raises hand
I think it's worth acknowledging that 'growing up' or 'putting it behind you' isn't a simple process, like a switch you can flip. It takes time, and you have to do a lot of grieving first.
I worry people see me as they do/did. I feel sad that my extended family also have a very low opinion of me and they believe m parents view of me even though I don't see them either.
Your parents were not seeing the real you, but an idea of you, formed out of their own fucked-upness. That was never really you. They just said it was. Children see themselves in what others reflect back and they accept it as truth. As a child you need your parents to be God. When they are the devil instead it leaves wounds that never really go away. When you feel you have these 'bad' characteristics it's because you are looking through the distorted lens you were given and not really seeing yourself.
But you can learn to live more fulfillingly even though you have these wounds. That starts with trying to accept yourself - pay attention to how you feel, think through the negative statements in your head and where they came from, be kind to yourself. In time it will start to get better. I whole-heartedly recommend the book Getting Through the Day by Nancy A Napier, which is for adult survivors of abuse who need day to day coping strategies.
It usually has to feel worse before it feels better as you are getting to feelings you've been bottling up or blocking out.
I think it's not helpful when people say things like "I'm past blaming mother". Your early life and attachments have a huge effect and when you are betrayed by the people who are meant to love and look after you, when you don't have inside you the experience of being loved, when you don't feel safe and secure in the world, it can have far-reaching consequences.
Personally I don't feel I will ever completely get over the loss of my childhood and the pain and grief of all I experienced. But I am finding it easier to live with, little by little, and I am feeling happier with the person I am now.
You are not like them. That is something to be proud of.