Posted by:
forestpal
(
)
Date: June 14, 2012 06:51AM
Mia is right. Her family seems to be a lot like mine. She drives home the point that nothing is ever good enough.
This is not personal. It is just perfectionism in the extreme. It is the conditional love that the Mormons teach and practice.
I was excluded from my TBM family, because I lived a distance away, and because I worked. My husband and children worked, too. My siblings were just bums, who lived off my parents.
In my case, my oldest brother and his wife were stealing my parents' estate. I was a good Mormon--an organist and cub scout leader and SS teacher--but never RS president, like my mother and grandmothers. AS good as I always tried to be, my brothers and sisters in law would make up gossip about me, to discredit me in my parents' eyes. They also lied to my parents that my husband was worth millions, and we didn't need money or gifts. I thought it was simple jealousy, but later I learned that they were after my share of the inheritance. They did steal over half of my share.
Yes, it bothers you badly, to be cut out of your family, but, you must understand that this is for the best! I don't know your details, but I assume by their behavior that your family is not loving or supportive. Your family seems to be dysfunctional and not kind. Do you want your children to be treated that way? This will probably bother them, too, right?
Sometime over the years, I realized that contact with my family was hurting my children. My brothers spanked them, verbally abused them, called them names. My kids were well behaved, sociable, musical, athletic, good students, paper boys, and Eagle scouts. Yet, my family constantly belittled them. When my brother sexually harassed my daughter, I stopped the family visits.
Years later, my children have succeeded way beyond anything my family could ever dream of. They are honest and loving non-Mormons. They are free from sexism, racism, snobbery, entitlement, narcissism, dishonesty, manipulation, back-biting, and all those other nasty traits that they might have learned from my brothers, Their kids are adults, now, and are just as rotten. The decision to break off all ties, is one we've never wanted to reverse.
If you can let go (and let go of the money, too) you and your wife and kids will be much happier. Your happiness will balance out the hurt.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/14/2012 07:09AM by forestpal.