Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Family, Relative... Toxic

I have been patient all the time of what happen to my so-called TOXIC family/relative which they always being an eye on my failure and success or good.
 
Yesterday, hubby came across this article by The Minds Journal - 'Why It's Okay To Cut Toxic Family Members From Your Life' and I found it is so true and would like to share out here.

We get it, your connection with your family supposed to be this mythical bond that nobody and nothing can break - however, sometimes it's okay to distance yourself from certain family members, even if that means cutting them off indefinitely.

You should never compromise your mental, emotional or physical health for the sake of tolerating a toxic family member.

'Before your start blocking Aunt Susan and your second cousin, it's important to recognize the signs of a toxic person':

They're Judgmental
Constructive criticism is healthy, but persistent, unwarranted criticism can deteriorate anyone's self-esteem.

They Feed Off Drama
Have you ever turned to a family member for some personal advice?  Yet, somehow after you've shared your most vulnerable moments with them - someone you thought was a trusted ally - somehow everyone in your family knows everything about your personal life (including your distant cousin in Hungary, who you've never met).

They Gaslight you
If your family member continually claims they never said something, when you and everyone else knows they did, it might not seem that serious.  However, this is a form of gaslighting, which is highly emotionally abusive behaviour.
 
They only Talk to you when they need something from you
Often, they'll go to you for advise or emotional comfort.  But once you turn to them for support, they dismiss you needs or hold your personal information against you.
 
They flip-flop between positive and negative reinforcement
They can lash out at you, yell, insult you.  However, once you ignore them after this senseless attack, they'll like coax you back into their trap by offering you pseudo-praise and support.  Typically these positive interactions are short-lived before this individual goes back to their typical manipulative behaviour.  If anyone in your family displays any of they symptoms of toxic (ie. abusive) behaviour, they're putting your mental health in jeopardy.
 
Alithia Asturrizaga, a licensed clinical social worker at Alithia Psychotherapy Associates, P.C., explains to Her Campus, “I have worked with countless people who have lived their lives dealing with toxic family members and significant others. In fact, this is one of the chief reasons that many people seek therapy.”
 
Toxic relationships, even with family members, can drain you emotionally, which can impact your overall mental well-being.  Nevertheless, you shouldn't accept this as the status quo.
 
There are certain techniques that people can use to make these relationships more tolerable—these methods generally involve distancing yourself to a certain degree from the toxic person. However, in many cases, the best solution is to remove the toxic individual from your life completely. This is rarely easy and is often complicated and emotionally conflicting in the case of close family relationships, such as with a parent—but when situations deteriorate to the point of making it impossible to live a happy and liberated life, this course of action is usually the best,” Asturrizaga says.
 
This abusive behavior isn’t confined to romantic relationships because anyone can have a toxic influence on your life.
 
Shannon Battle, LPC LCAS for the last eight years at Families Services of America, tells Her Campus that the best way to approach a toxic person is first to establish boundaries. To help stick to these boundaries, Battle suggests, “Anytime you deal with toxicity, understand there is a learning curve. There will be periods of uncertainty, guilt, and possible loss in relationships. You have to determine the level of sacrifice you are willing to make to protect your emotions and those that trust you to protect them as well. Sometimes, you have to hurt one to help another. The hurt is never intended to be malicious, but always done in love and respect. Behavior is choice-driven.”

Although you might feel an innate impulse to keep your toxic family member in your life, especially if that family member is your parent, it’s important to understand that keeping a toxic person in your life will have damaging effects on your mental health.
 
While you might try to convince your family member that what they’re doing is emotionally harmful to you, it’s possible that your family member won’t change—and that’s okay.
 
Personally, I spent most of my teenage years and a couple of years of my adulthood trying to get my parents to comprehend their emotionally abusive and toxic behavior. After finally convincing my mother to go to therapy with me, so my therapist could help her comprehend her abusive behavior (so she could make a positive change), my mother vehemently denounced my therapist’s suggestions and proclaimed that I was the one “who needed help, because [I was] the one who [was] crazy.” Not only did her statement perpetuate offensive ableist language, but it also contributes to the ignorant stigma that only the “emotional fragile” need therapy. In reality, everyone can benefit from therapy and counselling.
 
Before this instance, I’d heard similar phrases from my mother countless times. I told myself that her abhorrent behavior wasn’t worth sacrificing my mental health and emotional well-being because she was obviously never going to change—so I needed to change the situation to protect myself from this abuse.
 
Initially, I felt worthless because the very person who birthed me refused to change to keep me in her life, but I realized that I couldn’t force her to change.
 
Nevertheless, it’s okay if the toxic family member in your life never changes. Though you might become obsessed with getting them to change, this obsession can also negatively impact your mental health. Imagining a life where you disassociate from a family member might seem unfathomable, but it’s possible—because you don’t need them.
 
Even after you distance yourself from that toxic person, it will still take time to recover from that abuse, and that’s okay, too. Family is a subjective term, so you can form a new family from your supportive friends. Surrounding yourself with supportive people will help you reinforce the positive change that you need in your life.
 
While my personal experience with toxic parents might seem like an isolated event, it isn't. Lori Osachy, MSS, LCSW and director and owner of The Body Image Counseling Center, explains to Her Campuss, "Often one of these toxic family members is a parent.  It is extremely painful to realize that a toxic parent's personality is very unlikely to ever change.  The decision to go low or no-contact, and then stick with one's decision, can be excruciating.  on top of that, my clients often do not realize the parent's behaviour is toxic, so they continue to put up with abusive behaviours."   It can be a never-ending cycle of abusive behaviour, until you accept that this behaviour ism in fact, harmful and that it won't change until you distance yourself from this family member.
 
 “The social stigma of needing to ‘honor thy mother and father’ is another stumbling block. Sometimes cutting a parent out of your life is the best decision, but you need enormous support and education to do it successfully and experience relief,” Osachy says.
 
As someone who’s perfected the art of cutting toxic lovers, friends and family out of her life, the toxic person in your life might try to gaslight you into thinking that you’re actually the abuser.
 
They will likely claim that they’ve been victimized because you’re avoiding them, just because they give you the false sense of change or because they’ve made you feel remorse. These are the same abusive tactics they’ve used before, and you shouldn’t backpedal and accept them back into your life.

After all, toxicity is noxious, and you don’t need that kind of behavior killing your mental health.
 
xxxxxx
 
I have it, I face it, I am enough...  Toxic get away from me & my family.

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

23rd January 2018
 
This morning I have came across a very good story what is marriage life about.  As wishfully I have shared it in my Facebook & Blog and must read story for every married couple to read...
 
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I was married, had been with my wife for 15 years. Then I left her 2 months short of our 10 year wedding anniversary.
 
We were parents to two beautiful children,... who are in their late teens now, but were only seven and nine years old when I walked out.
I travelled for work, stayed in a different hotel at least three nights a week. That’s how I met Eve*.
We got to know each other over time. We became Facebook friends. We sent messages to each other all day and night. She was also married, also had two kids. We had so much in common, we soon fell in love. I felt like she 'got' me.
This was all during a very trying time in my marriage. I wasn’t happy, I didn’t look forward to going home. My wife had put on weight, we hardly ever spoke, she always looked so miserable.
Little did I realise that I was the reason she was so down and depressed. I didn’t pay her any attention. I took her for granted. I was too busy wishing my life was more exciting, being romanced online, spending all of my free time thinking how I could get out.
I believed she didn’t love me. I convinced myself she never cared about me or my needs and wants and wishes, that all I was was a paycheck.
She spent her free time taking care of us -- our kids, making our suppers, doing out washing, making lunches, doing homework, projects, shuttling kids to sport, taking care of the pets they loved so much, their friends, and had a job of her own on top of it all.
Every time she spoke to me, all I heard was nagging and whining. But she was actually begging for my attention: a weekend away, a date night, a movie -- everything I ended up doing with Eve behind her back and after I left my family.
We argued and fought because we felt unheard by the other. And yet that was all we actually had to do – LISTEN – to each other!
I moved to another province with Eve. My now ex-wife got custody of our kids. I saw them every second weekend, the usual 'Dad' set up.
New beginnings
Life was sweet!
Eve and I had an amazing sex life. A connection I believed I never had with my ex. We had a large circle of friends. My family loved her. My kids liked her.
But my ex could never bring herself to meet Eve – she felt betrayed. I hated her even more! She was childish. She was mean. She never cared about me or my happiness. I didn’t care about my ex’s feelings when I posted photos of us on Facebook… I had Eve and a whole new life and it was fantastic!
We were together for about six or seven years but never married – we believed marriage was not our thing.
I believed that after 15 years with my ex, we’d given it all we could and our time together was up, there was nothing we could do to salvage our relationship or marriage. Eve was my future, Eve was who I should have been with all along.
Eventually, no matter how well we got along in the beginning; no matter how well I thought she “got” me; no matter how good the sex was; the “honeymoon” came to an end.
Eve and I started snapping at each other. Little fights here and there. I had a moment of pure realisation one night, at about 2am.
I realised that I missed the woman who created my first home and family. I realised that if I'd treated my ex-wife the way I’d treated Eve, used the hours I spend woo-ing Eve on my ex, she’d have bloomed.
If I’d stopped being negative about her and our relationship to my family and friends they wouldn’t have been so negative to her and she wouldn’t have pulled into herself and shied away.
She became someone I convinced myself I no longer knew or got along with because I never gave her the time and affection and attention she craved and deserved.
I thought I had, but when I got down and really thought about it I never really did. I never really let her in. I had ended my marriage years before with the simple decision that she was no longer who or what I wanted. And I’d convinced my family and friends the same – that she was no good for me!
Regret sets in
But I was wrong. I missed the best years of my kids lives. Missed being a family with them. I let their mother battle with raising them alone. Yes I helped financially, but a man living outside his family has no real idea what the costs are on the single mother. While Eve and I ate steaks on the weekends, my ex-wife was living on egg and toast.
And do you know that she never complained? She never demanded more money out of me. She never stopped me from seeing the kids. Never said no if I changed plans on her at the last minute. She gave up her weekends so that my mother could spend time with her grandchildren. She left me to get on with my life with Eve, even though it must have killed her.
Like any relationship, it had started out good – great in fact – but when it go bad I decided to leave… I walked out and divorced a woman who – and I can only see this now – would have done anything for me. But I’d told myself she wouldn’t or couldn’t.
My ex-wife stayed single for 8 years. She dated but never got involved. Her being single was also a kind of affirmation for me – that no one wanted her – that everything I’d decided she lacked, so did other men… She actually stayed single to focus on our children.
Too late
And then came the day she met Craig. I never thought it would bug me in any way if she got a boyfriend. I thought it would be great! But I was very wrong. I felt hurt. I felt jealous. I even felt angry and maybe betrayed.
She moved in with Craig, along with my kids. She set up a new home. A new family, with my kids… it was a very bitter pill to swallow.
I finally understood how she’d felt all these years. And it felt rotten.
I watched via Facebook and through conversations with our old mutual friends how Craig spoiled her and the kids. Their weekends were spent on the beach – he surfed with my son. They went hiking in the Burg. They went to Mauritius where he proposed on a kayak and she said yes -- they got married.
My daughter was a bridesmaid. My son was a groomsman. Craig’s parents and brother welcomed my ex-wife and children into their family. They told everyone how blessed they were to be gaining them as family.
She glowed with happiness. She radiated love and none of it was for me! My heart felt like it had been ripped out.
It should have been me.
Don’t be me. You think you will never be happy when you are in a rut. It is when you are there at your darkest that you need to grip down and try your hardest.
Today I live alone and still only see my kids occasionally. They are big now and harbour anger towards me for leaving them and their mother. Who can blame them?
Of all the things Eve was, she was never the mother of my children – my original true love."
 
"HOPE this helps a few marriages, Love and appreciate a Good woman"

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

24th October 2017 : Me Myself MyLife MyLove

Finally after a long time of absent from my blog I have pick-up my mind to write again.  Facebook is the biggest seduction from blogging my BlogSpot.
 
Time really flies flew so fast... After announcing my 2nd pregnancy and now my lil boy have been grown up to be a lil Toddler.  Yes, he is 6 years old and started to learn to speak and understand many type of situation happen in his growing up journey
 
 
My lil girl no longer lil but growing up teenage girl and she is 12 years old.  Graduating from Primary 6 this year and entering to secondary school next year.  She has not been attaching us so much as she has her own time not a baby girl anymore

 
This October 2017 has been a very special year to myself and my hubby as 4 occasion happening this month:-
 
-  Renee Primary 6 Graduation (7th October 2017)
-  Ryan Kindergarden Year 6 Graduation (14th October 2017)
-  Our 2nd home key collection @ Ascenda Residence @ SkyArena (15th October 2017)
-  Our 14th Ivory Wedding Anniversary (18th October 2017)
 
Hubby has been very busy with his job and teaching.  I have been very proud of him every year when his students graduating from MII and he is one of the well known lecture.  He has been working hard for the family good living too.
 
Myself, nothing much to say the only biggest thing changes is my career.  I am no longer working in Travel Industry as I am more to family and my health.  Most important I have achieve what I wanted to achieve in my travel industry life.  So decided to walk backward to my Secretarial life.  Been working in this company for almost 2 years and hopefully this job will be my last job as I don't have any interest to jump anywhere.
 
That's all for now for a start but more to come...