Release the Hurt: Turmoil in the Home

I am now happy I was too young to understand the turmoil in the home, the reason my mother left my father. I was three. As information relayed to me by my older siblings about the not-so-nice-things my parents battled, I accepted why my parents had to separate. They were parents whose union had malfunctioned in detrimental ways. Breaking up was probably inevitable or necessary.

My mother, who became a single parent, did not spew venom at my father after the breakup. She gave her children the dignity to hold on to the best from a union that produced six children. Her silence taught us to respect both. Our parents. And, irrespective of an open invitation to be a father, my father stayed away. Maybe he was hurt after the separation. Maybe he was ashamed of his life. Maybe alcohol had devoured his knowledge of fatherhood. Maybe he was wounded from his own childhood or adult life.

For whatever the reason—rage, insecurity, jealousy, hate, ignorance, new hurt—it is sometimes complicated, but many parents and children hold on to past hurt. As I grew older, I held no grudge against either parent for separating. After all, they were not perfect. Now, with my own child, I am not a perfect parent, either. I had imposed on my child a broken home, too. And, though it is easy “to preach than to practice,” as people say, I try to let go of past hurt and I teach my son to let go, too. What about you? Are you a parent or child who has been hurt in the home? Do you hold on to your hurt or pain? How do you heal?

Together, let us release our hurt.

34 comments:

  1. Wonderful, thought-provoking post, Peaches. As always. :)

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  2. That is true, so many hold onto it and it just weighs them down. Let it go and live a little

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  3. Oh, I know those feelings very well Peaches! I think for a child is impossible to accept as it hurts so much, even when you grow up it keeps to feel upset. A broken home is the saddest thing, home means family and family has always to stay united. Hugs xo

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    1. Yes, Lilli, when home means family and the family splits, sometimes it's not good for those involved.

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  4. Holding on to that pain just hampers our life.

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  5. Nobody is a perfect parent. I can't think of anything else intelligent to say. Have a nice day.

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  6. Since 50% of marriages break up, it doesn't make much sense to hold anyone accountable. People do their best and sometimes it's just better to move on without the other person. What's harder to forgive is when certain people (even parents) put you down, never support you, or can't accept you the way you are. It's harder to let that kind of pain and anger go. It takes years.

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  7. Relationships can definitely make a lasting effect more than we know on the closests people around us. Especially our kids.

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  8. 3 is such a tender age...
    It's a fact that no marriage is perfect, and pointing fingers doesn't solve anything. Quite often, you find that people simply grow apart, for various reasons...
    No parents are perfect either.
    Really thought-provoking post.

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    1. I do believe that people grow apart and some decide to get out of relationships.

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  9. My parents stayed together, but I do remember them having fights. That sort of thing is scary for a child- even when it's not a big deal to adults. As adults, we can modify our world to suit ourselves to some extent, kids can't. The home we make for them is all the world they have.

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    1. Splitting if sometimes better when the relationship does not benefit anyone.

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  10. My parents stayed together until my brother and I were out of the house. After 32 years of marriage, they divorced. There was a lot of tension throughout the years, but it still wasn't easy for anyone when they finally separated. It's sad when it happens. I certainly respect your mother for not saying anything bad about your father. She must be a strong woman!

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    1. Some people do that, too, Sherry. The try to keep the family together until the children are grown.

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  11. I think forgiveness is one of the noblest and most difficult things to do sometimes. We really have to see the world as it is though. Imperfect people, struggling. When we hold onto grudges or pain, it only hurts us. I'm with you on a forgiving and pain-free philosophy, not to say I don't get hurt on occasion, but it's best to be quick to forgive.

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  12. You are such a good writer, Peaches - for many reasons, I'm sure, but your ability to pour out your emotions shows a lot of grit which is so appealing to the reader.

    How old is your son?

    Like you, I'm from divorced parents. It was tough for while my father tried to turn me against my mother and to come live with him. Thankfully, that lasted only a year or so. I understood his pain and never had anything against him. He passed away in 1999 at age 78. I always loved him.

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    1. My son is now twenty-three.

      I wish I could have had a talk with my dad before he passed in 1984.

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  13. Hmm, I left a comment but it's not here. If it shows up again later delete this. If not, Sorry. Beautiful post.

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    1. It's somewhere in cyberspace, Sara. Thanks for leaving a comment.

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  14. A well written post. Forgiveness is one of the most noble and difficult things. My parents didn't separate but they had a very bad marriage and I held on to that anger for years. Perhaps age mellows us out and it is easier to let go and forgive.

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    1. Age or time does change feelings, Christine. I'm glad you let go of your hurt.

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  15. I believe in letting go and moving on. When it comes to divorce or separation I think the worse thing a parent can do to their children is force them to take sides or teach them to hate the missing parent. Why? Give them the right to continue to love or at least have a chance to keep a relationship with the parent who left.

    As adults, we forget that our love can die rather ignominously due to certain circumstances. But it's too much to ask a little one, who has loved this parent all their lives, to stop because loving or liking we have due to valid or invalid reasons or we feel betrayal. When you force your children into that way of thinking you betray them and call into question your quality of love. For sure it affects the perception of love and relationships for the rest of their life. That's my opinion.

    Sia McKye Over Coffee

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    1. Yeah, Sia. Some parents force their kids to take sides, which can help to shape how they view each parents or how they spread their affection.

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  16. It is very difficult for everyone involved when parents separate, but really, it is up to the parents as the children will grow up and move on with their lives. When parents stay together for the children it can be worse as they may grow up and see how detrimental a toxic relationship is. Always difficult....glad your mum dealt with the breakup with great dignity.

    Denise :-)

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    1. Yes, Denise, some children only remember the toxic part of their parent's relationship and that's not good.

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  17. Let it go. Holding on only pulls you under. Your mom did exactly what was right.

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These are our stories. Thank you for your kind comment and laugh as often as you can. Peaches D. Ledwidge, author of Day Laughs Night Cries: Fifteen