But I will think about what you've said garlicbutter. As always, I do mull things over, try them for size.
Perhaps you could clarify for me then the following. It seems to me that she wants me to say a blanket 'it was shit'. No mitigating circumstances. I have said 'it was shit' - many times; I have said I am sorry (and been sorry) for what happened to her/them - many times. It seems that she wants me to be forever in the bad dog corner. Like, permanently. To hang my head forever as a means of making it up to her, as a means of making up for the shit, for what she didn't get (and what she did). I have another friend whose mother is, in her words, a paranoid schizophrenic (I assume this was the diagnosis). My friend's childhood was seriously shit - from the age of 9 my friend was the 'mother' in the family in the full sense, cooking, paying bills etc. ss eventually got involved and my friend was put into care, which was a lifeline for her and she is still very close to her foster mother. Her mother had extensive treatment and, 20 years later, is stable and functioning very well indeed. However, my friend treats her mother badly eg if her mother wants to come over, my friend will say she can but, within 5 minutes of her mother's arrival, tells her to go home (her mother comes a long way). This happens regularly. My friend says she deserves it after what she went through in her childhood. What I would say to that is, how long will you be doing that? HOw long before the scales are balanced? (I haven't said that btw)
I agree that her childhood was shit, but at what point do you 'forgive' your parent/s? Particularly if, as in this case, the mother fully recognises what happened and how shit it was for her daughter? At some point, she (and my daughter) has to come to terms with what happened - and drop it, let it go. imo to hang on to it, to use it as a means of not facing your life, is a disaster. It is this that I have short shrift with - not heartlessly at all, but as a matter of vital importance. imo unless and until she does, she will be defined by it and will not be free to live her own life. INterestingly, my friend and my daughter have very similar traits and behave in very similar ways. One that stands out is a clear judgement of the mother (another is a rabid codependence). This judgement looks permanent, like it's meant to be a permanent state of affairs. Disaster, imo. You have your times, your years of judging, of being angry, of coming to terms with it - but there comes a time when you choose to drop it and to face your parent as a flawed human being, who got it wrong (sometimes very wrong). You stand on your own feet, as an adult, and face what life dealt out to you, without blame. That's just how it was - what now? You don't want to be bringing all that shit with you.
imo, therapists get you to the point of facing what happened re your parent/s, being angry with what happened - all well and good. But they don't take you through to the other side, they leave you with the anger as though that is the pinnacle of healing. Imo they don't promote forgiveness and that is a travesty imo - they are signing people up to a lifetime of shit to not bring them out the other side.
Obviously, if a parent continues to be abusive you have to step away. I would still say though that, as hard as it is, you have to forgive, to let it go, to drop it. It is not dishonouring what happened to drop it, it is accepting it as what happened then (even if it is still happening but you have chosen to step away).
Forgiveness gets a bad press imo. it is not a blanket 'that's alright then, you didn't mean it'. it's serious, it's hard. YOu have to keep it up, maintain it. But, oh my, it is not as hard as living with the shit of what they did for the rest of your life. imo it is at the root of a lot of mental illness, a lot of anguish. Why would you want to bring all that shit with you and let it poison your entire life?