People who grow up in dysfunctional homes
often long for a normal family, a normal home, a normal life. But just what is
meant by “normal”?
The Oxford English Dictionary defines normal as “Conforming to a standard; usual, typical, or
expected.” Right there, we run into the first problem because what is “usual,
typical or expected” most definitely varies from one person to the next. Even
“conforming to a standard” is problematic because there is no objective
standard for a functional family and even dysfunctional families can conform to
a standard for dysfunctionality. The truth is, there is no such thing as a
“normal” family, home or life.
So, are we pining
over, yearning for something that exists only in our own imaginations? To a
degree, yes. There really is no such thing as a “normal” family or even a
“normal” parent. We create in our minds what we each define as “normal,” and
your definition is, of necessity, different from mine. Our personal definitions
of being normal, having normal family members or a normal family life are based
on both our observations of others (people who we perceive as “normal”) and on
our own needs and wants. Your version of normal may include an effusively loving
stay-at-home-mom who bakes cookies and listens, rapt, while you described your
school day whereas my definition of normal could include a working mom, but one
who didn’t hit or scream and who allows me to close my bedroom door. A better
term for what we want is “ideal” and that right there creates another set of
problems: ideals are goals to shoot for, but not always realistically
achievable.
What might be a better
examination is the difference between functional and dysfunctional family
interactions, recognizing that even this is an ideal, but at least some of it
is achievable. Rare is the family that achieves all of the benchmarks of a
fully functional family, and even families that achieve some of them…well,
sometimes those qualities can be faked. It’s not an easy thing to nail down.
Then there is the question: why do we even
want to know what is normal? Why chase after it, want it, hunger for it? If
you’ve never had a pony you can’t miss having one, so if you’ve never had a
functional family, can you miss it? And knowing that we cannot change anyone
but ourselves, are we not creating for ourselves a whole new world of pain by
focussing on and wishing for something we not only have been denied, but
something we can never have, a functional FOO?
I think the value in knowing what an ideal
functional family looks like is that most of us go on to have
families…children…of our own. It is doubly difficult to create something if you
have no idea what it should look or feel like. People who grow up in reasonably
functional families know…they may even subconsciously recognize each other,
much as dysfunctional people can subconsciously recognize and be drawn to
people with similar or complementing dysfunctions. If we have any hope of
breaking the dysfunctional cycle that we grew up in, the first thing we have to
do is know what functional looks like…not our personalized, idealized version
of functional but an achievable, real-world kind of functionality…so that we
can create something approximating it for our kids.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Elvira G. Aletta
wrote an article on just what qualities are present in functional families. What Makes aFamily Functional vs Dysfunctional?
outlines 17 points that are common to functional families. Dr. Aletta’s points
are presented below and my comments are, as usual, shown in violet.
1. R-E-S-P-E-C-T
Respect is the Holy Grail of functional
families. All people in the family, brothers to sisters, mothers to fathers,
parents to kids must be respectful as consistently as possible. Being
considerate of each other is the tie that binds, even more than love. I think
too much emphasis is put on love in general. I’ve heard of many atrocities done
within families in the name of love but never in the name of respect. Just
about all the things on the list come out of respect first.
Respect is paramount in all functional
relationships. The idea that people have to earn respect is logically absurd and emotionally destructive. We are owed respect from
everyone until we do something to earn disrespect and we owe respect to
everyone until that person earns our disrespect. It is very simple to respect
another person if don’t confuse respect with approval or love or even liking.
You don’t have to like a person or even approve of what he does or says or is
in order to respect him. Respect does not mean putting a person on a pedestal,
looking up to him, or even admiring him. Respect is simply caring about others,
about their feelings and their rights, regardless of whether you like or admire
or approve of them or not. And this includes our kids.
As ACoNs, every one of us can look back and
find examples of disrespect from our families. Caring about the feelings of
others is not the same as being controlled by those feelings, either. When I
was very young I came home from school and found most of my toys missing.
Thinking our house had been robbed, I ran to my mother only to learn that the
Goodwill truck was in our neighbourhood that day and she “cleaned” my closet. I
remember feeling shocked that she would do that. I was well aware that children
were obligated to follow the dictates of their parents and if she had told me
earlier that she would be giving away my old toys, I would have accepted her
dictates…but to come home and find it a fait
accompli was shocking…it was my
stuff! In retrospect I can see that I was feeling disrespected, that she had
usurped what little autonomy I had, by taking and giving away that which I
believed to be mine. It reinforced my feeling that she was not to be trusted,
and that it wasn’t a good idea for me to get attached to anything because it could
be gone in a heartbeat. Her lack of respect for my feelings…indeed, her failure
to acknowledge that my feelings were valid and deserved respect…characterized
and defined our relationship.
If your relationships with your FOO, your
partner, your kids, lack reciprocal respect, you are already in dysfunctional
territory. You cannot have a functional relationship or home without it.
2. An Emotionally Safe Environment
All members of the family can state their
opinions, thoughts, wants, dreams, desires and feelings without fear of being
slammed, shamed, belittled or dismissed.
This is less about permission to express
emotions but more about feeling free to express yourself without fear of being
emotionally injured as a result. I can remember telling my mother I wanted to
take French in the 9th grade and being called “pretentious” for it.
If I told anyone about getting an A on a test or received an academic award, I
was “showing off.” When I said I wanted to go to college, I was simply laughed
at. When I said I wanted to go live with my father, she took it as a personal
affront. She was fond of saying “There are three ways to do anything: the right
way, the wrong way, and my way…and my way is the only way that counts.”
This translated into every aspect of life: I could not like something she
didn’t, and if I didn’t like something she did (like liver), it was a personal
affront. It was not safe to like, feel, want or even need anything she did not
also like, feel, want or need. And the punishment for diverging from the “party
line” was emotional excoriation.
In a functional household, people are
allowed to hold and express their own opinions, feelings, wants, and beliefs
without fear of being punished for them. They can speak out and if their
opinions differ from others in the household, they are not subjected to ad hominem attack, even if those beliefs
and opinions come under rigorous discussion. In a dysfunctional household, any
deviation from the approved or expected leaves you open to personal attack…and
even agreeing may result in the same if you can’t parrot the party line as to why you believe as you profess. Members
of functional households are not controlled or punished with fear.
3. A Resilient Foundation
When relationships between and amongst
people in a family are healthy they can withstand stress, even trauma, and, if
not bounce back, at least recover. Resilience starts with encouraging sound
health, eating and sleeping well, and physical activity.
Resilience
implies flexibility and strength; its opposite is rigidity and inflexibility.
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that functional households, while possessing
structure and boundaries, also are resilient, flexing to accommodate new
situations and circumstances, and in dysfunctional households, there are rigid
roles and no flexibility to accommodate the members of the household.
Children
learn more by observation that by what they hear. What you, as a parent,
demonstrate to them, is what they absorb. So, if the parent as a rigid
personality, is stubborn and intransigent, won’t make exceptions when they are
warranted or, conversely, is so chaotic that no kind of grounding is provided,
it is difficult for children to learn to roll with the normal punches of life.
If your partner leaves and you become mired in grief or rage or react with a
sudden desperate siege of all of the local single’s joints, you aren’t teaching
your kids resilience, you aren’t demonstrating for them that first you grieve,
then you pick yourself up and resume life.
Resilience
is learned and you can learn it young, through a family that practices
emotionally healthy responses to stressors, or you can spend a lot of money and
time in therapy as an adult to learn it. Functional families give it to their
kids for free.
4. Privacy
Privacy of space, of body and of thought.
Knock and ask permission to enter before going through a closed door. All
family members are sensitive regarding personal space and aren’t insulted if
someone needs a wide berth.
This has to do with boundaries. In the
dysfunctional household, boundaries are set by the people who are in control of
the household and, as a rule, only they are allowed to have boundaries. Privacy
is a boundary that the dysfunctional parent finds threatening: they only feel
safe if they can know what you are doing at any time they feel they need to
know. It comes from fear and distrust: control makes them feel safe and they
fear that if you have privacy you might be doing something forbidden…and the
fact that you might do something forbidden is dangerous to their control.
In a dysfunctional household, people do get insulted if someone needs a wide
berth or personal space. You might be doing something that goes against the
controller’s wishes or, worse, you might be doing something that threatens his
control. If you are perceived as “hiding something,” you are suspect. You are expected to be an open book but,
at the same time, you are expected to respect the privacy of the household
controllers.
Functional households allow children to set
their own age-appropriate boundaries (parents must still have some idea of what
their minor children are doing in order to keep them safe…an Australian mother
recently discovered her toddler had brought a bunch of eggs that he found
outside into the house and stashed them in his closet—turns out they were eggs
of the most venomous snakes in the world and they hatched inside the closet!
Imagine if she didn’t think she had the right to go into his wardrobe because
of privacy issues and therefore didn’t find the snakes before her child was
bitten!). In dysfunctional households, the ability to set boundaries is
reserved to the people in control. Your privacy is at their whim, not your
right.
It all boils down to respect and
dysfunctional households, that is in very short supply.
5. Accountability
Being accountable is not the same as
planting a homing device on your kid or abusing the cell phone to track her
whereabouts 24/7. That’s not much better than stalking. No, being accountable
is (again with the respect thing) respectfully and reasonably informing people
in the family where you are and what you are doing so they can grow trust and
not worry.
This can be a touchy one because for
safety’s sake, parents need to know where their children are, and the younger
the child, the more important it is for the parent to know. In a functional
home, however, children are granted more and more freedom and autonomy as they
mature and demonstrate that they can make good decisions (or have learned from
their bad ones) and be trusted.
Dysfunctional households tend to go to one
extreme or the other: either the kids are simply turned loose to fend for
themselves and allowed to run wild, or they are rigidly controlled and given no
autonomy that does not benefit the controlling parents. There may be even be a
situation where some children are allowed to run wild while others are rigidly
controlled. Either way, the children do not come up in a household in which
they gradually learn responsibility and are given guidance such as how to learn
from a mistake.
6. An Apology
It’s sad when people hold out for an
apology on a point of pride, never acknowledging their part in a dispute. How
many times have you heard of rifts in families that last for years because
someone feels they are ‘owed an apology’?
A functional family will have conflict.
It’s very cool when we can have an argument and get to the other side of it
still friendly and satisfied with the outcome. But let’s face it, that’s not
always the case. Sometimes we say things that we regret. If we can feel and
show remorse for our part, quickly apologize, ask for and receive forgiveness,
no harm is done. You may even become closer for it.
I have to take some exception to this. While it does, on the surface, seem a bit absurd to remain estranged for an extended period of time while ostensible awaiting an apology, this might also be the tip of a huge narcissistic iceberg.
I have to take some exception to this. While it does, on the surface, seem a bit absurd to remain estranged for an extended period of time while ostensible awaiting an apology, this might also be the tip of a huge narcissistic iceberg.
Many of us go No Contact with narcissistic
family members for our own well-being and sometimes that decision is based on
an event in which someone ends up feeling s/he is owed an apology. Most of us
shy away from painful introspection…we don’t want to dig into our past pain and
re-experience it and come away with the devastating realization that our parents
are narcissists who have never loved anybody but themselves. Subconsciously, if
we are not emotionally ready to accept and deal with it, we protect ourselves
from that kind of shattering insight with less devastating “reasons” that still
allow us to take the steps that shield us from the damaging people in our
lives.
Whether or not breaking contact with a family member is a dysfunctional thing depends entirely on that family member and the relationship with him/her. If it is a narcissist who constantly gas lights you, exploits you, and generally runs you down and the schism occurred when you stood up to the abuse, one or both of you may expect and apology from the other and remain estranged while awaiting it…and in such a circumstance, I don’t think that is a bad thing!
Whether or not breaking contact with a family member is a dysfunctional thing depends entirely on that family member and the relationship with him/her. If it is a narcissist who constantly gas lights you, exploits you, and generally runs you down and the schism occurred when you stood up to the abuse, one or both of you may expect and apology from the other and remain estranged while awaiting it…and in such a circumstance, I don’t think that is a bad thing!
7. Allow Reasonable Expression of
Emotions
When I was growing up I wasn’t allowed to
be angry at my parents and my father would walk out on me if I cried. I was
determined to not do that to my kids. It hasn’t been easy. The main thing for
me was to teach them to state their anger in a managed manner and to teach
myself not to fly off the handle when they did. I had to learn that their
telling me they weren’t happy with something I did or said could be done with
respect. And, very importantly, vice versa.
The key word in this point is
“reasonable.” My kids were allowed to express their feelings but they weren’t
allowed to be abusive in the process: they were expected to respect the
feelings of others even while expressing their own. That meant that tantrums
that disrupted the peace of the rest of the family was not allowed…a child
having a tantrum was sent (or taken) to his room until the tantrum was over and
s/he could rejoin the rest of us and state his/her frustration in a manner that
we could all deal with. That meant that being angry was ok, but name-calling,
insults, throwing or breaking things, screaming and hitting were not.
Reasonable expressions of emotion, both
demonstrated by the parents and allowed to the children, do not include abuse.
They respect the rights and feelings of another, which can be a fine line to
walk when your child wants something desperately and the parent must say
“no.” Sometimes we have to hurt our
children (or do things they perceive as hurtful) in order to protect them. We
are not their buddies, after all, we are their teachers, mentors, guides and
protectors. But in fulfilling that role, we cannot squelch their expressions of
emotions, we must help them learn the appropriate, acceptable means of expressing
them and in functional families that is done both by example and by
instruction.
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I don't publish rudeness, so please keep your comments respectful, not only to me, but to those who comment as well. We are not all at the same point in our recovery.
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