H
hexesandcurses
Member
- Apr 3, 2022
- 42
A big part of why I stay is because I am the oldest of six kids, all under the age of 15. I've grown up taking care of them and still do (I basically play third parent) and the idea of leaving them behind fills me with so much guilt I hesitate. I'm by no means a good sister, definitely not a fun one, but I've done all I can to try and keep heat off of them and give them a taste of normalcy and support when our parents couldn't. Ive become bitter and angry, unable to cope myself with my lack of childhood, so my jealousy makes me act cruel to them from time to time. I know I could have been better, should have been, and my inability to be what they deserve has hurt our relationships forever, but I still think I did better than my parents at least.
I don't think my parents are bad people, but I don't think they're good parents. I gave them a lot of leeway when it came to me because they were teens and I was not an easy child to raise, but what makes it so upsetting is their resistance to change. They all claim to have changed, and in a way they have, but not to a degree they need to be good parents. Both of my fathers are still riding the violent pendulum between emotionless and then overwhelmingly angry (to the point of causing us fear), my biological mother is bipolar and flips between being good and taking her meds then believing they "suppress her true self" and going off the rails, and my stepmother has never healed from her own trauma so now competes with children for affection and attention.
This brings me to my main question of whether or not my death could change them for good?
I've been wondering on if I should include in my suicide notes my feelings towards my parents in the hopes that it wakes them up, or spare them that pain.
It's not their fault that I want to die, but they didn't help make it easier either.
I'm sorry for all the personal dumping lately. The closer I get to having everything in place, the more lonely I feel. I wish things had been different. Sometimes I think that even if my childhood had been slightly better, if my parents had just been warmer and more open to accepting their mistakes, if I hadn't been forced to be a parent rather than a big sister (and feeling like a failure at both), I would want to keep going. But right now the only thing I can really see that can change them is my death.
I don't think my parents are bad people, but I don't think they're good parents. I gave them a lot of leeway when it came to me because they were teens and I was not an easy child to raise, but what makes it so upsetting is their resistance to change. They all claim to have changed, and in a way they have, but not to a degree they need to be good parents. Both of my fathers are still riding the violent pendulum between emotionless and then overwhelmingly angry (to the point of causing us fear), my biological mother is bipolar and flips between being good and taking her meds then believing they "suppress her true self" and going off the rails, and my stepmother has never healed from her own trauma so now competes with children for affection and attention.
This brings me to my main question of whether or not my death could change them for good?
I've been wondering on if I should include in my suicide notes my feelings towards my parents in the hopes that it wakes them up, or spare them that pain.
It's not their fault that I want to die, but they didn't help make it easier either.
I'm sorry for all the personal dumping lately. The closer I get to having everything in place, the more lonely I feel. I wish things had been different. Sometimes I think that even if my childhood had been slightly better, if my parents had just been warmer and more open to accepting their mistakes, if I hadn't been forced to be a parent rather than a big sister (and feeling like a failure at both), I would want to keep going. But right now the only thing I can really see that can change them is my death.
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