Abusive home = Unhappy home

Posted on 27. Sep, 2011 by admin in Brainwashing

If you dig down to the very core of why some parents and households are abusive towards children and others are not, look at how happy or unhappy they are.

A happy parent is one who nurtures his or her children physically and emotionally. Happy people don’t molest, pass hurt feelings on to, deprive the other parent’s love from, or otherwise hurt their kids. Happy people who go through divorces or break-ups hurt just like anyone else, but they elevate their behaviors to protect their children from the adult pain.

“All abusive parents are unhappy parents, and unhappy parents are feelings-based people who act out on these feelings without regard to whether what they’re saying or doing is right or wrong for their child” – www.brainwashingchildren.com

Look at your own situation of mental abuse or even milder alienation efforts. How happy is the person who’s damaging your child? Are they an overall happy person?

Whenever I think of the environment that my child is in, I think of his home with a big giant neon sign above it flashing, “UNHAPPY – 24 hrs/day.” The nearly decade-long campaign of harming my son’s relationship with me has been so pervasive, how could such behavior come from a normal, happy parent? It can’t.

The unfortunate part is the long-term outlook. Since it’s impossible for you to change the unhappy person’s core, what are the odds of the damage being done to the children who are in their midst stopping? Quite low. The only real way to help the children that live with these negative, unhappy, parents is to have them spend more and more time with the positive, happy parent. It can be a complete change of custody in severe alienation and emotional abuse cases, to granting the “happy” parent a lot of meaningful time in the decree.

Tags: ,

2 Responses to “Abusive home = Unhappy home”

  1. WS

    10. Nov, 2011

    This is pretty vacuous thinking. “happy” people don’t damage their children? It’s a false statement.

    Additionally, are there other kinds of people in the world besides “happy” and “unhappy?” Are there perhaps other factors which have an effect on children? Could a depressed but self aware person perhaps raise healthier children than a joyfully cruel, and unreflective narcissist? You bet.

  2. Christine Epling

    31. Dec, 2011

    My husband left home and married me 35 years ago and his father used to and still abuses him badly. We own and operate a business which of whom his father put in my husbands name. My father-in-law makes my husband feel on a daily bases that he owes him his life for putting the business in his name. My husband did not ask his father to put the business in his name . i feel the man did so to make my husband feel obligated to him for the rest of his life. Things have gotten so bad that I am considering divorce. Help!

Leave a Reply