http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
Some parents are bullies, even those who genuinely think they have their child’s best interests at heart. Young people should be allowed to follow their own paths in life, not those mapped out for them by parents who see a chance of their own frustrated aspirations being realised in their children. ‘Bullies’ is no exaggeration. Until children reach an age when they are credited with a mind of their own by certain adults, they are pawns in what is sometimes a very nasty game, unable to establish their own rules of play. (It is not only LGBT boys and girls, men and women who need to break free of certain stereotypes nurtured during formative years.)
Some parents are bullies, even those who genuinely think they have their child’s best interests at heart. Young people should be allowed to follow their own paths in life, not those mapped out for them by parents who see a chance of their own frustrated aspirations being realised in their children. ‘Bullies’ is no exaggeration. Until children reach an age when they are credited with a mind of their own by certain adults, they are pawns in what is sometimes a very nasty game, unable to establish their own rules of play. (It is not only LGBT boys and girls, men and women who need to break free of certain stereotypes nurtured during formative years.)
Thankfully, many of these young
people rebel and assert themselves for the better in later years although it can
be tough , and not all parents 'get it'. I’ve heard many a parent complaining
about an ‘ungrateful’ child. (Perhaps they should have asked us what we want
from life?)
My father was a psychological
bully. I was less embarrassed about coming out as gay in my teens as
scared the atmosphere at home whenever he was around would get a lot worse.
Consequently, I hdt in the proverbial closet, lonely and scared for much of the
time.
I don't believe you should have
children so they can be ‘grateful’ to you, but for the pleasure of
nurturing them and seeing them grow into their own person, not a carbon copy of
a disillusioned or misguided parent.
We don’t ask to be born on the
back of our parents' sexual satisfaction and shared ego trip. So why should we
be grateful and feel guilty when we resist the kind of emotional blackmail from
parents who cry crocodile tears if we don’t fall in with their plans for us?
Good parents don’t have to ask
or connive; we willingly give what we can because we love them. Sadly, a
significant number only want children because their religion does not take
over-population into account and/or by way of reserving an
‘insurance’ policy to cushion their old age.
Good parents everywhere deserve
a BIG HUG, and more.
BRAVEHEART or MIND-BODY-SPIRIT,
A HEART OF ITS OWN
I'd cower in corners of the
mind
like a child besieged
by gremlins in an encroaching
dark;
captive of human nature,
dragging on the chains of
well-meant
parental expectations,
sum of their worst felt
failures
and haunting imitations
Confronting limitations, I'd
call on
the strength of Samson,
if only to risk locks cut
to the quick
by a well-meaning ambition
that’s not mine so (can no one
see?)
unfit for purpose, better
suited
to someone of a different
mindset,
anyone but me ...
Finally, breaking free! May
those
thinking they know,
and only ever meant what's
'best'
for me pause long enough
to reason why (and how) I
fought
to be the person I am now,
for needing to make my own
(adult)
choices (no one else's)
Copyright R. N. Taber 2001;
2011
[Note: An earlier
version of this poem appears in Love and Human Remains by R.
N. Taber, Assembly Books, (January) 2001 under the title 'Braveheart'; it also appeared on my general blog
in 2011 and remains in the archives there.]
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