“You’re Not Wrong!”
Is that music to your ears? A soothing balm? Something you
cannot trust or believe for yourself?
Abuse survivors often live under the judgment of always being
wrong: in thought, in word, in deed, in appearance, in beliefs, in identity, in
sexuality. You name it; you and I have probably been told we’re wrong, not
right, about it.
We are disempowered and deceived into believing we need
“fixing” of some sort.
Why is that? The answers can be complicated, unique, and
varied. But, perhaps, here are some explanations to this “certainty” that we
are wrong, never to be “right.”
An In Utero Job Description:
Well, there’s just nothing like going back to the start
of it all.
Trace ALL the way back, before we even arrived on the
planet!
And it’s not such an absurd premise to think along
these lines. After all, how many expectant parents, preparing for their
new arrival, project their hopes, dreams, plans, goals, and yes, jobs onto
their unborn child? It may not be intentionally malevolent, but its impact,
nonetheless, can be harmful and devastating.
Because, however overtly or subtly, we have a job description
subscribed to us.
It could be that we need to fulfill the parent’s unrealized
dream. It could be that we need to keep the parent from being lonely or
depressed. It could be that we need to carry on the family name. It could be
that we provide identity and purpose to the parent. It could be an actual job
description that we work in the family business and financially support
the parent(s) as the designated moneymaker.
Some examples of job descriptions and pressurized
circumstances to rise to the occasion, from birth on, exist all to serve the
parent.
What’s the purpose of being wrong here?
Being the child, just born, assigned
this job or role is a set up for failure. There is no real winning here. For,
inevitably, our life and performance will not match the parent’s vision of what
that looks like in their own head.
We fail to fulfill a job
description and a purpose we didn’t ask for, in that exacting specification. Nevertheless,
we were still given that job to execute successfully. Therefore, our failure to
do just that can better absolve the parent, the family belief system, and the
necessary sense of responsibility these individuals have for their choices.
The blame shifting begins, from their role, as adults, to us, as the children
we are, no matter what age and stage we are, in the situation.
The child is the problem, not the adult.
And that’s easier and more
comfortable for the adult to accept. The adult parent doesn’t need to address,
face, change, and accept their own dysfunction, disorder, addiction, failure,
weakness, or any harmful dynamic, if the child is the solely wrong
party.
If the child, you are I, are wrong,
then the adult, our family member, gets to be right.
Inability to Be Constantly Perfect:
Often, along with our in utero job description, lies the
mandate of perfection. Perfection can translate to any number of associations
and meanings. Perfection can equal such things as safety, comfort, aesthetic image, success, and
love.
We must look perfectly, speak perfectly, act perfectly, obey
perfectly, respond perfectly, and meet needs and expectations perfectly to be
considered “right.”
There is nothing shy of achieving those criteria that will do.
So, we can turn to addictions and eating disorders, as a way
of executing this perfection, or consoling ourselves for not achieving it. We
can punish ourselves through self-injury. We can get tunnel vision and become
Machiavellian in our pursuits, doing “whatever it takes” to accomplish that
perfection, including committing crimes and making choices that are not ones of
personal integrity.
Image is prized over truth, certainly over human imperfection. That
is not allowed.
For some of us, being imperfect is, as extreme as it sounds,
punishable by death.
Being Made Wrong:
What purpose does this tactic of striving for
unattainable perfection serve?
If we, as the children of this kind of parent, fail to reach
and perpetually sustain perfection, we again, get to be designated as “the
problem.”
How much more so if that parent is putting out a
well-honed and false standard that keeps up those necessary appearances?
If the parent is highly achieving, with accolades,
while the child gets all As and one B plus, the message is that it’s the
child who is not measuring up, not the parent. The parent
can achieve perfection. Therefore, really, how difficult is it for the
offspring to do likewise?
The apple doesn’t fall from the tree, right?
It’s convenient for the adult parent, because the focus from
others often goes to the source of imperfection, not to the
good-looking, pulled-together adult instead.
If, indeed, the proverbial apple doesn’t fall far from the
tree, it can, then, be reasoned that the kid, is the “one bad apple.”
“The problem child.” The “issue.” The “wrong” party.
Again, who is exalted and spared and who is punished and made
responsible?
Who is right and who is wrong?
And who derives power from that determination?
Being right can feed the ego.
And if a person is dysregulated and dysfunctional, that
ego-feeding can reach a desired sense of all-importance, with raising their
child coming in at a DISTANT second.
Being Yourself:
“To thine own self be true.”
Act I, Scene III, “Hamlet,” by William Shakespeare
Nope. Forget about that!
There is no such thing as “thine own self.”
We, according to a certain parent, need to be someone else.
Sometimes, it’s them, a little “mini-me” or an exact clone. Sometimes, it’s a
particular archetype: the “good boy or girl,” the star athlete, “The Star,” in
general.
Yes, indeed, many decades ago, some mothers tried to fashion
their little girls after famous child star, Shirley Temple. How many two, three
and four-years old had their hair set in curlers each night, while being shoved
into dance classes against their will? All to become the next Shirley Temple.
Yeah, you get the picture. Maybe some of you have flashbacks
from being forced to sing “On the Good Ship Lollipop.”
And although Shirley Temple now is long gone, child beauty
pageants and kiddie talent shows, unfortunately, keep the star search alive and
well. The promise of “getting discovered” lights up the eyes of many parents
who desire to live vicariously through their children. Fame, wealth, attention,
and luxurious perks are to be mined within the child who is just ripe for the
picking.
With this emphasis on choosing “other” to make up for the
child the parent already has, very little focus or positive association
is given to the concept that this child is their own unique, wonderful
being, with individuality and traits all their own.
Nope, that concept only classifies the child as wrong,
defective, in need of changing, somehow.
Being Made Wrong:
What purpose does this tactic serve?
Again, it’s a game of who’s right and who’s wrong. Certain
adults, certain parents can decide, with the utmost authority, that any choice
a child makes that does not exactly align with their world view, is wrong,
wrong, wrong.
And that includes the choice for the child to be their own
separate person. How dare they? That’s the cry when the child defies the
adult “who knows better.”
So, perhaps, the only way in the adult parent’s mind to be
right is to make another person, their child, wrong. It’s ego-driven. Being
“right” is more important to them than raising and loving their children. It
may be deliberate or unconscious.
Nevertheless, the explanation that the dysfunctional adult
needs, even in the context of relating to their own children, is that they are
inherently and forever right. A child becoming fully who they are is betrayal,
disobedience, evil intent, even. The adult personalizes it and makes it about
them. They do this instead of recognizing that each child, including their
child, is a separate human being. And that is not an aggressive
declaration of war on the parent.
The adult will not, or cannot, see it as such.
You’re Not Wrong! You’re Right!
Maybe you have never heard that before. It’s not about a
person being perfect, never making mistakes. We all do. But who you are is separate
from what you do. You can have wrong actions; you can make mistakes. But who
you are is NOT wrong. The individual, in all of your uniqueness, is not
wrong. You are right. And your individuality is to be celebrated not condemned.
The next time you encounter the decree that who you are is
wrong, consider the statement’s source.
And its agenda.
Copyright © 2022 by Sheryle Cruse
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