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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

July 2025 - Well we took you to Stately Homes

1000 replies

AttilaTheMeerkat · 02/07/2025 10:17

I have now set up a new thread as the previous one is now full.

This long runnning thread has become a safe haven for Adult children of abusive families.

The title refers to an original poster's family who claimed they could not have been abusive as they had taken her to plenty of Stately Homes during her childhood!

One thing you will never hear on this thread is that your abuse or experience was not that bad. You will never have your feelings minimised the way they were when you were a child, or now that you are an adult. To coin the phrase of a much respected past poster Ally90;

'Nobody can judge how sad your childhood made you, even if you wrote a novel on it, only you know that. I can well imagine any of us saying some of the seemingly trivial things our parents/ siblings did to us to many of our real life acquaintances and them not understanding why we were upset/ angry/ hurt etc. And that is why this thread is here. It's a safe place to vent our true feelings, validate our childhood/ lifetime experiences of being hurt/ angry etc by our parents behaviour and to get support for dealing with family in the here and now.'

Most new posters generally start off their posts by saying; but it wasn't that bad for me or my experience wasn't as awful as x,y or z's.
Some on here have been emotionally abused and/ or physically abused. Some are not sure what category (there doesn't have to be any) they fall into.
NONE of that matters. What matters is how 'YOU' felt growing up, how 'YOU' feel now and a chance to talk about how and why those childhood experiences and/ or current parental contact, has left you feeling damaged, falling apart from the inside out and stumbling around trying to find your sense of self-worth.
You might also find the following links and information useful, if you have come this far and are still not sure whether you belong here or not.
'Toxic Parents' by Susan Forward.
I started with this book and found it really useful.
Here are some excerpts:
"Once you get going, most toxic parents will counterattack. After all, if they had the capacity to listen, to hear, to be reasonable, to respect your feelings, and to promote your independence, they wouldn't be toxic parents. They will probably perceive your words as treacherous personal assaults. They will tend to fall back on the same tactics and defences that they have always used, only more so.
Remember, the important thing is not their reaction but your response. If you can stand fast in the face of your parents' fury, accusations, threats and guilt-peddling, you will experience your finest hour.
Here are some typical parental reactions to confrontation:
"It never happened". Parents who have used denial to avoid their own feelings of inadequacy or anxiety, will undoubtedly use it during confrontation, to promote their version of reality. They'll insist that your allegations never happened, or that you're exaggerating. They won't remember, or they will accuse you of lying.
YOUR RESPONSE: Just because you don't remember, doesn't mean it didn't happen".
"It was your fault." Toxic parents are almost never willing to accept responsibility for their destructive behaviour. Instead, they will blame you. They will say that you were bad, or that you were difficult. They will claim that they did the best that they could but that you always created problems for them. They will say that you drove them crazy. They will offer as proof, the fact that everybody in the family knew what a problem you were. They will offer up a laundry list of your alleged offences against them.
YOUR RESPONSE: "You can keep trying to make this my fault, but I'm not going to accept the responsibility for what you did to me, when I was a child".
"I said I was sorry what more do you want?" Some parents may acknowledge a few of the things that you say but be unwilling to do anything about it.
YOUR RESPONSE: "I appreciate your apology, but that is just a beginning. If you're truly sorry, you'll work through this with me, to make a better relationship."
"We did the best we could." Some parents will remind you of how tough they had it while you were growing up and how hard they struggled. They will say such things as "You'll never understand what I was going through," or "I did the best I could". This particular style of response will often stir up a lot of sympathy and compassion for your parents. This is understandable, but it makes it difficult for you to remain focused on what you need to say in your confrontation. The temptation is for you once again to put their needs ahead of your own. It is important that you be able to acknowledge their difficulties, without invalidating your own.
YOUR RESPONSE: "I understand that you had a hard time, and I'm sure that you didn't hurt me on purpose, but I need you to understand that the way you dealt with your problems really did hurt me"
"Look what we did for you." Many parents will attempt to counter your assertions by recalling the wonderful times you had as a child and the loving moments you and they shared. By focusing on the good things, they can avoid looking at the darker side of their behaviour. Parents will typically remind you of gifts they gave you, places they took you, sacrifices they made for you, and thoughtful things they did. They will say things like, "this is the thanks we get" or "nothing was ever enough for you."
YOUR RESPONSE: "I appreciate those things very much, but they didn't make up for ...."
"How can you do this to me?" Some parents act like martyrs. They'll collapse into tears, wring their hands, and express shock and disbelief at your "cruelty". They will act as if your confrontation has victimized them. They will accuse you of hurting them, or disappointing them. They will complain that they don't need this, they have enough problems. They will tell you that they are not strong enough or healthy enough to take this, that the heartache will kill them. Some of their sadness will, of course, be genuine. It is sad for parents to face their own shortcomings, to realise that they have caused their children significant pain. But their sadness can also be manipulative and controlling. It is their way of using guilt to try to make you back down from the confrontation.
YOUR RESPONSE: "I'm sorry you're upset. I'm sorry you're hurt. But I'm not willing to give up on this. I've been hurting for a long time, too."

Helpful Websites
Alice Miller
Personality Disorders definition
Daughters of narcissistic mothers
Out of the FOG
You carry the cure in your own heart
Help for adult children of child abuse
Pete Walker
The Echo Society
There are also one or two less public offshoots of Stately Homes, PM AttilaTheMeerkat for details.

Some books:
Toxic Parents by Susan Forward
Homecoming by John Bradshaw
Will I ever be good enough? by Karyl McBride
If you had controlling parents by Dan Neuharth
When you and your mother can't be friends by Victoria Segunda
Children of the self-absorbed by Nina Brown - check reviews on this, I didn't find it useful myself.
Recovery of your inner child by Lucia Capacchione
Childhood Disrupted by Donna Jackson Nazakawa
This final quote is from smithfield posting as therealsmithfield:
"I'm sure the other posters will be along shortly to add anything they feel I have left out. I personally don't claim to be sorted but I will say my head has become a helluva lot straighter since I started posting here. You will receive a lot of wisdom but above all else the insights and advice given will 'always' be delivered with warmth and support."

OP posts:
Thread gallery
5
JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 18:58

crazysnakess · 16/07/2025 18:52

@Strawberrypjs she wanted eldest to like her the most. Not just the most as a grandparent, but more than me. and she also took every opportunity to try and show that she could look after her better than me. I don't think my needs or feelings came into it at all, tbh.

Mines like this. I have a teenager that sees me as the problem and fully aligned with the problematic people underneath.

They use anything to win them over and want to play parent again. But they do it in ways that are so terrible and damaging and it's not love or care.

Not one part of any of your experience is anything to do with you. ❤️

Strawberrypjs · 16/07/2025 19:06

Imagine viewing the world like this and your family.

Dogaredabomb · 16/07/2025 19:58

One time mother said 'when I had (my child)' I said 'uh, actually I gave birth to him' and she laughed!!!! I actually laughed because it was SO MAD

crazysnakess · 16/07/2025 20:52

Dogaredabomb · 16/07/2025 19:58

One time mother said 'when I had (my child)' I said 'uh, actually I gave birth to him' and she laughed!!!! I actually laughed because it was SO MAD

I remember her giggling as she told me that someone had thought eldest was her child

I'm beginning to wonder if this is a thing

Strawberrypjs · 16/07/2025 21:04

Yeah I think they are collectively all nuts!

Twatalert · 16/07/2025 22:12

I'm convinced my mother sees my niece, her grandchild, as more than a grandchild. More like a possession. The influence she has (and my nieces parents let her have) is insane. The enmeshment just continues. She treats her like a 2nd version of me. I can't explain it well. There is some weird emotional neglect/distance and this enmeshment at the same time. It's more like surveillance. Being in her business all the time. My father is the same.

My brother set up a camera in his garden and gave my father the code and my father would log in and watch my brother and his family go about their business. He'd know when my brother gets home from work and then log in and take screenshots 'as a joke'. That kind of thing they see nothing wrong with it. My SiL was mad when she found out and I thought YES LADY but I think it was all brushed under the carpet. This was years before I threw my hissy fit and went NC lol. I remember logging in too and the moment I did it I realised how messed up this is and I couldn't look at it again. Yes I was part of this madness.

JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 23:07

@Twatalert that's so bloody weird ref the cameras. There are no boundaries in these families. None. Anything goes and you think it's normal.

JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 23:23

Is anyone else here entirely alone? I have totally NC sibling. He hasn't argued with it. I yellow rocked two attempts quite well. My mum is virtually NC now 2 and a half months.

I realised I can't fight and chase or fix anything ref my teen. I have entirely backed away. Always available and reply immediately if called. I've stopped fighting or trying to manage the impossible.

I'm less people pleaser so my neighbour who I get on ok with has gradually become more and more CF like with really not ok things. So I kindly am now saying ' I really need you to stop blocking our communal gate with this giant metal thing I can't physically lift ( obviously sick and not strong). And neighbour suggests I'm the problem and the dog will escape. I very firmly ended that and reiterated the gate thing needs to be moved, conversation over.

So I sit here and think - ok, so if you even as politely as possible set boundaries and don't people please to your detriment anymore - it can leave absolutely no one.

I'm not going to lie how hard this is with the health situation and being trapped inside a fair amount.

Is this what happens?

Twatalert · 16/07/2025 23:30

@JoyDivision79 they are weird. I still dont understand what this is about. Another thing they did was tracking flights when flight radar came about. It started as a joke when I was flying somewhere and they could see exactly as I landed or where the plane was, except it became a really nasty habit and my father expected me to send my flight number every time I went somewhere. I they tracked me around the world and I'd have WhatsApp messages when I landed with screenshots from mid air and crap like that. And I didn't feel I could say I didn't want that and I know it would have been an issue had I said that.

They still do it with my brother when they go on holiday. It's SO bizarre. I don't get it.

Last time I went to visit and we had already fallen out I had booked a hotel instead of staying at theirs. They then gifted me the same amount of money my hotel cost for the three nights. They'd obviously looked it up and calculated how much I pay because I sure hadnt told anyone what I paid. Fucking creeps.

Twatalert · 16/07/2025 23:35

@JoyDivision79 yes it is what happens. I have to set more boundaries with a couple of friends. For a while I thought that if they dont accept I will have to let them go. I'm always the mug in relationships. The one people dump their shit on. The one that's seen as lesser and inferior. Ton of examples. Im learning to express myself better and it will get to a point they might resist and I have to walk away.

I have walked away from a couple of work friends because I found them draining.

New, healthy people are supposed to enter your life instead. No idea where mine are.

JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 23:37

@Twatalert spying and stalking is a thing with them. Control is everything.

I'd make sure there's nothing they can track you with. Gross these people honestly.

I have a tracker app on my son's phone for when he's with me and out biking. When he's with his dad I refuse to ever look. Because these values and principles are really important to me. They mean nothing to these weirdos with no boundaries or morals.

JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 23:39

Twatalert · 16/07/2025 23:35

@JoyDivision79 yes it is what happens. I have to set more boundaries with a couple of friends. For a while I thought that if they dont accept I will have to let them go. I'm always the mug in relationships. The one people dump their shit on. The one that's seen as lesser and inferior. Ton of examples. Im learning to express myself better and it will get to a point they might resist and I have to walk away.

I have walked away from a couple of work friends because I found them draining.

New, healthy people are supposed to enter your life instead. No idea where mine are.

Ah bless you. Where the heck are mine too I wonder? 😆❤️

Dogaredabomb · 17/07/2025 04:00

We're here 💃💃💃💃💃♥️♥️♥️♥️

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 07:29

I got invited to the adult birthday “party” of a newish friend. I’m excited like a child! We are
going to the cinema!

Twatalert · 17/07/2025 10:33

JoyDivision79 · 16/07/2025 23:07

@Twatalert that's so bloody weird ref the cameras. There are no boundaries in these families. None. Anything goes and you think it's normal.

That's probably how they delude themselves that they are a close family. It's madness. And you get this sick feeling in your stomach but don't know exactly why and can't express it. Takes years to pin down and recognise it as abuse.

My father is much worse than my mother. My brother would just say 'we are looking to buy a new washing machine' and my father would study all washing machines under the sun and 'advise' my brother. He'd then also judge on whatever he buys, tell him he overpaid and that it's ridiculous. Or he'd have to be in the loop about when it gets delivered etc. It's suffocating. Or the time my brother let friends stay at their house whilst they were on holiday and got told off by my father that he shouldn't do that.

I'm SO glad to be out of this madness. That I won't pass over my flight number to them ever again and be tracked.

Twatalert · 17/07/2025 10:34

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 07:29

I got invited to the adult birthday “party” of a newish friend. I’m excited like a child! We are
going to the cinema!

That's fantastic. What kind of beverage are you thinking of getting? 🤗

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:42

Dogaredabomb · 17/07/2025 04:00

We're here 💃💃💃💃💃♥️♥️♥️♥️

Of course you are! You guys have been a voice of sanity I can't even tell you how much it has helped ❤️😘

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 10:46

Twatalert · 17/07/2025 10:34

That's fantastic. What kind of beverage are you thinking of getting? 🤗

2 for 1 on cocktails before hand lol!

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:47

@Twatalert I use the word incestuous when I think about these dynamics. It's very common in these families. To be so over involved in such unhealthy blurred ways, it's gross.

It goes back to the concept that people are objects / possessions to be monitoring,managed, controlled. 🤮

I love being closed off entirely to any communication online/ social media. It feels very self protective.

I do wonder if there's a tracker on my car. And no it would not be paranoid. It's the sort of thing that would be seen as normal, ' it's to make sure you're ok lovely if you ever broke down.'....🖕

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:48
flying kiss misery GIF

😬

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:50

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 10:46

2 for 1 on cocktails before hand lol!

This is great to hear. I am guessing it is a child free get together. Have fun fun fun 😘

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 10:51

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:50

This is great to hear. I am guessing it is a child free get together. Have fun fun fun 😘

Yeah. Now I’ve got to keep my lovely asd brain from thinking the shit out of it!

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 11:07

Strawberrypjs · 17/07/2025 10:51

Yeah. Now I’ve got to keep my lovely asd brain from thinking the shit out of it!

There isn't anything wrong with thinking about good conversation starters or topics before you go. Only if you're worried about this. I like to prepare many things because it isn't always easy to just go with the flow.

It's possible she might be ND too.

You sound a very giving decent person so enjoy it as much as you can and remember how fab a person you are.

Twatalert · 17/07/2025 11:43

JoyDivision79 · 17/07/2025 10:47

@Twatalert I use the word incestuous when I think about these dynamics. It's very common in these families. To be so over involved in such unhealthy blurred ways, it's gross.

It goes back to the concept that people are objects / possessions to be monitoring,managed, controlled. 🤮

I love being closed off entirely to any communication online/ social media. It feels very self protective.

I do wonder if there's a tracker on my car. And no it would not be paranoid. It's the sort of thing that would be seen as normal, ' it's to make sure you're ok lovely if you ever broke down.'....🖕

Edited

That's exactly the right word & the excuse you'd be getting was exactly what I got to hear for years. And I didn't know how to argue against it as it made me look horrible. My parents always had this weird thing that they seemed worried I was dead if they didn't hear from me for 5 minutes or I didn't immediately alert them that I had arrived wherever. Once I didn't answer my phone for a whole afternoon. The result was 12 missed calls from them 'because we were worried'. I'd feel immediate guilt and didn't know how to push back.

Is there a way of checking whether your car has a tracker? You need something like a ring door bell for your car. These people are ridiculous. I can see how it wouldn't surprise you.

Solace123 · 17/07/2025 21:28

Hi everyone, popped on this thread over the years

I'm feeling in a bad place atm. Been feeling lonely due to being single, having my DC 50% and not many friends if I'm honest. I've been trying to do more solo stuff to get out more.

Anyway went round my parents with DC as it was DF birthday. I cant remember how it came about but he said that I don't have any friends and was laughing.
I just half laughed it off in front of DC and said that's not nice. Dc also agreed.

Today I text my dad (which i wouldn't usually do but im trying to set boundries) and explained that his comment had hurt me and this weekend I had been feeling upset and lonely and its true I don't have many friends.
In his reply he didn't say sorry for upsetting me and told me basically that I shouldn't let comments upset me because its a joke. No acknowledgment that I've been upset and lonely at the weekend either!! So I've blocked him. First I've ever done it.

I spoke to my Dsis as we have discussed our parents before. I explained what happened. She's read my message and completely ignored me. She's posting on social media but ignoring me after reading it.

There's so much more backstory to my family but I've just had enough!
They don't support me in any way at all. None of them. Not even emotionally. Yet I spent an hour the other day listening to my mum moan about her mum and siblings. Both parents seem to favour the other younger grandchildren too and leave me and DS out alot but because I've always been the people pleaser and not really spoken up I havent normally said anything

I don't really have anyone to talk to about this. I guess people on this thread really get it.
How do you build a life with no family or support?

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