cut my mom off multiple times since I was 13 because of her allowing my stepdad to abuse me, gaslighting me about what happened and so much more, much more extreme case but all I wanted was accountability on her part and changed behavior. She continues to gaslight and attempt to manipulate for the benefit of herself and my stepdad so I do not talk to her anymore, but as an estranged daughter I can say all we want is for you to heal so we can have a good example/role model you don’t have to be perfect. My dad isn’t perfect but he treats me with respect and kindness and like an equal, my dad and I fights have been intense but he doesn’t insult me and belittle me the way my mom did. Which for her was probably “small” things like telling me I wouldn’t grow up to be more than trailer trash or that I would be a pot smoking loser when I grow up. All things said “out of love” trying to get me to do the things she thought was best but in reality it was abuse and I didn’t forgot those words 10+ years later. Her words motivated me to be successful but not in the way she wanted.

  • @elleevans5730
    @elleevans57304 ай бұрын

    Unified self❤ take responsibility for all parts, I love hearing this- met a few people who remove responsibility with “the monster” “the inner child” “my past self” etc. .. really important to own your whole self❤❤❤

  • @deannadeason1850
    @deannadeason18504 ай бұрын

    Sounds a little bit like me and my mom and dad and step mom. I had to move away from all of them and kept my distance and guard myself when I was pushed into their presence. Bot moms have passed, my Dad and I are closer now. It's hard ,but don't give up.

  • @sueg2658
    @sueg26584 ай бұрын

    -Power greater than ourself = any deity or thing like the universe who has power greater then yourself. -Before meditation or at times of Dysregulation it is important to learn “grounding techniques” that you connect with. -Make amends for what you have done to harm another person. However never assume how they will or should respond because that’s their business not yours. - I hope this helpful to anyone who reads this.

  • @carolcasey5441

    @carolcasey5441

    4 ай бұрын

    I've been unable to access the Daily Practice so far. Wondering if you would share one of the grounding techniques you use. I use hold fire, be watchful, say something stupid. I like the idea of meditation for regulation. But what do you do at the coal face? Peace be with you. 😘

  • @sueg2658

    @sueg2658

    4 ай бұрын

    @@carolcasey5441 There are many ways to ground self before meditating. I’m not familiar with the specific techniques you mentioned. I choose to ground myself so I can mentally protect my sprit and physical body before meditating. It is also very helpful during a dysregulated state. I sit and place my feet on the ground and feel the energy in and around me. I visualize White Light surrounding me inside and out and protecting me. Protection is extreamly important to me. I pray and connect the center of my being, my mind and body to the earth and universe. I visualize a cord from universe thru me and connected to the earth. Once I feel safe and grounded, I start meditating for a deeper experience. That’s just how I do it and what works for me. Everyone needs to find what works for them to feel protected and grounded. And as for meditations there are many as well. A good one for people with trauma is a Loving Meditation. Author Jon Kabat-Zinn is a good resource to learn more about Mindfulness and meditation. I hope this is helpful.

  • @carolcasey5441

    @carolcasey5441

    4 ай бұрын

    ​​@@sueg2658 Thank you for replying Sue. And the book recommendation. I think it'll be useful. May we continue in healing and peace. ❤️🙏🌹🍀🌝🎶👍

  • @sueg2658

    @sueg2658

    4 ай бұрын

    @@carolcasey5441You are most welcome. I have taken his Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (M.B.S.R.) course several times. That was before it was offered online. I really enjoyed the experience of being with other people learning such important information. Peace be with you on your journey.

  • @pitbullgarden9677
    @pitbullgarden96774 ай бұрын

    It never occurred to me to Blame my inner child!! Yuck, like blaming an actual child. Finally someone is there for my girl.😊Inner you is there to be loved, protected, cherished, provided for, calmed, reassured, supported. Another Great video!🥰

  • @AlwaysLime
    @AlwaysLime4 ай бұрын

    So if I’m gathering the message correctly: sometimes people won’t forgive you because your behavior hasn’t changed.

  • @susanaparker
    @susanaparker3 ай бұрын

    PS: I found this particular video very helpful and validating, as a daughter.

  • @im19ice3
    @im19ice33 ай бұрын

    i relate to struggling with the self-doubt coming up obsessively over every imperfect interaction but i learned from the fairy that it's not fair to put that on other people, if another is disappointed or dislikes me they're within their right to feel that way, and that doesn't mean all of my worst fears about myself are true or that receiving perfect unending approval would heal those doubts; building an inner sense of worth is a personal project and has to be based on who we are working to be, not on imaginary points earned by having flawless relationships in our lives.

  • @flower_14141
    @flower_141413 ай бұрын

    I feel that Anna is right here, this situation is very similar to what I've had with my mum, at some point when I moved out from home instead of agreeing with her I've started to lush out on her, I was full of anger for what I've put up all my childhood ( controlling, criticising, putting me down). Back then I was dependent on her so I couldn't defend myself and I bottled up everything. At some point I avoided contacting her, I couldn't stand to be around her. After years of working on myself something changed in me, I missed our relationship so I set some boundaries and we're doing quite well. She still triggers me sometimes but I know how to handle things, I want my mum in my life, it's healing for me to have her back. Funny thing is that when I stood up for myself ( set boundaries) she started to treat me with respect, amazing what boundaries can do😊

  • @crispy-jolteon
    @crispy-jolteon3 ай бұрын

    I have healed a lot and I don't often see comments that touch on this "shadow work" for trauma, so I will share my story if anyone can relate I was the traumatized one, who was defensive, justifying and not taking accountability for my actions even if I did not realize. I always found a way to not be held responsible because it made me feel even more shame than the shame I felt from my trauma. My trauma came from my childhood where my emotional needs were not met by my only parent. I grew up unstable, somewhat spoiled, had a broken identity and no self-esteem. I didn't even realize it but it made me abusive in some of my relationships. It took me years to realize and it has made me lose some relationships. I was searching for answers, of how to heal and be better but I couldn't change or take accountability. I would see all these comments talking about how others have had the pain of abuse from their own parents or broken relationships and I felt so much shame. I have trauma, but that doesn't make it okay for me to hurt people. If anyone out there is struggling with taking accountability, having humility and healing, I want to let you know I've been in your place and it will get better. You'll have your own path for healing but you are not alone. Just because you've done bad things doesn't make you a bad person and you can heal from it. I don't have the answers for you but I hope my story helped in seeing that you aren't alone and you aren't bad. Aside from that, thank you Anna for your videos. I have been watching many of them for half a year now. I've learned so much about trauma, CPTSD, repeated behaviors and you have helped give me the self awareness to realize my trauma can hurt others. I'm in a better place now and repairing my broken relationship :) thank you so much Fairy!!!

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil4 ай бұрын

    00:00 🔄 Healing from trauma involves taking responsibility for one's behavior. 03:38 🤷 Trauma can lead to harsh behavior, but it's crucial not to blame others and take steps to change. 07:04 📝 A letter from Lisa describes her strained relationship with her daughter, Emily, after conflicts during college. 14:26 🔄 Lisa recognizes her past behavior was inexcusable, leading to pain for her daughter. 17:17 🔄 Lisa's fear and anxiety persist despite therapy and positive moments with her daughter. 18:41 🤔 Lisa seeks advice on silencing her negative inner voice and maintaining her relationship with her daughter. 21:06 🚦 Lisa is encouraged to shift focus from her "inner child" to accepting responsibility for her actions. 27:25 🔄 The daily practice is recommended as a tool to address fear, resentment, and achieve mental clarity. 30:25 🔄 Acknowledging and addressing control issues and unacknowledged shame and guilt is crucial for Lisa's healing.

  • @Davian775
    @Davian7752 ай бұрын

    I’m a perfectionist Virgo with ctpsd. I am only 21 but being like this is my biggest fear. I just realized I have been a part of the problem and need to take responsibilities for my relationship. Man it hurts. But, I am glad it is at the age where people are more patient…

  • @yaysoon
    @yaysoon3 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for making these videos and helping so many people. I am blown away by your wisdom and insight. 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @WanderingSou1
    @WanderingSou14 ай бұрын

    Theres nothing to forgive im sad to have discovered my sister talking badly of me and spreading false lies about me. I thought we were best friends and that she truly knew who i was. Unfortunately she hurt me mostly because i thought we were pure and loved each other whole hearted. I realize how weak our bond was that me not showing up to her graduation made her say i was envious and didint want to see her succeed. She didint even come to me she went to others saying all these mean things that broke my heart. I was there for her diring all her hard time lifing her up and cheering her on its not easy being around sad people but when you love them you want them happy too even when i was sad I prioritize showing up for her. So when she celebrated i finally stepped back allow her to celebrate with many people because there are many people who will be there for others to celebrate. Its few who are around when your down to uplift you. But in her eyes someone told her that only people who want to see you down will be around you to see it. She actually believed this about me. It broke my heart and i realized i dont want to be in her life good or bad and i dont want to get close to her again because i dont trust her. Some people keep people in their lives even if they think your evil but i wont be one of those people. I hope she gets better but its sad that i dont see her the same way. Im kind to her if i see her but i wont pretend that i see the sister the friend that i used to see.

  • @annaro3123

    @annaro3123

    4 ай бұрын

    An almost similar situation here. Me and my sister are 8 years apart. Due to our dysfunctional parents, she grew up with me. I loved her all the way through, I truly believed she was my best friend but she broke my heart over and over again( she went through severe alcohol abuse and other dysfunctions) I have realized that she doesn't have a clue of how/ who I am. She is envious and bipolar so I was finally able to separate from our trauma bond. Although I understand how she is, I am still sad, it is a sort of deep grief that no therapy nor the Bible seem to fully heal.

  • @missliz9718
    @missliz97184 ай бұрын

    Someone send this to my mom

  • @christopherbouska6779
    @christopherbouska67794 ай бұрын

    Thank you for making these videos. They are wonderful source of hope.

  • @AsherahYamma
    @AsherahYamma4 ай бұрын

    As usual, I greatly appreciated Anna's comments. I'd just add that some of the letter writer's words and vibe seemed very familiar to me and immediately made me recall that I suspected I was projecting some unresolved junk with my parents onto my kids. Pretty horrible and I'm still now trying to make up for the damage I caused, especially to my eldest. Making some inroads, also constantly working on forgiving myself and living in the present and what I can do NOW.

  • @MonicaJeanetteHillmer
    @MonicaJeanetteHillmer4 ай бұрын

    The only power bigger then the worst version of ourselves, is the healed version of ourselves. But besides that person and to become that healed version we need the person who holds all the power and who is powerful enough and can actually take what we are asking away, or who we can release all our trauma to is the person of Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit. If we are asking anything else, the universe etc, nothing will change. Only God the father, Jesus Christ, the holy Spirit who created the world and us has the power to help us. Sure we can help ourselves to a limited extent but with God all things are possible especially healing that is part of God's will for use to be healed.

  • @danlemmon2739
    @danlemmon27394 ай бұрын

    Internal family systems and reading a plethora of books on inner child healing has shifted my healing journey with Cptsd. Awaiting my stellate ganglion block to help alleviate the chronic state of my nervous system.

  • @tinachristine4573
    @tinachristine45734 ай бұрын

    Basically this is a karen who has terrorised her family and then the daughter stood up to her and told her to shove it.

  • @57appel

    @57appel

    4 ай бұрын

    Using the name Karen is racist, sexist, and ageist. Take out your anger appropriately. Or, use your name to insult yourself.

  • @57appel

    @57appel

    4 ай бұрын

    Are you going to allow people to misappropriate the loved name Karen? Please teach people to use anger correctly.

  • @l.landren544
    @l.landren5444 ай бұрын

    I find that the responsible way to name parts of you, inner child etc as sources of your emotions is at the same time acknowledging that any harm you do is yours to resolve, always.

  • @skywolf288
    @skywolf2884 ай бұрын

    Thank you both for sharing😁

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment! -Calista@TeamFairy

  • @RoseDances
    @RoseDances3 ай бұрын

    You saw right through the mom’s narrative. Awesome job.

  • @24-7flounderproblem
    @24-7flounderproblem4 ай бұрын

    ❤thankyou 🙌🙏😌

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment! -Calista@TeamFairy

  • @onefortyfivepm776
    @onefortyfivepm7763 ай бұрын

    I actually really like the concept of the inner child, but I think what is most often forgotten or misunderstood about that work is that there is also the "inner adult"; or outer considering the adult is who that person is at that point (At least physically, internally they may being run by their wounded inner child). Which is how I find the work so helpful to visualize an inner child and inner adult dialogue, exchange or interaction. This concept has really helped me when tackling and absorbing the work around re-parenting the self. Because to re-parent an adult feels patronizing; but visualizing the work as helping the child in your story that was hurt, abused and/or neglected, (or just never parented properly; with care, love and attention) makes the work feel so much more real, significant, and meaningful. And at no point in my explanation of that, nor in my understanding, do I ever say that the inner child concept and work is another person's problem. It's not meant for other people to have to handle or deal with; the child is our own and thus is our own responsibility. And yeah, an inner child can throw a tantrum, be mean, and selfish. Or otherwise, respond and act in a way a child would. But that isn't an excuse, because unless a person is in actuality a literal child, then that means an adult self is always present. (At least from a developmental standpoint; de-regularization without the skills and knowledge to recover or keep a hold on a rational balanced perspective may make the inner adult inaccessible in the moment of that kind of reaction; thus a person who is incapable of being able to respond in a mature way; aka, a person in desperate need of some kind of inner healing). And to allow a child to hurt others and then excuse them for it while standing by without any effort to mitigate or prevent damage to others; is just irresponsible. If that were to happen in real life, which I'm sure many people have had their own experiences of witnessing, where a child runs rampant causing chaos in an environment while their parent sits by passively as this happens, seemingly ignoring the child and their impact on others and their surrounding for whatever reason. I would hope that a majority of people would, rightfully, feel anger with the adult in this scenario rather than the child. Because the child is acting in a way that can be expected of a child; well, a wild child in this case. But I would hope the common understanding is that it's the adult's responsibility to care for and keep their child in check, (And I mean that in the gentle guiding hand sense; not the punitive authoritative sense). So that a child can learn through a parent's guidance to consider and respect the feelings of others. Which is why I absolutely agree with the sentiment about how others who are full grown adults, who either intentionally or unintentionally, use this concept of the inner child to excuse themselves from the responsibility and consequences of their actions are using it wrong. Essentially, making others responsible for the inner child of a full grown adult. And while yeah, others can have compassion for another person's story and understanding of how that's affected them in regards to this concept; that still does not or could ever warrant, excuse, or ever justify hurting or mistreating another person. The sentiment I think of often when thinking on issues like this is the line, "you can act however you like but that doesn't mean other people ever have to put up with your bulls*t" Which is honestly a line I've found so much healing in when it came to facing the ways I have hurt other people in my past and present. It has helped me to take responsibility for my actions, regardless of my intentions or extenuating circumstances, and ultimately take accountability for the changes that were necessary for my own internal growth. And thinking on it now, I can see how that can be interpreted as an internal re-parenting moment. The lesson of those words are gentle but firm, not punishing and shaming. And to me, that is what re-parenting (re: the inner child concept) is all about.

  • @tracy3812
    @tracy38124 ай бұрын

    Dear Fairy, do you have any thoughts about daily practice + therapy with EMDR? Not even sure if this is the best place for this Q. Thank-you.

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    4 ай бұрын

    EMDR can be good. Talk therapy is not something that's worked for me. If you do the DP, consider doing it for a week, with no other treatment to see whether it helps you.

  • @user-cj2kt4gg2r
    @user-cj2kt4gg2r3 ай бұрын

    What if I don't have resentments every day twice a day? Do i skip those days ( Daily Practice). Thank you

  • @tigerlily222
    @tigerlily2224 ай бұрын

    Very tempted to do your Daily Practice, I used to journal but my hubby found them, read them and yelled at me about it (yep- fun...not). I watched some of the videos and one gal burns them after the writing so that's a possibility. I have a new puppy so maybe after he calms down and I'm not dealing with "Puppy Brain" in addition to trying this 🙂

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    3 ай бұрын

    I encourage you to give it a try. After writing we destroy the paper right away so no one can read it. It's a safe way to release emotions and feel lighter. Nika@TeamFairy

  • @JuneAdams-li9sy
    @JuneAdams-li9sy4 ай бұрын

    Hurt people hurt people. There's nothing to forgive nor for which to be forgiven.

  • @xLiLlyx98

    @xLiLlyx98

    3 ай бұрын

    Uh... No. People are responsible for their actions, especially if they're parents. Just because they were hurt in the past doesn't make it ok or "nothing to be forgiven"

  • @JuneAdams-li9sy

    @JuneAdams-li9sy

    3 ай бұрын

    @@xLiLlyx98 'Vengence is mine', says the uncharitable, uninformed, unevolved harbored of ill-will.

  • @xLiLlyx98

    @xLiLlyx98

    3 ай бұрын

    @@JuneAdams-li9sy no one is saying anything about vengeance, I'm just saying being hurt in the past doesn't excuse hurting others in the present. It's about accountability.

  • @JuneAdams-li9sy

    @JuneAdams-li9sy

    3 ай бұрын

    @@xLiLlyx98 let he who is without sin....

  • @xLiLlyx98

    @xLiLlyx98

    3 ай бұрын

    @@JuneAdams-li9sy okay, you clearly don't want to understand. Seems like you're on the wrong channel here though

  • @mayamachine
    @mayamachine4 ай бұрын

    you shouldn't play the blame game, it never brings health or resolutions. You shouldn't blame others or yourself. Those that traumatized you, they too were traumatized, they couldn't behave any other way without healing. If you trace the trauma to it's source, you'll find that source going further back than you can trace. in the end it's turtles all the way down. Not blaming dosen't remove responsibility, or culpability, but it makes room to heal.

  • @melitapavlinic7302
    @melitapavlinic73024 ай бұрын

    Regarding the daughter, she might be partially here to blame and stuck in her dysfunctional ways too but it is still not the mother's problem. She has no choice but to let it go completely and stop trying to fit the daughter into some kind of mild. Even if she decides to cut the contact out, it might be temporary and for her own good

  • @polyglotmona
    @polyglotmona4 ай бұрын

    I don’t know what to think about this video. On the one side, there are the mother and her daughter, both apparently victims of misunderstandings, neediness, narcissistic tendencies of their parents and awakening, trying to heal and set boundaries, and then there is you naming mainly the daughter who is suffering and trying to set boundaries but you nearly are offensive to the mother who wrote the letter. And then here I am asking myself how much I am only a victim but because a bad person, too, maybe, and all my insisting on boundaries might be narcissistic. How do I see if I’m behaving like a victim or like an abuser when I’m setting boundaries?

  • @polyglotmona

    @polyglotmona

    3 ай бұрын

    @@inawisha thank you for sharing this and responding very detailed to my question. I wonder if expressing anger is always coming from our inner child and ego wanting justice or wanting to be seen. Maybe it’s a good idea if we all tried to be conscious of our emotions, where they’re coming from, that they destroy us and our relationships and that nobody told us how to cope with them. However, acknowledging, that our inner child is “right” because it didn’t get what it needed and also becoming aware of the general injustice of the world per se.

  • @inawisha

    @inawisha

    3 ай бұрын

    @@polyglotmona Thank you, you are right there is more to think about for me in your comment too.

  • @sharoncarter4560
    @sharoncarter45603 ай бұрын

    A lot of people blame the mother but I have complex and it was both caused by my mom and dad but main one I’m sure was my first infant school teacher she was psycho I was five and she stared at me all the time has if to beat me up she never took her eyes of me I was such a calm girl in school never talking but she hated me she didn’t so many times allow me to go to toilet I had to wait hours and I would wet my pants so many times this was in the uk school I didn’t tell my mom I was scared terrified in the end I told my mom she went up to the school to beat her up the teacher escaped in time she was expelled from the school afterwards but the damage had been done even now I can’t sit around people I get a big fear in me even though I’m sixty now I hope that teacher gis to hell she ruined my life

  • @sunderwonder6366
    @sunderwonder63664 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Im fkg rough as russian get

  • @rhythmandblues_alibi
    @rhythmandblues_alibi3 ай бұрын

    This could be me and my mother 😓

  • @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    @CrappyChildhoodFairy

    3 ай бұрын

    I'm glad you're here, we're all sending you support :) -Calista@TeamFairy

  • @cansontravel2289
    @cansontravel22893 ай бұрын

    Dear writer Lisa, please don't give up! Chances are, that your relationship with your daughter will get better again, since it was ok during the first 18 years. Maybe you are two different personality types, therefore you have diverging views and values on many things, which naturally creates conflict. A second thing might be, that there is also a generational clash going on between you two. So you can't have a symbiotic relationship with your adult daughter, as you might have wished (probably only a small amount of adult children have that with their parents anyway). Therefore, you might need a phase with some distance, avoid sensitive topics but leave your doors always open for your daughter. It's very clear through your letter, that you love her. Please, don't be so hard on yourself, many conflicts come from personality and generation differences. On the other hand, it was a bad thing from your daughter to lie about her grades, it's ok to get angry about that! Moreover, the current Western societies want people to be celebrated for whatever ugly physical decisions they make - don't fall for that. If you don't like her appearance, you have the right to say so. To get a wider angle of the role of a mother, you should consider discussing with moms of Asian or Latin-American origins, so you can get all those unfair mom-bashers out of your head. Maybe your daughter carries some amount of unhappyness inside her, and guess who is there to let out her aggressions without bigger risks while she's nice to anybody else? Of course you should be careful with your tone and avoid devaluating her. Because of your low self-esteem, people might smell your insecurity and don't accept what your saying, which might lead to a harsh tone from you. If that resonates with you, stay on your firm ground and try to make it better the next time. Take your responsability for that. But it's ok to show anger and emotions! Some people generally treat people with low self-esteem badly, well, if your daughter does that, then shame on her, she needs to do a bit of character work. I wish you and your daughter all the best and may your big love between you two come back.

  • @melissamaya1066

    @melissamaya1066

    3 ай бұрын

    I am the letter writer, "Lisa". My real name is Melissa. I am not a Karen, as one responder put it. I have not failed to take responsibility for hurting my daughter, as many, many responders believe. One doesn't experience 6 months of joint mother-daughter therapy and not learn to take responsibility. The therapist calls you out for excuse making as soon as you start playing your own violin. Each week for six months I listened to all the ways I failed as a mom and screwed up my daughter. I sat there and faced my evils because I love her so much, and I needed to hear what she needed me to hear. I listened, I learned, I cried, and I changed. I didn't deny my faults. I learned what my faults were and I trusted her to speak her truth. What seems to be lost in my fairy letter is this: I have a new fear that I don't understand. I now avoid my daughter, not because she opened up or criticized my parenting, but because I am so afraid I will hurt her again. I don't trust myself. My inner child analogy struck a chord with many readers. In therapy I learned to recognize insecurities and negative self-perceptions as the "inner child" never healed from the pain of CPTSD. I have been trying to "reparent" my inner child for 40 years, well before my daughter was even born. I am getting frustrated that I try so hard and still mess up, still lack confidence, and have now developed a new fear of myself, if you can believe that. Thank you for encouraging me and for your insightful message. Many responders left messages that were very insightful and helped me see things more clearly, because of their objective lens. I trust these anonymous responders to speak honest, raw truth, and I am very grateful we have a Crappy Childhood Fairy to help people all over the world strive to become their best self.

  • @cansontravel2289

    @cansontravel2289

    3 ай бұрын

    Dear Melissa, thank you for your answer, I was deeply touched! Your words showed me again, what a big loving heart, good soul and intelligent mind you have, they are your real super power in your life. Many people consider folks with low self-esteem as inferior and damaged. But you know what? I myself have always had low self-esteem, but since I stopped thinking about that fact and started concentrating on the beauty of the day, the love towards my family and friends and my enthusiasm for my job and my hobbies, it simply doesn't matter anymore. On the contrary, I think that people with high self-esteem pretty often suck😉. Awesome music, good comedy, travelling and nice clothes can also eliminate many dark clouds in my head. Sounds superficial, but it's just true. You will, together with your super power, find the way out of the valley of sadness and fear, I'm totally convinced. Kind regards and my best wishes once again! @@melissamaya1066

  • @c.a.mathews2155
    @c.a.mathews21554 ай бұрын

    This woman sounds Borderline. She acts exactly like my sister who has been dealing with Borderline Personality Disorder her entire adult life. It's not an easy thing to get over even with therapy. While her awful childhood could be a component, the condition itself is a neurological problem.

  • @joervin2156

    @joervin2156

    3 ай бұрын

    Had wondered that myself upon watching this video.. sounded like she may have borderline tendencies.. I would hope therapy wouldve picked that up.. but I think its sorta an emerging idea and that it stems from trauma in early life.. not sure but thats from my looking it up as I was viewing the video.. I thought hmm sounds like bpd.. but its a label and thats a slippery slope.

  • @pepolite4082
    @pepolite40823 ай бұрын

    I have a feeling, this Lisa, heard you but refused to actually accept what you said. She most likely dissociated really hard and refused to understand it was even her.

  • @beverleymacca4737
    @beverleymacca47374 ай бұрын

    First 😊

  • @melitapavlinic7302
    @melitapavlinic73024 ай бұрын

    I am not also not sure what to say other than that Anna is probaly right and that this mom is similar to some other parents: abusive, emotionally manipulative, controlling and not ready to accept the person as an adult. I would stop seeing the current therapist and see a psychiatrist, there might be some narcisstic personality going on, some substance abuse or other untreated mental disease. Inner child theory is also a bullshit, I am not buying any of this eaither and go to some 12-step groups

  • @LisaCheek-sz1jc

    @LisaCheek-sz1jc

    4 ай бұрын

    So very many specific judgments that you made.. Maybe I missed a large portion of this video.