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Even in recovery family life is fraught with tension. Such things
happen, if we meet up as a family, and there is drink; and, there is
always drink. The pattern re-emerges, but you would be ostracised
for psycho analysing it and defining a family pathology! Distance
and objectivity and definition, are not the order of the day, no
matter what.
I had not realised the possible damage to family members until a few
years back when, being newly in receipt of my first computer (and
the associated problems) I had asked too much of one of my brothers.
I was shattered absolutely, when, he suddenly became the model of my
father, at his most damaging and ugly, and extreme...throwing my bag
and belongings out onto the street.
I was truly amazed and broken-hearted! I wandered the streets, of my
old home-town sobbing. I had not realised the damage to him was so
great that he became this tyrannical bully; unreasonable, abusive
and twisted.
I was gutted. It was not so much what he did to me that was so
terrible. It was the awful realisation that 'the monster had
resurrected'. My alcoholic father had left his model on my poor,
wrecked brother, who incidentally was very fragile and had not known
an easy life; he already had endured tragedy.
My eldest sister, eldest family member, is the worst. I have learned
now, that the very best way to survive, is minimal contact.
Nonetheless, when we have a family 'do', I feel myself bracing
myself for abrasive or non-affirming brushes. I would never have
known how to do this if I had not had love and praise and
appreciation from friends.
Sadly, the sibling rivalry is also a feature of our 'cement'. Vicky |