I am wounded, I am broken, my relationships all end in disaster-WHY? ? ? As with any personal, spiritual journey it stands to reason we must begin at the beginning. Our relationship building skills were learned from our earliest teachers, those responsible for our physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual well-being, specifically, our parents / mentors . The result of earliest personal interactions, excluding inherited mental illness, will determine the outcome of our adult adaptations and the results thereof from our childhood lessons on how to function in life and on life’s terms. We become as well or as sick as our teachers because we learned to rely and act upon our earliest recollections, lessons learned during our formative years, whether healthy or unhealthy will follow us to our dying breath. If our most basic human needs were not properly met by our families / mentors , chances are horrifically great that we will arrive at adulthood as a wounded child within the adult.
Until we allow ourselves to acknowledge, appreciate, love, and release our wounded child within, our attempts at healthy relationships will be grossly handicapped at best. Finally we come to that place in our lives we are willing to take the necessary action to achieve and maintain healthy interactions with our loved ones as well as society as a whole. We become exhaust ingly tired of one failed relationship after another and finally decide to take the necessary action to be healed of our grosser emotional handicaps. For this process to be of the greatest success, one must first examine oneself for any and all addictive disorders; namely, drug addiction & alcoholism. This is necessary because until we can stop the use of any and all mood altering substances, we haven’t a chance of starting our inner-child work because the drugs and alcohol needs will far out weigh the urge for getting in touch with oneself via inner-child work.
The Essay on Parent-Child Relationship
The relationship between parents and their children is perhaps one of the most important relationships among human beings. The relationship between parents and their children can determine the personal growth of children as it can likewise influence the behavioral adjustments needed on the part of parents in order to meet the emotional needs of their children. Max Apple’s “Bridging” highlights how ...
We “must” start in search of our wounded selves with a clear & sober set of “eye glasses.” As quoted from John Bradshaw’s book “Homecoming: Reclaiming and Championing Your Inner Child:”Had our childhood needs been met, we would not have become ‘adult children.’ ” Until we heal our inner-child, we have no hope of become healthy adults who are attracted to and who attract other healthy-minded adults with whom we can form happy & content relationships.