Heart To Heart Chat

 

This post isn’t going to have pics of people I’ve met at races.  It’s not going to tell a fun story.  It’s going to be me talking a bit about something that off and on….more often on recently, that has at times made me furious, other times made me cry and most of the time just deeply hurts.

We won’t be discussing running or any of the animals.  I’m going to try super hard not to come across as a big ol’ whiner because nobody likes to listen to other people whine.

What I’m going to write is probably going to cause me some major grief seeing as the people I will be writing about read this blog.  Hold onto your hats and let’s dive in, shall we?

Where to begin….

I’m sure all of you have seen memes about how mean people suck?  Some of the memes are pretty funny!  Other memes are sad.  Almost all of the memes are spot on.  What is sad is the realization that the mean people in your life are your parents.

It’s heartbreaking.

It’s heartbreaking when you look back over your life and look at how they’ve held you away at arms length over the years and are actively pushing you away.  It makes you sad when you see how they flat out don’t care that they’re doing it!

Now, I want to make it abundantly clear that the things I’m going to share are not just from my experience with these two people.  They are also from other’s who are close to me and them.  Some of these people are relatives, others are not.

Every kid wants approval from their parents, right?  They’d like an atta girl/atta guy tossed at them here and there.  Maybe I’m weird in thinking this but you’re talking to a grown woman who rarely has received this.  The ONLY times I’ve received this is when I played the piano (16 years of forced lessons) and when I was obese and very ill.  As soon as I began to lose the weight and improve my health as much as possible, that approval vanished.

Bear in mind, there’s nothing wrong with piano and piano lessons!  I probably would have enjoyed it a lot more if my mom wouldn’t have whipped me for not practicing as hard as she felt I should have.

These two people are firm believers in not sparing the rod.  Goodness, MFH and I would give our two kids a pop on the rumpatootis when they were little and it was needed.  Our children were never “spanked” past the age of 5.  Maybe 6?  If they were 6, they were too old for that type of correction.

Many of my childhood memories are of me begging my mom to spank me with the tennis shoe instead of my dad’s leather belt.  It was almost always a fail.  She really liked the whistle she could get swinging that belt around!  As I grew older, she would get very angry because I wouldn’t cry anymore when she beat me and I use the words, “beat me” on purpose because what she was doing wasn’t correction, it was a power thing.  She would wail on me trying to get me to cry.  I wouldn’t.  It made her angry so she would beat me some more….pretty much until she was too tired to do it anymore.

My dad was absent during a lot of this.  He was taking night classes for a little bit at a local college and our church was doing a building project.  Church ALWAYS came before anything else.  Still does.  Church before family.  Church before anything!  Now, the only thing that might come before church is FoxNews.

Seeing as my dad was gone a lot at church, he didn’t have a clue or didn’t want to deal with what was going on in that house.

I can look back on my Jr. High and High School years as strategically dressing to hide welts and bruises my mom gave me.  I don’t know if he knew or not.  Still he was the one who gave me my last “spanking” when I was 22 years old and a Senior in college.  That one, I fought back.  I thought, “No.  You’re not doing this to me.  I’m an adult and this is wrong.”  You know, I still don’t know what made him so angry that day.  I just know he completely lost it.  The only other time I can remember him “correcting” me was in high school and he punched me in the mouth. POW!

So, you’re asking, what got me on this topic today?

Sunday was Father’s Day.  I knew I had to call and wish him a Happy Father’s Day.  Those Hallmark Holidays are super important to my parents.  MFH (My Favorite Husband) and I aren’t big into those but realize they’re important to others.  After church, I thought long and hard about some “fun and happy” stories I could tell him for his phone call.  I dialed, wished him a Happy Father’s Day.  He sounded bored and annoyed that I’d called.

That is a typical reaction when I call.  They. Just. Don’t. Care.

I’m annoying.

They are REALLY good about complaining about other people not calling and visiting but they’ve spent the majority of their lives alienating everybody!  Nobody wants to be around them!!!  It’s a very sad thing to witness.

My sister and I talk regularly.  She’s super busy and the folks are getting older.  Mom is dealing with some dementia stuff.  She’s not as sharp as she used to be and pretty unsteady on her feet.  Dad’s caring for her.  Cooking all the meals. Doing all the laundry.  Cleaning the house and taking care of the yard.  Mom?  She sleeps all day and comes out if there’s food.  She’s always close by if there’s food but that’s a completely different can of worms so we’ll leave that alone.

Because my sister is so busy, we’ve agreed that I will call the folks on a consistent basis and test the waters, as it were.  How’s mom doing?  How’s dad holding up taking care of her and everything else.  I keep her up to date on that and they complain to her that I call.  LOL!!!  It works, though, and we’ve got a pretty good handle on how they’re doing.

MFH and I have had many talks about the Scripture telling us to obey our parents.  My question has always been, when do we stop obeying our parents or do we ever stop?  MFH and I have been married 33 years, have 2 adult children and yet we still deal with my parents trying to control our lives.  They have some boundary issues.

Enter Sunday’s sermon:

We had a visiting minister Sunday and he talked about the obeying and honoring your parents in Scripture.  It was riveting  and both of us were paying close attention.

He talked about the part in Scripture that talks about obedience, is strictly for children.  Things change as you become an adult.  You should show your parents respect but you don’t obey them blindly like you did as a child.  It was like a light-bulb went off in my head.  FINALLY somebody talked about our responsibilities as adults to our parents!

Guess what~the phone calls that they hate and complain about?  I’m doing it right!  YAY, me!

Their doing things like putting down the phone and walking away or running the sweeper when they find out it’s me on the phone or running the garbage disposal? That’s wrong!

Holy Cow!  I wanted to do the happy dance!!!  It was like a huge burden was lifted off my shoulders.  After service, MFH told me I was doing a very good job of honoring my parents and they haven’t made it easy.  He’s super supportive and is great with the atta girl’s!  I hit the jackpot when I married that man!!!

So yesterday, I did my phone call to check on them.  Dad obviously didn’t want to talk.  He set down the phone and started talking to my mom.  I heard dishes clunking around in the background, etc.

Normally, when they do this, I just hang up but something yesterday made me stay on the line.  I had this morbid curiosity to see how long they’d leave me there.  It was maybe 5 minutes, tops, when my dad picked the phone back up.

“Are you still there?” I heard him ask.

“Yes, I am!” I replied cheerfully.

He said, “Oh.”

It was not a happy, “Oh” it was a, “Rats.  I thought I got rid of her, Oh.”

Now call me crazy but I love that my two adult children call the house!  When they call it’s not always great timing BUT, they’ve taken the time out of their busy lives to call and say “Hi!”  After the way I’ve been dismissed over the years, I’ll put aside whatever I’m doing and talk to my kids.  Family first.  I don’t make my kids compete against the TV and 40 year old reruns of Hogan’s Hero’s.  I don’t set the phone down and walk away trying to get rid of them.  I certainly don’t make a bunch of noise with whatever appliance is handy so talking is impossible.  I give them my full attention because they deserve it!  I’m their biggest cheerleader!  Everybody needs and deserves those atta girl’s and atta guy’s that I never got.

One of my children (and the other one confirmed this to be true) let slip that for the past ten-ish years, at Christmas time they’ve received $10 in a Christmas card and a gospel tract telling them how they’re going to hell as their Christmas present.  Gotta love how they endear themselves to my kids.  *that was sarcasm, btw*  They’re really good at judging others.  They’ve got the corner market on it!  I’m sorry, but when I found that out, I was furious.  I had no idea they’d been doing this all that time.  This past year, they were kind and generous towards my two.  The kids were confused but thankful.

I guess maybe I will toss in a little running stuff.  They did tell me, firmly, that my running was of no interest to them and not to call them about it.  They told me I was embarrassing myself running “at my age” and I should settle down and be a good wife to MFH.  They also “forbid” me to go run the Berlin Marathon back in 2015.  MFH and I had a terrific time in Berlin that year!  LOL!!!  My sister and I had a great time in 2016, too!  MFH and I had a fabulous time in London in 2017….all trips of which they heartily disapproved.

I guess I’m just really good at getting their disapproval?  Maybe I could get kudos for that!  Hahaha!!!

If you’re still reading this, you deserve a medal.  LOL!!!  I already know this is going to come back and bite me big.  So be it. Many things here are left unsaid but what’s the use of beating a dead horse, right?

Many, many thanks to all of you who encourage me online and even though you think I’m completely nuts with the races I try to do, you cheer anyway!  Also, thanks for putting up with all my incredibly lame puns!  Y’all are the very, very best!!!

11 thoughts on “Heart To Heart Chat

  1. Alfred Kuhnert

    Melinda, your life story reveals a LOT about your willingness to apply Matthew 18:22 to your relationship with your parents. Over and over you extend the opportunity for them to realize that having a loving adult child can be a rare treasure. [Based on what you experienced during the childhood years, a logical decision would have been to move FAR away and have little or NO contact with them. ]

    When people combine a self-centered faith with a self-centered humanity, their behavior can descend into a similar chasm as your parents’ behavior has.

    Agree 100% with the lesson on Obedience vs. Respect. Part of transitioning to adulthood is taking complete responsibility for our life and where it goes. We are no longer DIRECTED by our parents. We can listen respectfully to their opinions and then make our own decisions.

    One idea I will extend to you: if your parents react so negatively to hearing about “running”, consider the option of discussing “trips” you will be making and never mention “running” in the conversation. For example , “running in the Berlin Marathon” would be converted to “MFH and I have wanted to visit Berlin for many years and have decided to go later this year for a week!” If God created the ENTIRE planet , then surely He is quite pleased with us visiting DIFFERENT areas of His creation. 🙂

  2. Cathy

    That was a good sermon. I pray God’s continued healing from suffering such abuse. You are an inspiration to me, not to run of course, though😊

  3. Sandy McCoy Crowl

    It hurts me deeply that as a little girl you were treated so badly. Every child deserves loving parents, but unfortunately, that’s not the case for lots of people. Families are supposed to be your soft place to land; your shield from life’s cruelty. Like so many have said here, you are remarkable. I love your humor and tough as nails determination. I feel sad for those miserable souls because they missed out on the joy a child brings a parent and the pride in a child’s accomplishments. I do believe their day of judgement will not be favorable for them. I wished I could say something meaningful, but there are just no words. 😢

  4. Irene

    Melinda, I am speechless. I had no idea whatsoever you were abused by your parents. Yes, abused! There is no other word for it. It brings tears to my eyes to think they got by treating you like that all these years. I knew you didn’t get along but I had no idea! You are a courageous woman for speaking out. It’s high time people know what you have been through. I am so sorry! I can only hope they will be judged someday for their actions. If not here on earth, then by God.

  5. Bain

    I’m lucky–I totally scored really great parents, through dumb luck.

    Also, technically it is “honor” your father and mother, not “obey” them. (If you’re Baptist and female, you do vow to “obey” your husband–but I’m not Baptist, I’ve just been to some weddings. Maybe other Christian churches–non-Christian ones, too–say that as well, but I don’t believe it.) Even if you are 100% convinced the church teaches you to “obey” you parents, it has to have SOME limit on it. What if your parent commanded you to kill someone, or to commit adultery, or to embezzle money, or to start worshipping some other god? Wouldn’t you have to say “no”?

    Ultimately, you have ZERO control over how your parents act or choose to interact (or not interact) with you. What you can control is your reaction. Why let them decide if you should feel bad about yourself, or feel upset or angry or annoyed?

  6. Debbie Alford

    And, still you turned out great! Our families do not define us, Melinda. It is what you do as an adult, where you are in control, with your life, your spouse, and your children that matter. I totally relate to this post in so many ways. Hugs, girlfriend. You are awesome!

  7. Courtney Bush

    I had heard things over the years while charring with other family members, and knew they weren’t the most positive people. I never wanted to be around their negativity, and to be quiet honest… they scared me. I just wanted to comment, and let everyone know that I am YOUR niece! I love you, so very much, and while no one is perfect, that’s no excuse for treating anyone (family or not) the way that you were treated. I am so thankful I have you in my life! My life has been a positive one and part of that has been having you as my aunt. You raised two great kids, and I blessed beyond measure to call them my family.
    Hugs and love to you, Aunt M. You’re an inspiration <3

  8. Anonymous

    I am so touched by your story. I only know you from the cheerful, hilarious posts you make that I look forward to every morning! I am just amazed, how can this person I perceive you to be – strong, adventurous, humorous- have come through all this and be so strong and cheerful? I am so very sorry for what you have endured, without having had what is every child’s right to expect from its parents…..unconditional love, acceptance, basic interest in your life, and appreciation for you. How much could church have really come first in your parents’ lives, when they were not starting and ending each day thanking God for blessing them with you? I am so glad to know you received the message that you needed to hear in that sermon, that you are doing it all RIGHT. You have such great character, continuing to honor your parents the way you do. The best part of the story is what an awesome parent YOU have turned out to be. In the end, human relationships are what life is all about- not money, notoriety, possessions, achievements…..just love for God and all people, especially family. How wonderfully blessed your kids are to know that you will always have the time of day for them, I am sure they treasure that.

  9. Heather R

    Oh Melinda! I was so disheartened to read this. To come out of what you went through with the wonderful and amazing personality you have. I can relate a little bit to what you said as well. Growing up, my mother made everything about my brother. My brother this, my brother that. I never felt (and still don’t to this day) like anything I did was good enough for her. It caused a lot of animosity between the two of us growing up. Luckily, as we got older him and I were able to work past it and are now friends and always there for one another.
    I am sorry you had to go through all of that, but thank you for sharing your story. Know that it has and will continue to touch many people.

  10. Anonymous

    Wow what a troubling and powerful story. I saw my childhood flash before me as I read each word.
    Though my story is slightly different as my mother passed when I was 9 and my father at 15. We (6) were taken from him when I turned 13 and lived with an uncle, his wife and over time 6 children. It is here were our stories have the most similarities.
    Thank you for sharing your story, I can’t imagine how much pain it caused to do so. Yet I could feel it was also very liberating and freeing to do so. Im happy that you have overcome everything you experienced growing up as some of us never completely do.

  11. Nancy Green

    I understand this completely. My dad was always saying women have no value, they only go to college for an MRS degree. Taking care of him till he died was a major sacrifice. He believed I was his wife and treated me as badly as he had treated them. I am not a caregiver, I have a smart mouth. He would tell me it was not asking too much to have his daughter take care of him. The other brother and sisters did not help. I could understand why. He never had time for them either. He would say my husband treated me like a queen, in a sarcastic voice, and say how badly I treated my husband. So grateful Keith disagreed about that. He accused me of all sorts of things over those 5 1/2 years. So sorry for your pain. You are right, honor, not obey, as an adult. Good read

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