Split Family

  • #1942837
    이해 70.***.139.31 1602

    What People Without Divorced Parents Don’t Understand The truth about how it feels to have divorced parents.
    Carly Tycia Bandy in Lifestyle on Jul 27, 2015

    If you’ve grown up with divorced parents, you’ve probably heard the thoughts that others have on the subject. But if you haven’t grown up in a split home, you don’t even know the half of it. This article isn’t here to bash those that got to grow up in a solid home but to help you better understand what it’s like for those who didn’t.

    The most common thing I heard while growing up from the kids I went to school with was that it was probably “so cool to have two of everything.” No. It wasn’t. Your friends thought that having two houses and two rooms was the coolest thing ever. But when you live out of a suitcase every other weekend, it gets exhausting. What people don’t see is the back and forth. When a friend asked you to hang out, you couldn’t give them an answer right then. You had to go back to your parents and figure out where exactly you would be living that weekend. And then whose house you were at changed your whole weekend. Your sense of ‘home’ got so misconstrued because you were constantly bouncing between two houses and two families. There was no constant, and after a while, that really starts to impact you.

    The holidays were another story. When your parents are divorced, you probably aren’t having one giant Christmas with the whole family. You had multiple, and when you told your friends that, they almost showed jealousy because they felt that you were going to get more presents than them. But that was not the case. There is no comfort in spending the holidays in one place, no matter the holiday. It felt like you were being shipped around like some sort of guest trying to make as many appearances as possible. I love my family, don’t get me wrong, but this is tiring. It makes you want to stay home by yourself and just not even celebrate the holiday because it’s so forced and planned out.

    One of the biggest things that people without divorced parents don’t understand is how it affects us mentally and emotionally in general and in all of our relationships. When you’re younger, it doesn’t really hit you. You learn to be independent earlier on, and in some ways, it’s beneficial. But when you start to get older and begin to have relationships with people, it really begins to take a toll on you. When your parents are divorced, your trust in other people is greatly affected. You feel like you have been abandoned and left to fend for yourself. It’s harder to trust people, even if they are telling the truth just because of everything you’ve been through. You’re constantly scared of people leaving because you watched a parent, someone who is connected to you in a way that can never be changed, walk away from you and your family. It makes you question your worth and if certain things are even worth your time because you have a mindset that, in the end, everyone leaves. Having divorced parents is not glamorous or fun like some people see it. It’s hard, and it’s something that you will never get over. You deal with it your whole life, and it doesn’t really ever change.

    • A 74.***.53.162

      아주 좋은 글입니다.
      이혼하는 사람들이 얼마나 이기적인지 생각해봐야 합니다.
      아이들에게 못할 짓이지요.

      • tracer 216.***.0.72

        이기적이라서 이혼하는 사람들도 있고, 드물지만 그래도 이혼하는게 아이한테 더 나아서 하는 경우도 있을겁니다. 다 싸잡아서 말하다보면 상처받는 사람들이 꼭 생기죠.

    • . 216.***.203.2

      그냥 징징거리는 글로 밖에 안 보입니다.
      어디 사춘기에 그정도 고민없이 크는 사람 있답니까.
      부모가 사흘이 멀다하고 싸우는거 보면서 크는 것은 퍽이나 인간적 신뢰에 도움이 되겠습니다.

    • sssss 75.***.8.34

      댓글들 달기전에,

      http://www.divorcecorp.com/

      이 다큐먼터리를 먼저 보시고 그러고도 할말있으시면 댓글다세요.
      결혼하기전에 이 다큐먼터리부터 보시구요. Reality is worse than what this Documentary shows.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9EDT1GgAFG0

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