I believe that parents who have been estranged are on the
receiving end of a lot of criticism.
They are often blamed or scapegoated for being on the receiving end of
ostracism. More often than not the
message is expressed in self-righteousness as in “you must have done something
to deserve it”. And yet I rarely had great
difficulty dealing with these kinds of people, because I understood that they
were ignorant, and their words, hurtful as they may be came from that
ignorance.
Of course at the same time I was also battling my own
self-flagellation where I blamed myself for being inadequate. I examined every word every action under the
microscope of hindsight seeking for the mistakes that I made. (And yes I made my
list of things I needed to apologize for and wrote the letters as
advised.)
However there is a kind of judge mentalism that I find hard
to tolerate; that is when someone says “Well all you have to do is
apologize”.
This is in my opinion the most insensitive and discouraging of all come backs that people make toward a parent that has been estranged. And sadly enough even some parents who are estranged believe also that if only they can word the apology just right then they will be taken back. How often have I seen parents blasting other parents to “just apologize!” This is a really low blow.
This is in my opinion the most insensitive and discouraging of all come backs that people make toward a parent that has been estranged. And sadly enough even some parents who are estranged believe also that if only they can word the apology just right then they will be taken back. How often have I seen parents blasting other parents to “just apologize!” This is a really low blow.
First of all most parents that have been estranged do “do
the apology thing” first and think about it later. In the early stages of estrangement most
parents are so willing to “do anything” to make it end that they will blanket
apologize for everything and anything they did wrong in hopes of begging their
way back into good standing. I have known parents to grovel and beg, offering
themselves up to walking on eggshells in fear that any misstep will once again
precipitate rejection.
I confess; I too did several apologies. All of them were met with silence! The message became clear to me; even your
apologies are not good enough.
It has taken me a long time to figure something out. Offspring that estrange don’t want an apology
if the apology is meant as a preface to communication and dialogue. Only the
ones who “want” to work on repairing the relationship respond to an
apology. It is just like any other
amends program, you offer the apology, but the recipient can decline.
When an apology is declined there is a message as well. The nonverbal message is; “I am not yet over
whatever it is I am holding against you.
I want to perpetuate the grudge.
I want to continue to show my power over you so the emotional abuse can
continue, because power over you makes me feel better about myself.”
You see communication requires surrendering power and
control. Declining an apology is about control.
As long as they control the situation they are powerful. Rejecting an apology they are still in control.
So the question that really ought to be asked is not “why
don’t you apologize” but “why are your apologies rejected?
The rejecting of an apology says more about the rejecter
than the person offering the apology. The person offering the apology says;
here I am, I am offering up my inadequacies for your judgement, I am ready to
atone. The person rejecting says; I am
not ready, I have my own agenda, I have not yet finished what I set out to
prove to you.
The evidence is growing steadily and daily that estrangement
is an epidemic with 1 in four families now affected. With that many families
sending apologies surely there would be a higher rate of reconciliations than
there is if all it took was an apology to open the lines of communication.
There are even those now in the mental health care industry
that are talking about this strange turn of events; rising numbers of
estrangements and very few reconciliations.
The old standard for growing up and expressing autonomy does not explain
this phenomenon!
What this tells me is that it is not about the “right
apology” it is about control and power.
Those who want equal relationships want dialogue and communication. Those are the apologies that are received and
used as a starting point for reconciliation. Those are relationships of adult
child becoming autonomous within their own rights.
Those adults who ignore apologies, who do not even respond
with what their grievance are, don’t want an equal relationship, they want an
empowered relationship where they are in charge.
Then there are those adult offspring, in the rare instances,
where they do reply to an apology and do so with a list of “demands”. They very clearly voice those demands in
language that says I am in control, do as I demand or I withhold myself from
interacting with you. Any attempt to
reconcile without acquiescing to the demands is turned down flat. This is not an act of communication and
compromise, it clearly is about control.
If you have this many estrangements being perpetuated in
spite of apologies delivered, in spite of efforts made to open lines of
communication, in spite of willingness to forgive the pain experienced because
of estrangement, surely the problem is going much deeper than no apology
extended.
And yet still the most often heard critique an estranged
parent continues to receive is; “why don’t you just apologize”. The most hurtful, condescending sentiment of
them all because it comes from the unfounded assumption that the estranged
parent hasn’t tried hard enough, done enough, worked diligently enough to
resolve a situation they wish fervently they were not experiencing in the first
place.
Renate Dundys Marrello
2016 – 12 – 12
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