chadsarticles.com chadsarticles.com
   Index >> About Us >> Privacy of Info >> Terms of Service >> Add Url >> Add Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 

Issues & News

Recreation

Finance & Banking

Medical Care

Health & Therapy

Hotels & Travel

Science & Research

Art & Creative

Careers & Employment

Property & Estate

Software & Networking

Government & Politics

Home Family & Garden

Teens & Kids

Malls & Shopping

Self Healing

Academics & Education

Business & Companies

Eating & Drinking

Society & Communities

Automobile & Automotive

Lifestyle & Fashion

Sports

Online & Board Games

 

Index › Teens & Kids › Affair & Relationships
 

Payback Time in the Family? Don't Even Consider It

 
Author: Shirley Ann Parker

Today, many families could be, and are, called dysfunctional, since that has become something of a buzzword. Regardless, millions of people lead productive lives, in spite of living conditions at home. Overcoming the defeatist or antagonistic attitudes of other people toward us is probably one of the true tests of character. Will we reach a goal, when there is little encouragement? Its hard work, and it may also be painful and depressing at times, but yes, we can achieve!

Many of us had difficult, even rough childhoods, full of ridicule, poverty, or other limitations. Some unfortunate people spend their entire lives, just fighting for survival. While we may, and do, envy other people and their seeming lack of trials, there are few we would really want to trade places with, if the facades were stripped away. Trying to even the score with the apparently favored in society gets no one anywhere but in more trouble.

In fact, what we do with the talents and abilities that God has given each one of us is our gift back to Him. No matter how hard the circumstances in which we find ourselves, we can push forward. We do this by using our talents and learning new skills every day, by doing a little good each day in a world that may have treated us badly. Attempts to get even with other people only cause us to lose traction on the slippery slope were attempting to scale.

Most of our childhood wounds eventually heal, but not all. Some heal with scars, both physical and emotional. Some people never grow up because they dont want to. They never attempt to push past the age of tantrums, never stop trying to get back at those they think wronged them. They do this, without so much as the desire to know all the facts first about supposed neglect, for example.

Typical bitter individuals, at age 40, are children of divorced parents: still angry at being abandoned by the father who accepted work out-of-state, still hating the step-mom who took him away from them, still unwilling to accept responsibility for their own decisions over the decades. For years, they have plotted their revenge. And to what place has it brought them?

One of the coldest situations is when grandchildren try to grab the grandfathers estate when he passes on, an estate that should go to their father instead. If the Will or the Living Trust does not name the grandchildren first in line, instead of the son, the grandkids will lose in court. Regardless of the outcome, that kind of payback attempt is doomed to failure and destroys what little is left of family ties. We need to build bridges, not destroy them.

Self-defense at the time of an attack is one thing. Protecting someone else from harm is another. Both are justified. Abuse, though, is never justified, and abusers belong in jail or in a treatment program. In addition, life does have a way of catching up with them eventually.

But payback time years later just for deeply hurt feelings in the family? Dont even consider it. Those who deliberately or selfishly hurt, inflict pain, or dig a pit for others to fall into, will receive only pain and suffering in return. For every action, there is a reaction. It is the basic law of the universe. It is also a law that we can so easily avert by a change in our attitude.

2006 Shirley Ann Parker

Author Bio:

Shirley Ann Parker

Shirley was born and raised in the south of England. She has lived in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Utah, and for two extended stays, California. She has a B.A. in English, with a minor in Communication from Weber State University.

She is the author of Discoveries: A Journey Through Life, an engaging collection of short stories, as well as published essays and articles, and stories for children. Her head is full of many more tales and articles, demanding to be put down on paper, as soon as she can find a way to pay the bills without working full-time for other people. That, of course, may be a few years away.

Shirley is a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication, a full member of the Society of Children's Book Writers & Illustrators, a member of the National Notary Association, and a member of The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi.

You can search for this article using: teen relationship, teen relationship advice, abusive teen relationship, teen relationship quiz
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Space Radiation the Big Killer
 
Do You Want Trust Back In Your Relationship?
 
Jinxed Relationships -- Are Yours?
 
50 Reasons to Stay in a Relationship: Excerpt from Stop Being the String Along
 
Relationship Advice - How to Improve Intimacy
 
Why Women Date Jerks
 
You're not Alone, Marital Problems Affect Most of Us at Some Point in our Lives
 
Besting Bullying
 
Saving Teen Lives while Driving
 
Future Concepts and Modern Advances in Technology; Good or Bad?
 
 
 
Index >> Privacy of Info >> Terms of Service
Copyright © www.chadsarticles.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.