Hi everyone and welcome to my letter G post in the #AtoZChallenge. Today, I want to talk about grief as it affects survivors of childhood trauma and particularly family dysfunction. I discussed grief in last year’s A-to-Z too. The thing is though, for many survivors of family dysfunction, the grief is not related to loss, but to missing something you never had. After all, for most people growing up in dysfunctional families, the abuse and neglect started before they were old enough to form clear memories. Because of this as well as other factors, many children also grow up to believe their experience is normal. After all, if you’ve never known any different, it’s hard to understand that your experience could be traumatic. This is one reason way too many people still believe that adversity experienced in early childhood has few effects because “they won’t remember anyway”.
I personally greatly struggle with this belief. Like I shared, I quite literally experienced adversity from birth on if not before. As such, even though my parents claim I was a happy child until around age seven, I have very few memories of a happy childhood.
I also struggle with the belief that “it wasn’t that bad” because it was all I knew. This means that, for a long time, I didn’t actually grieve my childhood trauma. This might seem positive, but the grief is all the worse now that I do know that my experiences weren’t normal. Besides, denial is the first stage in grieving for a reason. In other words, not knowing means I’ll never move on either.
Many people who didn’t experience significant childhood trauma, react to those grieving the happy childhood they never had with well-meaning but hurtful comments like “leave the past behind” or “everybody struggles sometimes”. In reality though, I’m not everybody and the past is part of my life.
Grief is different for everyone and your entitled to grieve your past, and a lost childhood. X
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Thank you, carol anne!
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I think some people have no idea what to say. I have no idea what to say. I’m sorry. I hope you do find peace.
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Thanks so much for commenting. Even though you don’t know what to say, the fact that you care means a lot.
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Hugs.
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Thank you!
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Not all get to live a dreamy happy childhood. Sending good wishes.
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True. Thanks for valiidating me.
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I guess my comments have been spammed.
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Yes, indeed. I apologize for not having noticed earlier.
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For me, healing does not come from ignoring the past. It comes from acceptance and finally being able to talk about it. It might still be painful but it is also part of moving forward. Sending hugs.
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Thank you. I agree!
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Sending hugs.
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Thanks!
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You’re allowed to process your grief in your own way. Others have no way in it.
Wishing you peace.
Lori
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Thanks for your kind comment. It means a lot.
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Should be “no say in it.” Sorry about that.
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