Improving Your Relationship With Your Grown Children
Dear Neil: I have five grown children and have always been a loving and supportive parent. I call and visit when I have money for gas, but my children aren’t as poor as I am, and they seldom call me and hardly ever visit. I never ask for their help—I just want them to call or to come and see me. But they don’t seem to care. I was a good mother to them and was always there if they needed me. I am in terrible pain, and I feel unloved by them. I tell them I want to see them, but they reply that they’re so “busy.” What do I do? Let them go and keep hurting?
Feeling Unloved in Longview, Texas
Dear Texas: As young adults forge their own careers, families, friends and interests, they often need to get away from their families (and especially their parents) in order to find their own identities. It’s a teenagers and young adults “job” to break away from their families in order to find their own path.
This, of course, does not make it easy for parents, who can easily feel slighted and rejected by their (now) grown children. But typically, adult children have established their own identities by their mid-thirties or earlier, and then they are able to be closer to their parents once again—unless there are some underlying unresolved issues—or unless the family was just never very close.
So what do you do? Why don’t you call your five children, one at a time, and separately ask them if they are hurt, angry, resentful or upset with you. Tell them that you’re not understanding the lack of contact, and that you’re feeling rejected by them. Ask what you could do in order to have a closer relationship with each of them, where you might be able to talk and see each other more regularly and reliably.
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