Topics of generational abuse, or intergenerational abuse, have suddenly become relevant in my life. I have a parent I barely know and was criticizing one day, and I was getting all kinds of excuses which mainly boiled down to either “appeal to authority”, “appeal to psychology”, or “not my problem”. At one point, I ragequit the conversation after making sure I had made a statement. I contacted my sister who knew all my relatives better than I had and dropped a brief comment along the lines of “I wonder why they are like this” and she responded with a “you’re not being tolerant enough, they have generational abuse, cut everyone some slack”. So maybe I’ve been influenced the wrong way when I say intergenerational abuse as a phenomenon or a concept sounds like the biggest load of BS I’ve ever heard.

I’m also into learning about a lot of culty topics, and recently I watched a video about one of those televangelists you see on TV that claim you can pray your stigmatized relationship orientations away, and the video was chronicling his life and how he grew up in an environment that would always put him down for his lamentations towards many of those practices, and it mentioned he became the monster he feared growing up. Genuine question here, how DOES someone become the monster they fear? What kind of free will does someone have to lack to inherit someone’s monstrosity? Even when someone says it simply, such as when they say “that’s just how I was raised”, that raises a huge red flag, because if you don’t like how you were treated/raised, why the heck are you (even consciously) imitating it?

In general, in a world where we expect free will to be valued and where that “bad times make good people” meme still floats around, how are people so unquestioning enough of their bad experiences that they consciously use the lack of their questioning of something they never liked as an excuse to do that very thing onto others?

  • neomachino@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 days ago

    Not to make any justification s or excuses for anyone who does shitty things.

    As someone who broke quite a few generational curses, I completely get it.

    You see it everyday and think it’s normal, it becomes just another thing that happens. I didn’t realize that what I went though as a kid was wrong until I happened upon a solid loving family who took me in for a while and they had to sit me down and tell me they weren’t going to beat me no matter what I did. I was 16 at the time and I just thought it was a thing that happened. I’m not sure it would have had the same impact learning the truth if I just realized later in life and hadn’t actually experienced what was right.

    I was so close to becoming the worst parts of my parents, and I did for a while. I think I just got lucky enough to turn my life around, not everyone gets that luck.

    That doesn’t make it right, but I get it.