Esther Calling - What If I Break Up With My Dad?

Primary Topic

This episode dives into the complex and emotionally charged topic of ending or redefining familial relationships, specifically focusing on a daughter contemplating distancing herself from her father due to longstanding issues and recent events.

Episode Summary

In this heartfelt episode of "Esther's Office Hours," a caller discusses the painful decision of potentially ending her relationship with her father, who has been emotionally absent and recently involved in an affair that led to her parents' divorce. The episode delves into themes of betrayal, familial obligations, and emotional healing. Esther Perel navigates the caller through her tangled emotions, exploring the impacts of her father's actions on her mental and emotional well-being. They discuss the broader cultural and familial expectations that complicate her feelings of anger and betrayal, offering insights into navigating complex family dynamics and the process of healing from familial wounds.

Main Takeaways

  1. Family Dynamics: The impact of a parent's actions on family dynamics and individual mental health is profound.
  2. Cultural Expectations: Cultural and societal expectations can complicate personal feelings and the healing process in familial relationships.
  3. Emotional Healing: Discusses strategies for emotional healing and managing complex relationships with parents.
  4. Boundary Setting: Importance of setting boundaries for personal well-being when dealing with difficult family relationships.
  5. Self-reflection: Encourages self-reflection and understanding the historical context of familial behaviors as a tool for managing personal relationships.

Episode Chapters

1: Opening Discussion

Esther Perel begins the conversation by exploring the caller's current emotional state and her history with her father, highlighting the complexities of their relationship. Esther Perel: "Where do you want to focus today on your relationship with your father?"

2: Familial Impact

The caller details the impact of her father's affair and subsequent family dynamics, including her brother's decision to cut ties. Caller: "My brother doesn't want anything to do with my dad at all."

3: Exploring Cultural Dynamics

Discussion on how cultural expectations affect the caller's feelings towards her father and their relationship. Caller: "Especially in black American culture, you're not supposed to talk about your relationship with your parents outside of the house."

4: Financial and Emotional Support

Esther discusses the dichotomy of financial support versus emotional availability in parental relationships. Esther Perel: "For him to provide financially is deeply emotional."

5: Concluding Thoughts

Esther provides strategies for coping with and possibly redefining the relationship with her father, emphasizing understanding and empathy. Esther Perel: "How long and how much do we continue to hope for them to be different?"

Actionable Advice

  1. Reflect on Personal Feelings: Take time to understand and separate personal feelings from familial expectations.
  2. Set Clear Boundaries: Establish clear boundaries with family members to protect mental health.
  3. Seek Professional Help: Consider therapy to navigate complex emotions and familial relationships.
  4. Communicate Openly: When possible, communicate feelings and expectations clearly to family members.
  5. Cultivate Self-Compassion: Be gentle with yourself through the process of dealing with familial conflicts.

About This Episode

Esther takes a question from a young woman struggling with her relationship with her father. A recent divorce and the slow reveal of an affair on the part of her father has ruptured the family- and leaves her questioning whether or not her father should continue to have a role in her life.

Esther Callings are a one time, 45-60 minute interventional phone call with Esther. They are edited for time, clarity, and anonymity. If you have a question you would like to talk through with Esther, send a voice memo to producer@estherperel.com.

People

Esther Perel

Companies

None

Books

None

Guest Name(s):

None

Content Warnings:

None

Transcript

Speaker A
My relationship with my father has always been fraught. He has been a father that has provided everything that I needed except emotional support. Often he'd have these big blow ups over something that I did as a child that was small. Usually things that warrant corrective behavior from a parent, but never anything that would make a parent yell or scream and speak so negatively about a child. I have struggled with those negative feelings about myself because of the things that he said to me.

I have struggled with anxiety. After this endless pursuit of trying to keep the peace between him and I, I've had to go to therapy. I've had to get on medication to help cope with the anxiety that I have struggled with stemming from our relationship. Recently, my father had an affair and is divorcing my mother after being married for 30 years and that was the only family that I had. And now that he has started a life with his affair partner, he is trying to establish a relationship with me outside of my mom and I'm having a hard time overcoming the past trauma and the current trauma that he is inflicting as he takes no accountability for his actions and how they impact me, instead saying that this marriage is not any of our business as kids.

I don't know how to proceed with him and I'm not quite sure if I want to. And I struggle with a great amount of guilt for not wanting to go on and have a relationship with my father.

Speaker B
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Speaker D
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Speaker C
So I was thinking where would you want to focus. Is it about, shall I have a relationship with him? Is it about how do I process the relationship we've had over the years? Is it about the decision? Or is it about an exploration of who is he to you and where are you at with him at this moment?

And what can you realistically expect from him? And then where's your mom in the picture? Because sometimes you may have your own feelings and sometimes you may have borrowed some of her feelings, too. Fill me in a little bit on that. And then, you know, we'll do a heat map and you'll tell me, yeah, this.

This is where I want to linger for a bit. Thank you. I think he is very adamant about trying to maintain relationships. I think. Are you an only child, by the way?

Speaker E
I have a younger brother. Right. But my younger brother, he's only. So I'm 25 and he will be 22. So he's still in college and stuff.

But he doesn't want anything to do with my dad at all. So they don't talk since the affair. Or since he left home. Since the affair, yeah. So we found out about.

Well, my mom found out in September of last year, and that's where the divorce started. And so ever since, my brother has been pretty much, like, very minimal contact. And then in light of recent events, my dad and I got into some very heated conversation in, like, march, and he, like, hung up my face. We've tried to meet for dinner, and I'll end up crying and having to go to the restroom. So in light of all of that, my brother just does not want speak to my dad at all.

Speaker C
So he has borrowed feelings from you. From me and my mom. Yeah, from you and your mom. Okay. And tell me who initiated the divorce?

Speaker E
My dad. So that's part of the reason why my feelings of, like, not really wanting to move forward with him sometimes, because. So my mom found out in September because he was very sloppy. So I was trying to show my mom something on the computer, and she found some receipts that he spent on his affair partner. But I knew something was up for a while.

And I confronted him about it about a month before my mom found out. And he lied to my face. Just lied. And I didn't say anything else about it because I'm in law school. You know, school was starting up.

I don't know, I guess maybe I was in denial. I just didn't want to talk about it. So I never told my mom. But when my mom found out, of course my suspicions are correct. I had to lie to her.

And be like, oh, my God, I'm so surprised. I can't believe this. When really and truly, I was not surprised. So there's a lot of anger towards him for being so sloppy and lying to me after being sloppy. And even aside from my mom, it's just the dishonesty, at least for a year straight, just constant lies to cover up some of, I'm assuming, of affair and also just our relationship beforehand was not good.

So it's like, I feel like a bad person because I know this is my father. And especially in black american culture, like, you're not supposed to talk about your relationship with your parents outside of the house. So I already have feelings of feeling guilty for speaking about it to you. And to a white woman, no more, no less. Yeah.

And so it's like a lot of his issues are, like, cast aside as being a result of his environment. Very southern family. He grew up very poor. And so a lot of people will attribute him being rough around the edges to that. But that, to me, shoots him so much grace.

And I am the one that's, like, the recipient of all of his harshness, be in a relationship with someone who's caused me so much pain. And then now, in light of everything that's going on, and morally, I don't agree with his decision. I think some of his behavior has been a little erratic lately. His affair partner has started to question what he gives me for my living expenses while I'm in law school. And so he started to question about how much money he gives me.

And so I'm like, all right, now this person is starting to interfere with my well being, my day to day life. And I'm mad at my dad for not defending me and instead listening to an affair partner when I've been his daughter for 25 years. So I guess, to answer your question, maybe figuring out how to move forward. And if I want a relationship, given all of this hurt, how does one even process it to try and go forward when I'm still dealing with so much anger about things that have been boiling and boiling and boiling for 20 years? Let me try and repeat to you what I just heard, okay?

Speaker C
Because the bigger envelope is here. You are talking about your dad.

Speaker D
And. It feels almost like a transgressive experience. You should be talking about your father to an outsider, let alone an outsider to the black community. What is she going to do with all of this information? What does this say about me and about us?

Speaker C
And I want to really respect that and stay there if we need to for a moment. Then there is. My dad has never really taken much responsibility for the ways that he often reacted. And everybody else wants to excuse him and to contextualize his behavior and to explain it away due to the circumstances of his growing up. And I have a problem with that.

I understand how he grew up, but it somehow isn't meant to excuse everything. It's not a given that poverty must lead to the kind of rough edges that he put me through. Then you're saying in my family, we have a way of absorbing other people's feelings. My brother experiences what I feel and what my mother feels. I experience what my brother feels and what my mother feels.

We become shock absorbers for the experiences of others so that we end up feeling inside of us things that are ours and things that are not ours, but they all blend into one, and so it creates more intensity all the time. Yeah. And then there is the fact that my dad left my mother and he had an affair. So then it becomes, would it have been really different if he left your mom without the affair? Is it the fact that he left your mom, or is it the fact that he fell in love with someone else?

Or is it the fact that he was deceptive to the whole family? Or is it a combination of all. Of it, that he was deceptive? I knew that my parents relationship was very rocky. I mean, in fact, the reason I started listening to your podcast was because I felt like I needed guidance on how to be in a relationship, and I did not feel comfortable with my parents giving me a lot of advice.

Speaker E
So I knew the divorce wasn't a problem. It's the deception and the lying that really, really frustrates me. Like, if they were to both, they left and then found someone else, got into another relationship. Of course, it's icky my parents are dating. But this, to me, the deception is just really what I cannot stomach.

Speaker C
That leads me to say, maybe for the one conversation that we have, we focus on what is just yours. Okay? Because you've been trying to help your brother, you've been trying to help your mother, so I'm going to try to help you. So you went to your dad and you asked him what? This was the second time.

Speaker E
I guess I have to back up a little bit. The first time that I saw him doing something suspicious was literally the day before Mother's day. So I knew that they were kind of already on the outs. But usually he would take me and my brother to go shopping for my mom's mother's day gift. I don't know why my brother didn't come, so I went with him.

And after we got our gifts and before we met up with his relatives, we went to a bar to meet up with one of my friends. So I was very happy to see one of my friends, and I was too busy talking to him. But in the corner of my eye, I see my dad, like, taking pictures of another woman. And first of all, I thought that was creepy because it's like, why are you taking pictures of a stranger? But I didn't say anything.

And this is where I feel bad. I snuck and looked at his phone, and he was talking about the woman in a group message with some of his friends. So I did confront him about that, and he first was like, well, we just joke around. We do that all the time. And I told him, I was like, well, that she looked about my age.

You're my dad. You're supposed to have a certain respect for women. You're taking a picture of her and talking about her clothes and stuff. What if I were to be out and about like that, and some man did that to me, and he immediately started talking about why I would be dressed like that and that would be bringing unwanted attention. So I just dropped it.

That was the first time, and the second time, he was coming to visit me to help get me ready for the school year. He was texting someone the entire time, like, he was barely present, constantly on his phone. I was able to see the username and see who the woman was. I assumed maybe it was a classmate. I don't know.

I didn't want to get into it. I just wanted to really just stay out of it. But later that day, it was late at night, and he was still texting this person. And so I asked him, like, oh, you know, who are you talking to? Like, what's going on?

And he was like, oh, nothing. It's just something I'm been seeing on Instagram. So I knew he lied to me. Again, it's to the point now or wherever I talk to him, if I ask him a question, and if I don't get a definitive yes, then I know he's lying about whatever it is that he's saying. And this is new, or this has been there, and you are way more aware of it now.

It's been there, and I'm aware of it now. I've always been inquisitive and just. I don't want to say, like, oh, super smart child, but just, you know, someone. You can take the compliment. So.

But always wanting to reason through things. And so whenever he'd tell me to do something, I would ask, well, why? You know, typical kids. And that's when he would snap at me or just shut down any of my questions about something that he would say. And that's kind of what started everything.

I knew that he was a drinker. So as a little kid, I'd ask, well, dad, like, why are you sending me to get more beer? Are you sure you're okay? Like, maybe you shouldn't. Nope.

He snaps at me. I'm not. I'm staying out of a child's place. I'm talking back. I'm being disrespectful.

And so most of the time when I knew something was afoot, I would just not say anything because they would be deemed disrespectful. And then I would get screamed at or whatever it was. And so now that I'm old enough and I can communicate and I can reason through things much better than a ten year old or 13 year old, it's just like, okay, now you can't say it's disrespectful, because it's not. No, you're just lying. And I am not taking it well because I know it's a lie.

Speaker C
So the more he fibs and the more he alludes to things and the less definitive he is in his answers and the more inquisitive you have become. It's kind of an irony that the thing that you like the least has actually been one of the ways that you have strengthened your determination, your curiosity, your discernment and your inquisitiveness. Sometimes when I think, you know, what are some of the resources that we take from our family, it's easy to think about the positive things we received and therefore than to say, those are my resources. But our resources also draw from the negative experiences that we had, the challenging experiences, because then you're not going to think, for me to maintain my relationship with my dad, I need to be able to believe him. No, for you to maintain your relationship with your dad, you need a realistic sense of the man with his good sides and his flaws, and you will be able to say, my dad is somebody.

One thing I don't try to do is to think that he is telling me the truth. I actually expect my dad not to tell me the truth. And for me to become a very good truth seeker. Yeah. I mean, that was never assigned to me as a positive thing.

Speaker E
Whenever I would do those things with him, he would call me difficult or just like my mom. I mean, he would react to me just like he did my mom. When you hear his voice, what do you hear him say? He would say I'm difficult. That was his favorite word, and that I'm impossible to communicate with.

A lot of times, I think, take. A moment, take a moment. Because of how much you care about him, you began to wonder, is there truth to that? I mean, it didn't help. Being a black girl, that's all we're told, is that we don't know how to be quiet.

We don't know how to listen, or let people tell us what to do is always a fight with us. So to hear that outside of home, to hear it at home, I mean, it was devastating. For years, I would come home and just cry and cry and cry. It felt like there was nowhere to be safe. As a black girl, he always had to be something else or make peace or be meek or stop questioning things or trying to figure things out, because otherwise, we'd just be labeled as difficult or bitter, whatever it was.

And so it was just devastating to see that online here at school and then come home and the person that is my dad saying the same thing, telling me this, if he's telling me this, it has to be true. And what would mom say? So whenever he and I would get into it, my mom would try and not to say anything because he would get angry with her and say that she's teaming up against him and taking my side. Is his lover black, too? She is, but there's another element of that.

So my father's family, they're from Louisiana, so they're Creole, very racially ambiguous. They don't have typical black features. So he, being one of the kids who did present as black, resented that, and his family treated him differently. So this person that he's with now is lighter than my mom, has curly hair, and more along the lines of what his family would be receptive to and what they would want a man like him to have. My mom is a darker skinned black woman, so.

And one of the things that, of course, would frustrate me and would cause fights whenever I would complain to him about his family and their colorist prejudiced comments and, like, how would we feel? Like my mom, especially my brother, darker skinned black people, having to hear these things, he would get mad at me and say, I'm judgmental. All I do is judge his family and more negative comments about me. Were you able to find other people in your life who could represent a different story than the one he was feeding you. My grandpa.

Speaker C
Okay, tell me about him. My mom's side.

He is like, he worships you. Yeah. And of course, I know that I'm not perfect, and he knows that, but he has always been, like, the father figure that I always dreamt of having. He calls me at least once a week, every day to check on me, make sure I'm okay. He was that person who praised all of those things about me rather than, you know, put them down.

And which one is louder? I think my dad's has been louder, especially since he's echoing a lot of what we hear in society. Right. So I guess my brain, in sort of a defensive way, has been like, you might as well get used to this, that, you know, being your truth, because that's how the world is going to perceive you.

Speaker E
My grandpa has been kind of like a safe harbor, mentally and physically. And it's just like, it makes me so angry that I don't have that with my own dad. And I don't know if I ever will be able to have that or even if I want it with him. But I will tell you that to have your grandpa, to have someone else when we don't get to hear certain things from our parents, to have a friend, a neighbor, an auntie, a grandpa is one of the most important emotional assets in one's life. And see, my dad resents me and my grandpa for that.

Speaker C
Yeah. Okay. And it's like, why does he. If it's not him being my everything, it's a problem. And it's like, he's not creating an environment for me to want that with him.

We have to take a brief break. Stay with us.

Speaker B
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Speaker D
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Speaker C
I think one of the most challenging questions that we get to ask as a child, and I just wrote something very similar about my own mother actually, is how long and how much do we continue to hope for them to be different? Because as long as you keep hoping and expecting you also imagine that they have it in them, and they're just stubbornly not wanting to be different versus this very symbolic act of becoming mature, which is to realize their limitations and to be realistic about what they will and will not be able to be with us and for us at this moment. This may always change, but at this moment, your dad's view of you is not that different from your dad's view of women is not that different from your dad's view of black women. It's not that different of your dad's view of his wife until now, or ex wife. It's not even like you were chosen.

My question to you is, when you know a little bit about him, what helps you understand how he came to think the way he does? Because sometimes it helps to switch the questions from why are you doing this to me? To what happened to you? Yeah. And just so we are very clear, none of this is a requisite for you to forgive him, to accept it, to change anything yet.

So there's a part of you that also knows there's only as much as I can take him on, or I don't want him to cut me off financially. So I have to be thoughtful, true to myself, and strategic. I tend to not think that cutting off in many circumstances is the best way. It takes a tremendous amount of energy not to talk to someone that one is close to. Sometimes more psychic energy goes into being cut off than in actually having a more disengaged relationship.

Speaker E
The only thing that I can think of as to why he would do these things is he has a younger sister, but they're only, like, 18 months apart. He is about my color, a little bit lighter, and has kinkier textured hair, whereas his sister, very light skinned, very straight hair. And so he claims that he was treated worse because he looked more like his african american father, whereas his sister looked more like his creole family. And so he would recount different instances where they would be, you know, harbor some anti black feelings. And that manifested in treating him worse, like not wanting to do his hair or making fun of his hair because it was kinky.

And that side of the family also has rampant sexual abuse. So being a victim of that also contributes to some of his insecurities and just general hostility, I guess. And while I understand those things are painful, and I agree they're all wrong, it frustrates me, because instead of overcoming those feelings and protecting his wife, his daughter, his son from that family's prejudice, he just says, that's how they are. You can't change them. So that's why, for me, it's been hard to say.

I know this is why you treat me and my mom this way, but it's hard for me to stomach it, because you know how bad that feels. Yet instead of defend your daughter and at the time, your wife, you're defending your family, who exacts that same prejudice onto you. Mm hmm. What would he say to that? He.

His biggest go to in those conversations was that I'm judgmental and I'm judging people and I don't like his family, and how is he supposed to feel when I'm talking negatively about his family as if I am not his family? So I have. How would I put this? Like, what right do I have? What entrance do I have to speak about this with you when this is not my experience?

Speaker C
So I need your permission. Of course. Yes, of course. Right. I'm thinking out loud.

I'm fishing with a broad net, and there's a lot of gaps. And if it doesn't feel right, you just say, nah, that's not it. Your dad was rejected by his family and was made to feel lesser, specifically around color and everything that came with that. On some level, he's in a loyalty bind, so he ends up defending the very people who hurt him. And you would like him to admit that, but sometimes we defend the people who hurt us, because if we don't, it's as if we justify why they needed to hurt us.

So when you are trying to say to him, why don't you see what they did to you? And now you're doing the same thing to us. There's a block sometimes where if I have to admit that, it actually makes me feel worse. Remember, none of this is meant for you to necessarily forgive him or accept it, but it gives you a frame work. When he says to you, you are judgmental, he is basically saying to you, you don't have the right to judge my family when I myself did not give myself the permission to judge them.

You are owning my anger towards my family, which I myself have not known how to express. And so it feels like you are inhabiting my experience. This is another one of these absorbing. And on some level, he needs to be able to say this to and about his family rather than you. But the more you say it and the less he will, the more you express it, the more he will present his loyalty, the more he will defend the very people that he doesn't want to defend.

But since you're the one attacking them, he'll defend them. That's the triangle. So instead of, how can you do this? It's what was done to you? Tell me more.

I understand that your sister this and you that. Tell me more. And you become a good lawyer with your dad, an inquisitive lawyer that asks him questions and doesn't tell him how he should feel about it so that he can get to feel about it.

Speaker E
That makes sense. I think. My fear is that, will he ever want to get to that point where he feels like it's okay to feel what he feels and to acknowledge how hurtful it was for me?

Speaker C
I don't know either. You know, many people grow up saying, I will never say or do what my dad or what my mom did to me. And then they find themselves saying and doing that exact same thing. It's very hard for them sometimes to acknowledge it because it's attached with a lot of shame. Here is the very thing I promised never to, and here I am.

That person lives inside of me who I thought I would basically push away as far as I could, and yet they're inside of me. What do I do with that part of me? Sometimes we learn to acknowledge it, and we say, that part lives inside of me, and so do other parts, and sometimes we deny it. If it doesn't, the challenge for you will be to admit it as another limitation. My dad did what he could with what he had.

You can't change what he did to you. But you can decide what you want to do with it henceforward. And you don't have to decide this in one time. This is not like you sit down and you. You know, but it led you to read.

It led you to try to understand. It led you to understand nuances of racism inside black families and colorism inside black families, and not just from the outside in. It led you to understand how we internalize this, and it led you to understand how one way that men who are disempowered respond. By putting the women down. Yeah, for sure.

And over time, because you're 25 and you are not supposed to be resolving all of this now, you'll, on occasion, have a different conversation, but the conversation won't start from a place of, why don't you see what I see? You will learn to trust what you see. And then you will sometimes think, I see it. He doesn't. Yeah.

And those two coexist. Yeah. I don't. I don't think I've even considered any of this in that way, because I think my problem is getting caught up on what should be instead of what it is. And.

You just said it very well. Yeah. I don't expect that to be that different at this stage for you, is it? But slowly, yes, you begin to respond to what is. You also begin to see, you know, like you started and you said, he was there for me financially.

He's been providing for me materially. Emotionally, it's a whole different story. And I thought, we can take this as a kind of. Therefore it isn't really important. Or we can ask, you know, given how poor he was, being able to provide for you materially must mean a ton for him.

Speaker E
That's all of it for him. Okay. So in his reality, you know, when you're hungry, you're not always asking yourself, how do I feel?

Speaker C
You ask yourself, when will I eat next? Yeah. So the emotional education of your dad, I'm not sure that there was much attention paid to that. Not at all. Right.

So there is a lot of emotion in his material providing. You've separated emotional support from material providing. But I have a sense, or at least I'm asking myself, that for him to provide financially is deeply emotional. I think so. I mean, he doesn't.

Speaker E
Even before the divorce, as long as the bills were paid, we're fine. Or as long as we had everything materially that we needed, we should be fine. But I'm an anxious person, so I've struggled with anxiety. Being in law school makes it even worse. And then already dealing with my self esteem issues and things like that from childhood.

While in law school, when you're graded on a curve, you know, it's all about who's the best. And if you're not the best, you're not going to get these jobs. So the whole, it's been my worst nightmare and he doesn't call and check up on me or my mental health. What does he understand of your reality? Nothing.

Speaker C
Okay. Did he. I mean. But I'm saying this with. With empathy for him.

I'm not saying this critically. What? Seriously, what is school? Something he has experienced, not graduate school. Okay.

Is being, you know, you're talking about a system, right? I mean, in this system, many of the people who are in class with you are struggling with the same anxieties and then additional realities and race and gender and age and everything added, but it's not an anxiety free system. So what does he know about this? Did he ever allow himself to be anxious? No, he drinks when he's anxious.

Speaker E
Yeah, a lot. Okay, so you're asking something. It's like, go to your grandpa for that. Go to those who can give it to you. Go to those who know it.

I would feel so much better doing that if you didn't blame me for that. For going to your grandpa. Yeah. But you're telling him that grandpa is able to say things to you that he can't do. Yeah.

Speaker C
You've basically pinned them against each other in a competitive way. You've already told him you're not a very good dad. You have zero idea about emotional intelligence. And look at what grandpa is able to do. Yeah, you put him in his place.

So, you know, of course he, and then he feels unappreciated. And he feels that with all what he does for you, you are all the time judgmental and critical and unappreciative of him. And he is not utterly mistaken.

We are in the midst of our session and there is still so much to talk about. We need to take a brief break, so stay with us.

Speaker F
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Speaker B
Support for where should we begin? Comes from NPR's new show wild card. A good conversation with a celebrity requires getting them away from their well rehearsed answers. But truthfully, I think the same applies. When I do a session with a patient, I continuously look for new stories, new angles to old stories, new ways of thinking.

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I hope you enjoyed the show as much as I did. Wild card comes out every Thursday from NPR. Listen to it wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker D
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Speaker C
I think the bridge is to really understand that to provide for you financially is emotional. For him. It's not money here, feelings there, material here, mental health there. And once you make that bridge, things will come together better. So when he says, you go give me a line.

Speaker E
Oh yeah, I not appreciate of all the support that he does give me, but I always say what other people do for me. That's right. And you typically answer what I will say. It's not true. I try.

Yeah, yeah. So let's change the script. Now, in light of what we just said, what would you answer?

I think I would definitely try to make the bridge of saying, I understand that what you provided for me financially was your way of being there, I guess is his way of being there for me emotionally as well. And I'm very grateful for that. I think this is where I mess up, because I'm like, but I needed. No, but okay, I needed more than that. Correct.

Do I tell him that? No, not yet. And not in the same sentence. Okay, not in the same sentence. Because what I'm saying to you is that he needed more as well and.

I wanted to give him more. So if you say that to him, you will. I mean, it's ironic, because you're telling me how much your dad lacked empathy and understanding of you. And I'm kind of saying to you, yes, and so have you of him. That's the tragedy.

Speaker C
There's a tragedy of the family, there's a tragedy of his family, of race in the family. But in effect, what you feel toward him, he feels from you. I can see that. And if one day you can just simply say, I know how important that is for you and how proud you must feel that you've been able to do this, then we will see how he is able to start to come toward you. It's hard, admittedly, it is hard for me.

Speaker E
I know that I have not extended the best or the most empathy towards him. But some of that is just from me feeling like for years, I've intentionally disconnected to try and lessen the pain that he would inflict. And that was my way of doing it. And I am suggesting that if you are able to look at him as a person, not only as a dad, you will actually inflict less pain on you because you will begin to hear him differently. If you do to him what you want him to do to you, you will develop a relationship that has more boundaries, where you are less affected by everything he says, because you can choose how you want to relate to him and not only be reactive.

Yeah, that makes sense. There is complete understanding for why you are where you are. And I imagine that part of why we're talking is because you're saying to me, is there another way I can do this? I'm familiar with how I feel. I'm familiar with our strife.

Speaker C
I'm familiar with the disconnect but yet he creeps under my skin and I end up believing, even though I fight him overtly internally, I've kind of internalized what he said about me the same way that he internalized what his family said about him. So now I want to liberate myself from this a little bit. And one way is that, in an ironic way, in a twist, you know, if you are more compassionate and understanding of him, you will experience his barbs very differently. They won't reach you the same way because you will have a different experience of the source. I get it now.

Speaker E
Yeah. And if you one day just simply say, you must be so proud of how you've been able to do something that you never had, and just leave it at that. Watch his throat. Watch to see the corner of his eyes, because I'm not sure that many people have ever told him in his life. You did well.

Speaker C
That doesn't mean that he didn't do not well on bunch of other things. That makes sense. But you have that power of being able to tell him. On this one I know you did well and it means a lot to you. And it means a lot to me too.

Without the but I needed something else. He knows that. I promise you. He knows that you've told it to him. And he knows that he doesn't have it.

But you want to break the cycle and you can't take on all of society, but you take on. But you can take on your dad. I think I just want to get to a place where I can let some of the anger go. I always felt a sense of like resentment or emptiness. And that's why I saw it elsewhere.

Speaker E
The difference between him and my grandpa. It was stark and it hurt for a very long time. Feeling like there was always something wrong with me. And I can't connect with him. And it seems like he won't connect with me.

I always felt like I was just some sort of collateral damage, I guess, of him not getting help for what happened when he was growing up or now with the divorce. I especially feel like collateral damage. And I really have always just wanted to feel loved by my dad. But it just feels like nothing was enough. Like I did everything a kid is supposed to do.

I never got in trouble. Graduated at the top of my class, I'm in law school on a full ride. Like I've done everything that you're supposed to do, quote unquote. And it's still not enough. And do you hear both of you saying the same thing to each other?

Speaker C
See, there are times when I hear what you're telling me and I think there is on the other side, somebody who really doesn't have it. They're not attached to their kid. There's very little connection. But there are times when I hear it, like I do with you, and I'm thinking, these two people are longing for the same thing and they're stuck. Each one says to the other, you're not accepting me, you're not appreciating me.

I've done everything. They're like on a parallel track. And we have to break that knot, we have to loosen it up. And whoever can start should be the one to do it. And starts from a place not of what the other one has done wrong, but from a place of what you appreciate that the other one has been there for.

And then you let it sit. You don't expect immediately from him to say the same thing to you. He may, but you don't let it happen if it does, but just break the expected do the opposite of what he expects from you.

As I was saying, sometimes that if you want to change the other, start by changing yourself.

Since each of you is reactive to the other, if one of you finally breaks the spell, it may open up the possibility for something new to develop.

And then please write to me and tell me what happened. Thank you. You're most welcome. So much. Definitely helped me more ways than I can express.

Speaker G
This was an Esther calling, a one time intervention phone call recorded remotely from two points somewhere in the world. If you have a question you'd like to explore with Astaire, it could be answered in a 40 or 50 minutes phone call. Send her a voice message and Esther might just call you. Send your question to producer estheraparell.com where should we begin? With Esther Perel is produced by magnificent noise.

We're part of the Vox Media podcast network in partnership with New York magazine and the Cut. Our production staff includes Eric Newsom, Destry Sibley, Sabrina Farhi, Kristen Muller and Julian. Original music and additional production by Paul Schneider. And the executive producers of where should we begin? Are Esther Perel and Jesse Baker.

We'd also like to thank Courtney Hamilton, Mary Alice Miller and Jack Saul.

Speaker D
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Save 25% and enjoy free shipping when you subscribe and thrive at Shop dot naturesunshine.com. Support for this show comes from HubSpot, more to dos, less time, and an infinite number of tools to keep track of. Doing business has never felt harder. But you don't need a miracle to hit your goals. You just need HubSpot, because their all in one customer platform can make growing your business infinitely easier.

Speaker H
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