Notwendy,
I often feel sad about all the missed opportunities in my life because of being scapegoated by such a large extended family. The golden children and flying monkeys appear to be so much more successful than I am when it comes to wealth, outstanding careers, marriage, children, having lots of friends.
I realize I cannot put myself in my disordered relatives shoes and fully understand how unhappy they must be deep down inside from having a compulsive need to maintain a false image and ignore their deepest fears.
I often feel sad about all the missed opportunities in my life because of being scapegoated by such a large extended family. The golden children and flying monkeys appear to be so much more successful than I am when it comes to wealth, outstanding careers, marriage, children, having lots of friends.
I realize I cannot put myself in my disordered relatives shoes and fully understand how unhappy they must be deep down inside from having a compulsive need to maintain a false image and ignore their deepest fears.
I understand and when I look back at how success, achievement, money was handled in my FOO, the main purpose for all of it seemed to be to bolster BPD mother's self image, and- we also saw that emotional turmoil she struggled with, no matter what anyone did, or what she had materially.
I do think having sufficient material security is important and a good thing to have, and I undrerstand feeling that you weren't given the chance and opportunities other family members had or were given. I hope that you can also overcome this disadvantage with the strenghts you do have, and even if it doesn't reach the level of what your FOO has, be able to feel secure with it.
I don't have a lot of friends or socialize a lot but I find when I do more socializing- it's not the kind of closeness that has meaning for me.
I learned in ACA groups- and they have extended the description to include adult children of dysfunction in that- is that adults who grew up in these kinds of families tend to self isolate. Maybe that is true- but it's not that I don't want or have friends, it's that having alone time is a time where we feel emotionally safe- and I think we need some of that as a form of self care. I also think it's more difficult for us to build trust in people. But we also need people, friends, too. One of my closest friends is very social and enjoys that sphere. I don't join her in these events but- we are friends in the sense that we can trust each other.
To have friends also means taking risks, risks that for us are difficult to take. If I think of someone as a friend and they betray a trust or turn out to not be such a good friend, it's crushing. But we can't cut out the world either- it's a risk we need to take to have friends. It's actually hard for me to do this. I can be social at a party or get together but to actually become closer friends- I'm hesitant.
The kind of friends your FOO seems to have may not be the kind of friendships you want- they may be more like business or social connections- and while these have their purpose and benefits, they may not have the emotional connection one might wish for in a friend. One good friend may have more meaning to you than 10 business contacts.


