Black sheep heroes: dysfunctional families in childhood trauma and adult romantic relationships

6 thoughts on “Black sheep heroes: dysfunctional families in childhood trauma and adult romantic relationships”

    1. Thank you so much for this really lovely surprise comment! It was really lovely to see you here today 😉 thank you! I will write more on the subject but having “run away” from home at age 18 did not mean I had run away from all the issues that had hurt me and unfortunately, would continue to follow me until about a decade or so ago. For me family and love are the 2 things that have always mattered the most, and yet, I have been unable to have them though I tried so hard. They still matter to me, but that wound, both a mother and father wound, scarred me deeply and would set the stage for many failed relationships. Not because I did not have any love to give, but on the contrary, because I was so starved for love I would accept anything thrown at me, similarly to the few moments and breadcrumbs I got from my parents. Tolerating narcissistic behavior but also people who did not really want me or love me, because it was a familiar pattern, one I had grown up with at home. There were some good moments of course, as some I had with my parents, although few, which is why one becomes a dependent and finds it so hard to leave a relationship that is soul-destroying. They can’t be that bad? He/she had a bad day (this article also applies to men btw), and so we go on making excuses. I did this for many years, just like I did for my parents until I had had enough and rescued myself.

      For a relationship to work, we need to come to it from a healthy place, and while I don’t agree that we need to be happy and have all our ducks in a row before initiating a relationship, we do need to have done enough work on ourselves to realise why previous relationships did not work and look at what role our childhood may have played. While the work is ongoing, I have done this, I took time out to raise a child and barely have any relationships due to this and working on myself.

      We need to take time out sometimes, and that means also from relationships, but the work…is ongoing always for all of us. Much love your way x

  1. Hi Elayne

    This is very very insightful, I thank you very much for sharing. I’m really happy to know that you’re in a much better state than before and I hope you’ll always find kind and honest people in your path.

    It’s sort of crazy to think about all the inner pain that someone in this scenario could go through.

    1. Hello Rock, so lovely to read you and thanks so much for this thoughtful comment and following my work!

      Pain and suffering change us, and while we often resist them and facing the things which bring us pai, when we do embrace them, and go into the underworld willingly, experiencing destruction, we also experience growth and resurrection. It is a painful dark gift but one with the promise of new beginnings. I have had more than my fair share of pain, but also because I refuse to be hardened by it, even if more cautious, some people, as you all know from what I shared here and people I met on here, will take advantage of this. Often because they themselves are not healed either or refuse to do the work, not many can handle deep pain and grief that comes with dealing with our shadow side, and also accepting our accountability for the things that have happened to us.

      I was abused emotionally and physically, not sexually, by my caregivers and that is a deep wound. It never did stop me from trusting others but rather threw me into the arms of people that did not deserve me as I was so starved for love. Like a child, I am perhaps naive in this, but I still believe in giving everyone in my path a blank slate. However these days, they really need to earn access to me, even if hey have a blank slate and at the first signs of a red flag (now thankfully I see them) I will be gone. I have no problems in leaving the table when respect is no longer served. But agree all this pain was unnecessary and I would have given anything to have found my life partner early on in life and had some “normality”. Instead, I can now help others who suffered similar with my experience. It is good to give back, but I often wish life had been different.

      I’ll be online later, I hope you are having a good week!

  2. Hello,
    First of all, thanks for writing this post. I resonate with much of it being a black sheep myself. In my case there were two issues that never stopped haunting my relationships until I left my blood-family behind: religion and my blindness-since-birth.
    Even though my family tried to accept me being blind, I don’t think they ever fully did. I felt alone and different in almost all occasions and, ironically so, I was left feeling the most lonely in the religious meetings my family forced me to take part in. No one came to speak to me or so much as greet me apart from my family during those meetings. Afterward, I would hear people saying that this and this person was there, and I’d be like ah well, they could’ve at least said hi.
    As it often is with strict societies, this religion, too, shouted out loud of being permissive and open-minded and that everyone are welcome, but they acted on the contrary. I never felt welcome during all those years in the religion.
    Leaving the religious past behind was not an easy process, and it will never leave me fully. We have a saying for it, we say that the religion is in your bloodstream, and doesn’t fully get out no matter how you change your way of living.
    These days I don’t talk to most of my family. I feel much better as a hermit, allbeit that I hope to find a partner one day. If there’s one thing that these great struggles to regrow my identity has taught me, it’s inner strength. I was viewed a rebel but at the same time I’ve never felt so free as I now do, after leaving the past behind and living the life I want, alone but happy. Here’s hoping that loneliness may one day subside.

  3. Great piece of writing. I study psychological trauma as part of my job, and I was surprised and elated to see your post here. Prevention starts with awareness. I highly recommend the book “The Body Keeps the Score” for anyone who hasn’t yet read it.

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