Bowyn, Thanks for the reminder
. That's why it's my sig...
Okay, would it make a difference if I said she has had the worst up-bringing of all of us? My mum didn't protect her properly. We all had a turbulent childhood, but she is the eldest. She remembers the most. I never understood why she would totally lose it when mum would have a glass of wine. She used to have a drinking problem. I never understood why she doesn't trust the friends my mum has. She used to have all sorts of rough riff-raff coming to the house, and smoking dope, at the very least. I don't know details of this, and I can't exactly ask her now, but these things happened either before I was born, or when I was too young to remember.
One thing that my sister doesn't remember is when he walked out on my mum for his secretary. She has not a single memory of him, aside from the occasional birthday card in the post. They have had absolutely no contact that she can remember. She looked him up a few years ago, and it seems he has started a new family. She has more half-brothers and sisters. She tried to make contact with them, and I think was initially successful, but then when he found out he forbid them from ever communicating with her again. I don't suppose anyone knows what's going on in his head?
By contrast, my memories of early childhood were ignorant bliss. My mum was stable, had a stable job, stable mortgage. I even had both parents in the same house - at least for a while (they later said that the resentment had set in soon after I was born, and only stayed together for the kids' sake). Most of my memories were sunny (literally, as it was Cornwall). My mum never mentioned the other stuff, and when my sister confronts her about the past, my mum always down-plays it, as if it weren't that bad. I am more inclined to believe sis, as I am aware of how mum's mental contortion-ism can bend around the truth.
Then, there's the stuff that happened to us that I DO remember. My mum's third husband was evil. I will not go into the details of why he did what he did, but he brainwashed my mum - always making her his special super hot curries which we now suspect were drugged, as they were only for her, not the kids. My mum asked my dad to take me when she moved. She sent my brother to live with my grandparents, and my sister stayed with mum and huband no.3. They quickly sold the house and payed off the mortgage.
Most of what my sister suffered was mental abuse. She was allowed to go to school but had to come home straight after. They lived hundreds of miles away at the opposite end of the country from my family, and were even miles away from the nearest settlement. When I was younger I didn't understand why they didn't just call the police. I think I understand a bit better now, hearing other people's stories of abuse, but I have never lived this, so I can't truly fully feel how it has affected her now. There was no one to rescue her from this except my mum, who was too goofed up on hypnotics and stockholm syndrome to ever want to leave. Regardless of the reason, my mum let her down. My sister was the first to stand up to him. As punishment she was kicked out.
She came to live with me and my dad's new family, which went well until she went and had a wild house party without his permission. Now, this is a man who is strict on his own kids, and wouldn't think twice about hitting us to keep us in line. He had a very militant attitude towards our upbringing, which makes sense considering he was in the military. But this level of disobedience from someone who isn't even his own child was not to be tolerated. I remember the night she was kicked out - the screaming and shouting from my dad and step-mother, and the sobbing and weeping from her.
At 15 years of age she ended up homeless - I am not entirely sure how this happened, as I thought she would have ended up in care. But instead, she ended up in a youth hostel. She told me that she did speed sometimes instead of buying food. All of this has a common theme. Her family couldn't keep her safe. So why now are they so concerned for her well-being, and that her husband might be to control her, when she is happily (not quite sure about that) married, with 2 children?
What I am trying to say is, she needs help too - she is possibly more of a victim of this than my mother, and I don't think mum understands that. Even if she does realise what is going on, is she seriously going to leave him, split up another family and risk her children going through what happened to her? How on earth can I get through to her and bring her back? This isn't a rhetorical question - is it even possible? Some people said I had a difficult childhood, and it's nothing compared to the hell she had.
I have cut out some details for the sake of brevity, but at the same time I see I have once again gone on far longer than I expected. Can someone say they went through something similar, so I can maybe understand how to see things in her shoes?
Perhaps this was even a bit......
But I guess the family issues kinda are all roots of the same tree.