Yamamaya (post: 1457836) wrote:My mom and dad did and still do get into a lot of arguments. It mostly involves my mom bringing up a grievance and then repeating her same points over and over until my dad gets irritated and says a passive aggressive comment or mutters a half hearted apology.
That sounds so much like mine it's not even funny.
I've gotten to the point where I can predict my mother's patterns. Having studied psychology and analyzed my childhood, I realized that my mother had some deep-seated issues which spilled over into her interactions with the rest of us. These days, I can figure out when she's spoiling for a blow-up, sometimes before she even can. She told me when I was visiting this Christmas that I understand her better than anybody else in the family.
But yeah, I really want to learn to handle conflict differently. I don't want to yell and scream, not in front of my children, not at my children. I don't want to get in horrible, nasty fights with my husband that leave my children (and probably my husband and I) feeling traumatized.
I observed when I left for college and had several different roommates, that the only people I ever yelled at were the ones in my family. I would be fine at college, contain my anger, and react to unfavorable situations with varying degrees of maturity (or, sometimes, passive-aggressive immaturity, but I've been working hard on outgrowing that), but then when I got home, I'd get in shouting matches with my family. I felt like such an ugly person. So during the past couple of years I've been working on not yelling at my family, because it just leaves people (specifically my oldest brother) hurt and me feeling really guilty. It takes so much effort, though, because it was like throughout my entire childhood my mother was training me to handle personal conflict by yelling. It's a nasty habit, and it's been really hard work to break it.