Forum topic: Yup, Nope, OK.

I have a journal that goes back decades.  One day, when my son was about 11 years old after our older son moved to college, I wrote, "We seem to have stopped being able to communicate as a family.  No one talks anymore.  They seem so far away and not willing to make any effort to talk with me. I feel alone. It is a heartache.  I don't know what is going wrong. Maybe it is just getting through the 'teen years' "  From both of them (DH and DS) I got,  "Yup.  Nope. OK."  And that is about it FOR YEARS!!! I remember my son was always in to his computer until all hours of the night.  I would tell him sternly that he MUST get off the computer to be able to get the sleep he needed for school in the morning.  He would defy me and I would tell him again and again that it was time to go to bed.  He said he had trouble sleeping.  I told him the games on the computer were probably giving him graphic visions that were keeping him awake.  He said he needed the games.  I didn't understand at all.  I thought he was rebelling and being obstinate.   I was frustrated because I was getting up early in the morning for a stressful corporate job and I needed sleep but couldn't sleep believing that I needed to be his watchdog so he didn't stay up all night playing video games. I could see there was a problem, but had no idea what it was because he would not communicate.  I thought it was "bad habits". I believed they both needed a kick in the pants (as I was taught) to "get going".  I am stopping blaming myself for their lack of communication with me.  But I feel very lonely.  They must feel lonely too.  I am trying to figure out how to respond better to their unresponsiveness. And how to fill the void I feel in my need to be connected. I grieve the years that I did not understand.  I grieve the lack of understanding and love that I could have given them in a better way had I known a little more of what was going on. 

Comments

That is one of the worst. It's so exquisitely painful, the complete lack of communication. Goes deeper than the kids, as you know. Starts with the husband, as you already know. (Do apologize for my recent absence, it's often too painful to face these facts, which I realize you'll understand here) I certainly have an easier time understanding the kid n I realize this is because I don't have expectations there, he's a kid after all. When it comes to a spouse it's different. Even though my spouse isn't capable of partnership, it's generally considered a normal expectation of marriage. I do definitely get what you're saying here though.