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ยป Home ยป Turning Inwards

Do Your Parents Lack Emotional Maturity? (19 Signs)

by Aletheia Luna ยท Updated: Jul 15, 2023 ยท 112 Comments

Image of a sad abandoned inner child
wounded inner child work immature parents emotional maturity

All children deserve parents who are caring, attentive, receptive, and emotionally mature.

Sadly, the reality is that many of us were born into families who had the emotional intelligence of brick walls. This led to us feeling a sense of being abandoned, ignored, rejected, and never truly seen or appreciated for who we were.

If your parents were distant, self-preoccupied, and insensitive, you likely had an emotionally immature parent.


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Table of contents

  • What is Emotional Maturity?
  • 19 Signs of Emotional Maturity (in Parents & People in General)
  • Being Raised By Emotionally Immature Parents is Traumatic
  • 19 Signs Your Parents Are Emotionally Immature
  • Are Emotionally Immature Parents Also Narcissists?
  • 4 Types of Emotionally Immature Parents
  • How to Stop Being Controlled By Emotionally Immature Parentsย 

What is Emotional Maturity?

Emotional maturity is the ability to be comfortable with a wide range of intense or conflicting emotions (whether positive or negative). Those with emotional maturity are sensitive, perceptive, empathetic, receptive, and attentive to the needs of themselves and others. They are able to manage their emotions as well as hold space for the emotional complexity within others.

19 Signs of Emotional Maturity (in Parents & People in General)

Image of a happy family at the beach

Letโ€™s look at emotional maturity more in-depth. Emotionally mature people:

  1. Are realistic
  2. Are reliable
  3. Can think and feel at the same time
  4. Work with reality (rather than fight it)
  5. Can laugh good-naturedly at themselves
  6. Donโ€™t take everything personally
  7. Have consistent personalitiesย 
  8. Respect your personal boundaries
  9. Reciprocate giving and receiving
  10. Are courteous
  11. Are sensitive
  12. Are flexible and can compromise
  13. Are empathetic (which makes you feel safe)
  14. Are even-tempered
  15. Value your individuality
  16. Are self-reflective (and willing to change)
  17. Are interested in getting to know you
  18. Can laugh and be playful
  19. Can listen attentively and compassionately

Emotionally mature people are, overall, nice to be around. You feel safe and truly seen in their presence. There is a sense of reciprocity and genuine interest in learning more about you. There is no need to walk on eggshells around them as they are even-tempered, flexible, and down-to-earth. These good-natured and empathetic souls are not scared of emotional complexity or intensity but instead embrace it with love.

Being Raised By Emotionally Immature Parents is Traumatic

Image of a sad abandoned inner child

Stop for a moment and let me ask you this question: how many of the above characteristics did your parents possess?

If you answered less than five, no doubt about it, you have an emotionally immature parent.

Now, Iโ€™m not here to condemn your parents or reinforce a victim/persecutor complex. Iโ€™m here to help you face the truth about your childhood and how to overcome the trauma youโ€™ve likely undergone because of it.ย 

Being raised by emotionally immature parents is traumatic.


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Thereโ€™s no getting around it.ย 

It wounds us on a deep level to not be truly seen, heard, or valued. Something within us is suffocated when we are emotionally and psychologically neglected. Something within us breaks when we experience the unfathomably deep loneliness of never being truly seen.

In my own experience of being raised by two emotionally immature parents, one of the most debilitating and profoundly painful wounds Iโ€™ve carried has been an unshakable sense of emptiness, loneliness, and fundamental abandonment.

It was only recently when I discovered how soul-deep these traumas cut when, on holiday, I collapsed into a shaking ball of sobs and loud weeping that gushed from me like intense tidal waves. I suddenly realized that I had never truly felt like I existed. I suddenly realized that I had never truly felt seen. No one, not a single soul, had ever truly seen me โ€“ not my siblings, my extended family, my friends, my teachers, and certainly not my parents. All anyone had ever done was project their ideas and beliefs onto me, none had ever seen me.ย 

As I held this shaking child within me, it dawned on me how thankful I was to find an emotionally mature partner, someone who could see me. And also, how unspeakably sad it is for a child to be born into a family who is technically present, but offer little in the way of help, protection, or comfort.ย 

As decent human beings, itโ€™s our job, our duty, to learn and evolve. But emotionally immature people are stuck in a stagnant standstill; refusing to deal with our shared emotional reality due to their own unresolved inner wounds.


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19 Signs Your Parents Are Emotionally Immature

Image of two cold parents who lack emotional maturity

To our inner child โ€“ the young and vulnerable place within us โ€“ coming to terms with the ugly truth about our parents can be terrifying. It can feel like a grievous betrayal of trust. After all, we still want to please our mommy and daddy, right? (On some level, most of us continue to feel that way.)ย 

But at some point, we need to step into the role of adult, take our inner child by the hand, and go on a journey of healing. This journey requires us to pull apart our childhood, piece by piece, and examine how it impacted us (this is the crux of inner child work, by the way).ย 

For many people, the journey toward true adulthood, or what psychoanalyst Carl Jung referred to as individuation, starts with shining the spotlight on our parents.

So letโ€™s begin.

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Here are nineteen signs your parents are emotionally immature:

  1. They are self-preoccupied and self-involved
  2. They have dramatic (but shallow) displays of emotion
  3. They are killjoys: they canโ€™t enjoy their childrenโ€™s happinessย 
  4. They focus on the physical instead of emotional
  5. They canโ€™t experience mixed emotions ( which is a sign of emotional maturity) but instead experience only black or white emotions
  6. They canโ€™t self-reflect or think about their thinking (a form of higher intelligence) because itโ€™s too emotionally threatening
  7. Theyโ€™re only comfortable if conversation stays on an impersonal and intellectual level
  8. They expect you to read their minds and know what they need, but push you away when you try to help
  9. They think literally and talk only about โ€˜whatโ€™ (what they saw, what happened) but canโ€™t talk about deeper topics (like โ€˜whyโ€™ this happened, why I felt โ€ฆ)
  10. They crave exclusive attention (like children) and arenโ€™t interested in mutual/reciprocal conversations
  11. They donโ€™t try to understand your emotions and even take pride in being insensitive (e.g., โ€œIโ€™m just saying it like it is,โ€ โ€œI canโ€™t change who I amโ€ etc.)
  12. They communicate their emotions through emotional contagion and upset everyone around them (similar to what young children do)
  13. They donโ€™t say sorry or try to repair relationships
  14. They expect you to mirror themย 
  15. They enforce strict roles and encourage toxically enmeshed family dynamics, rejecting individuality and boundaries
  16. They feel entitled to do what they like simply because theyโ€™re the โ€œparentโ€ and youโ€™re the โ€œchildโ€
  17. They play favoritesย 
  18. Their self-esteem rides on you giving them what they want or you acting in a way they think you should
  19. They shame you and show contempt for who you authentically are and how you genuinely feel

How many of these signs did you say โ€œyesโ€ to?

Are Emotionally Immature Parents Also Narcissists?

Itโ€™s not always clear whether emotionally immature parents are also narcissists.ย 

There is definitely an overlap between EI parents and narcs โ€“ in other words, emotionally immature parents often display narcissistic behavior. But pathological narcissism (a medically diagnosable mental issue), is a whole other matter.

So thereโ€™s no black or white answer here. Yes, some EI parents might be clinically diagnosable narcissists. But others arenโ€™t โ€“ theyโ€™re just petulant and scared children at heart wearing the disguise of adults.ย 

4 Types of Emotionally Immature Parents

Usually, emotionally immature parents fit into four different types (that often overlap), as defined by clinical psychologist Lindsay C. Gibson. These are:

1. Emotional Parentsย 

Characteristics: Ruled by their emotions. Swing from over-involvement to sudden withdrawal. Tend to be unnervingly unstable and unpredictable. Perceive other people as their rescuers or abandoners. Often overwhelmed by anxiety and depend on others to ground them. Treat small upsets as the end of the world.

2. Driven Parentsย 

Characteristics: Extremely busy and compulsively goal-oriented. Controlling and interfering. Have excessively high expectations. Try to perfect everything, including their children. Use work as a way of avoiding reality and emotions.

3. Passive Parents

Characteristics: Rarely set in place rules or do much in the way of actively parenting. Prefer to let their children do whatever they want (because they want to avoid dealing with conflict). Take the backseat to a more dominant mate. Tend to be push-overs. Donโ€™t stick up for their children. Will allow abuse and neglect to occur by looking the other way. Cope with stress by minimizing and acquiescing.

4. Rejecting Parents

Characteristics: Donโ€™t enjoy intimacy. Mostly want to be left alone. Punish strong displays of emotion. Donโ€™t tolerate the needs of others or differences in opinion. Actively shame and belittle you. Fail to treat you as equal. Issue commands from a place of โ€œparental superiority.โ€ Have a pattern of blowing up and isolating themselves.

What categories do your parents fit into?

Remember that itโ€™s possible to have a parent who fits into multiple types with varying intensities.ย 

How to Stop Being Controlled By Emotionally Immature Parentsย 

Emotionally mature

Emotionally immature parents fear genuine emotion and pull back from emotional closeness. They use coping mechanisms that resistant reality rather than dealing with it. They donโ€™ t welcome self-reflection, so they rarely accept blame or apologize. Their immaturity makes them inconsistent and emotionally unreliable, and theyโ€™re blind to their childrenโ€™s needs once their own agenda comes into play.

โ€“ L. C. Gibson

Being the child of an emotionally immature parent is a terribly and inhumanely lonely experience. We grow up not only feeling fundamentally unsafe in the world, but we may even lack a sense of our own basic realness.ย 

Having adopted false roles as children in a desperate attempt to be accepted, we struggle to discover who we authentically are. We may feel ashamed once we do discover our genuine needs and desires, leading to chronic self-esteem issues. Our sense of alienation and emotional deprivation means that we are more prone to suffering from addictions and mental health issues like depression and ongoing anxiety.

We may, on some level, blame ourselves for the lack of real connection and love in our childhoods (as the inner child often does), leading us to a basic sense of unworthiness and brokenness. In an attempt to find real connection, we may become desperate people-pleasers, self-sacrificers, or codependents who attract egocentric and exploitative people who are similar to our parents in an unconscious attempt to try and resolve our childhood issues.

The list goes on and on โ€ฆ the trauma runs deep.


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But we donโ€™t need to remain victims forever. We can free ourselves from the manipulation, emotional coldness, false hope, and desperation that comes as a result of being the child of parents who lack emotional maturity.

Usually, itโ€™s important to seek some kind of professional help. (I did, and it certainly helped.) But this article will give you a place to start if youโ€™re not quite ready to take that step yet:

1. Understand that their neglect was about them, not you

Itโ€™s not your fault that you couldnโ€™t connect with your parent/s. Itโ€™s not your fault that you were shamed, ignored, rejected, unseen, or emotionally abandoned. A parentโ€™s job and responsibility is to care for their child on a physical, mental, and emotional level. If your parents neglected you, thatโ€™s their fault, not yours. Free yourself from the guilt and shame of feeling not good enough โ€“ your parents werenโ€™t good enough when it came to parenting, and thatโ€™s a harsh reality to accept, but itโ€™s the truth. Accepting this truth will free you from the toxic core belief that thereโ€™s something fundamentally โ€œbadโ€ or โ€œbrokenโ€ about you. As a child, you were a beautiful, joyous, divine being who deserved to be seen, held, and validated. ALL children are. If your parents couldnโ€™t see that due to their own unresolved baggage, thatโ€™s on them NOT you.

2. Validate your emotional pain

Many people struggle to heal from childhood wounds because they carry the belief that โ€œif it wasnโ€™t physical, it wasnโ€™t real.โ€ But as psychologist Gibson writes,

The loneliness of feeling unseen by others is as fundamental a pain as physical injury, but it doesnโ€™t show on the outside. Emotional loneliness is a vague and private experience, not easy to see or describe. You might call it a feeling of emptiness or being alone in the world. Some people have called this feeling existential loneliness, but thereโ€™s nothing existential about it. If you feel it, it came from your family.

Just because a wound isnโ€™t external or physical, doesnโ€™t mean it is any less important or painful.ย 

In order to validate your emotional pain, to admit to yourself that it is real and it f*cking hurts, try journaling about your pain. Let it all out! You have the right to face and feel your grief. Your anger, disgust, sadness, and disappointment are all valid and they all deserve to be acknowledged and felt.ย 

3. Discover what role-self youโ€™ve had to adopt to be accepted

Children with parents who lack emotional maturity arenโ€™t accepted for who they authentically are. Authentic is too real, too raw, too emotional โ€“ and thus, it is rejected. So instead, they must adopt a role-self in order to play a valuable part in the family.

In her book (which I encourage you to read), Lindsay C. Gibson provides an activity to help you identify your role-self. Iโ€™ll include it below.

On a blank page, complete the following sentences:

  • I try hard to be โ€ฆ
  • The main reason people like me is because I โ€ฆ
  • Other people donโ€™t appreciate how much I โ€ฆ
  • I always have to be the one who โ€ฆ
  • Iโ€™ve tried to be the kind of person who …ย 

Then, create a summary of how you answered each sentence.

Hereโ€™s how I finished each sentence (yours will be different):

  • I try hard to be likable and acceptable to others.
  • The main reason people like me is because I am easy to get along with and donโ€™t create drama.
  • Other people donโ€™t appreciate how much I am thoughtful, sensitive, and caring.
  • I always have to be the one who is reasonable and deals with peopleโ€™s emotional crap.
  • Iโ€™ve tried to be the kind of person who gets along with everyone.

Summary: I have played the role of being an easy-going person who tries to create harmony, tries to be likable and acceptable and deals with what others throw at me. Basically, I resort to playing small. Not asserting my needs. Not daring to be disliked. Being a martyr/caretaker.ย 

Just like I’ve done above, reflect on your role-self and how you still enact it in your life. The key to breaking this role is to slowly and gently introduce opposite behaviors. For example, for me, it would be to not play small, not hide my feelings, and not play a role others like.

4. Become observational and detached

In order to stop getting wound up in your emotionally immature parentโ€™s behavior, become like a scientist or detached therapist. Watch their words, how they think, and how they behave, treating it as an observational science study. Doing so will help you get out of the wounded child role and into the empowered adult role.

5. Relate to them instead of looking for a relationship

Relating instead of relationship โ€“ remember this.ย 

Subconscious Mind Test image

Many children of parents who lack emotional maturity believe, on some level, that thereโ€™s a genuine and fully-developed self hiding inside of their parents. They believe that one day, they might be able to connect with this hidden self, if only their parents would let them.ย 

Hereโ€™s the thing โ€ฆ there is no strong self to build a relationship with.

Give up hope now.

I know it sounds harsh, but your parent is emotionally immature meaning that they donโ€™t have a fully developed self โ€“ there is no stable, solid, or consistent self to relate to.ย 

Instead of wishfully hoping for someone solid and real to build a relationship with, try relating to them instead, as an adult. Express yourself clearly and calmly as an adult would. Step out of the child role and into the adult role.

6. Creating boundaries means creating safety for yourself

Create strong boundaries with them. Emotional connection with your parents is the basis for developing a sense of safety โ€“ but because youโ€™ve lacked that, you will always feel fundamentally unsafe around your parents.ย ย 

Creating boundaries means creating a safe place that is free from the influence of your parent/s. Learn more about assertiveness, discover your needs, and find the areas in life where you need to draw a strong boundary, put down your feet, and say a firm โ€œno.โ€

7. Do inner child work

Being emotionally abandoned creates a painfully deep wound within you. This wound needs to be addressed so that you can live free of the self-destructive patterns, relationship issues, and health crises that inevitably come with carrying a battered inner child.

To begin inner child work, itโ€™s important that you simultaneously learn how to love yourself (the two go hand-in-hand). Read my free guide on inner child work to continue this healing journey.

***

Emotional maturity is a crucial life skill that, tragically, many people don’t possess a whit of. When our parents lack emotional maturity, we will inevitably grow up feeling lost, abandoned, alone, rejected, and fundamentally unseen. I hope this article has shown you that you don’t need to stay in the victim role anymore.

Are you the child of an emotionally immature parent? What has been the hardest part for you? Iโ€™d love to hear your story below.

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About Aletheia Luna

Aletheia Luna is a prolific psychospiritual writer, author, educator, and intuitive guide whose work has touched the lives of millions worldwide. As a survivor of fundamentalist religious abuse, her mission is to help others find love, strength, and inner light in even the darkest places. She is the author of hundreds of popular articles, as well as numerous books and journals on the topics of Self-Love, Spiritual Awakening, and more. [Read More]

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  1. Bridgette says

    September 27, 2022 at 5:05 am

    It slowly dawned on me in my late 40s that my childhood memories of mum didnโ€™t include any of closeness – no cuddles or snuggles, no kind words, just a lot of raging screaming and anger, throwing things, slamming doors, threats, smacks and manipulation. I wondered how weโ€™d grown up to be normal, then realised I wasnโ€™t! Through the self reflection work Iโ€™ve done I discovered I have a great fear/hyper vigilance/anxiety of authority figures, older adults, bosses, police, teachers etc and I have dismissive avoidant tendencies. I always wondered why I felt awkward making space in my life for friends, it shocked me to realize I didnโ€™t trust people and was always thinking I was a nuisance to others, so much so I was completely self sufficient never asking for help with anything (even researching my own health symptoms because I didnโ€™t trust the doctors and didnโ€™t want to bother them or upset them!).
    Mum only smiled at visitors, which made the child me think she liked them but she didnโ€™t like me. Then I could tell she was pretending to like them anyway as sheโ€™d talk badly about them later. I thought this was โ€˜having friendsโ€™.
    As a child I think my animals, dogs and horses especially, allowed me to experience the emotions of mutual love and trust. I wonder if I am an animal empath sometimes or if Iโ€™m just drawn to animals because it was the only pure love/trust I knew. I am somehow happily married (little bit co-dependent! But realising this now!) and have raised my two kids with love and cuddles, it came naturally to me thank goodness! I was determined not to yell and carry on like my own parents Of course I didnโ€™t do the perfect jobโ€ฆdifficult when you prefer to avoid teachers and making friends- and the ones I did have were only in my life to be helped, as I believe thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m here for, to help others heal, whenever they need someoneโ€ฆI seem to willingly attract people in need, underdogs etc. but few and far between as I still donโ€™t get anything myself from having friends (I feel good having helped) Iโ€™d rather spend my time as I like, and love being alone often, or with my husband and dogs, and of course my now adult children, who I have shared all this with, and apologized for certain things I wouldโ€™ve done differently now. After making these discoveries Iโ€™m just so glad and relieved that my kids seem to have normal attachment styles.
    I have done a lot of work on my inner child, reframing situations, with some instant results (like being able to phone people-I got anxiety every time I had to make a phone call! I traced it back to one anxiety riddled instance when Mum made me phone an adult to ask for a rideโ€ฆafter reframing that situation I now have NO anxiety making calls!
    But still a long way to go, knowing the โ€˜why Iโ€™m the way I amโ€™ doesnโ€™t automatically make it easy to fix. I canโ€™t imagine what others get out friendships so wonder if Iโ€™ll ever want/need/crave my own friends.
    I still donโ€™t know if Iโ€™m an empath or if I am just habitually hyper vigilant in sensing others moods/true feelings due to my childhood. I have felt very sad and angry that mum treated me so badlyโ€ฆBut she is not emotionally intelligent, or even โ€˜in checkโ€™ half the time! So Iโ€™m just grateful she did do her best (and for giving me animals to love instead ).
    Thank you Luna and Sol for sharing your wisdom, itโ€™s been absolutely invaluable on my journey! Thanks also for the opportunity to share, itโ€™s good to reflect on my progress!

    Reply
  2. RSK says

    July 26, 2022 at 6:57 am

    I’ve heard all about emotionally immature parents. This article perfectly describes what is wrong with my mother, as she acts much less than a tenth of her age. Emotionally immature parents are even worse than outright abusive ones regardless of how they fall in the same category of bad parenting. I’ve been living a very toxic lifestyle that I’ve been trying to escape since finishing college. Her mental health has worsened over the years in a job where she was bullied, just because her boss and some coworkers were racist, as that racist manager was an extremely spiteful disciplinarian, considering heโ€™s petty, heโ€™s racist, and that massive *sshole is such a massive *sshole, just like the massive *sshole that he is. And one of the higher ups, the director, whoโ€™s more like that racist managerโ€™s enforce is no better, as he encourages, approves of, and enforces that racist managerโ€™s toxic leadership out of nepotism, indoctrinates an extreme us vs them, holier-than-thou, Social Darwinism mindset, given that their ego is much more valuable than the lives of other people, since that enforcerโ€™s ego is of much greater worth than my familyโ€™s existence just because heโ€™s an aristocrat, as aristocrats are terrible people especially in the US, that heโ€™s been plotting and scheming my familyโ€™s downfall out of pure nepotism for that walking hate crime he supports, like the egotistical sociopath that he is. It doesn’t just stop there; her detractors from her last job constantly insult, threaten, and belittle her children as well, where she develops this obsessive overprotective paranoia, always arguing up a storm just to prove her unfounded suspicions true for the sake of grabbing attention, distrust everyone including family whom she often sees as suspects, finding faults in every little thing, believe things in her head over perceived slights instead of other perspectives, connects unrelated issues to think the universe has it out for her, jumps to conclusions, throws petulant fits of psychosis for any infraction, and take things out on her family just because of the people allegedly giving her grief, since that behavior is expected, as some of these beyond obnoxious behavior is whatโ€™s expected for the toxic bureaucracyโ€™s employees, which she has taken to heart even after she left, just because of how abysmal her personal life is compared to others, so that they wonโ€™t have to attack her family themselves without bearing any legal consequences, considering how petty, racist, and vindictive, those adult bullies really are. Afterwards, when she was at a breaking point, they kicked her out of the job, just because they’re done with bullying her, took her sanity, and now theyโ€™re holding her family at her mercy for the past 5 years out of pure spite, or so I thought was the cause of her instability, from what I recalled regarding her past experiences. After losing her job and her sanity, she has become bitter, cynical, black-hearted, argumentative, disagreeable, even more short-tempered, and acting less than a tenth of her age. To think that the government officials in finance are allowed to hold singled out minority families at their mercy, or at the mercy of an unstable family member, endangering lives of families of disgraced employees just rubs me the wrong way… She obsessively believes that all those things that went wrong in life everyoneโ€™s playing games that they always win by screwing her mind and screwing her over. While my dad knows better, heโ€™s no saint, as he falls into the rejecting category, a total buzzkill who often shames me, and barely calls my mother out for her mental behavior. I am sick of being in the firing range between the two, mom argues up a storm, dad tells me not to get involved, mom believes dadโ€™s manipulating me to betray her, dad blames me for momโ€™s outburst, even though he wants me to grow up. Itโ€™s an endlessly vicious cycle. My mother has been destabilizing her family just to appease her past tormentors, which this counterproductive behavior towards her family is whatโ€™s expected; how she treats her family is no better than how most people allegedly treat her, my mother acts outs exactly how people outside her house picture her as or exactly how she pictures things as; i.e. Sheโ€™s been demonized at work, she acts like a demon to her family, or she projects her arguments over her perceived slights. She always riles herself up over petty suspicions and conspiracy theories, as anything the woman deems suspicious always p**s her off, that includes her family as sheโ€™s most suspicious of my father just because of his toxic friends, who often push her around. She even thinks that screaming her lungs out over all her unfounded suspicions is worth risking her health over, since she never listens to anyone except all those things she obsessively believes in her head, because sheโ€™s the only one to listen to her. She also speaks unfavorably of herself and her family and more in favor of those she resents just because of her lack of self-worth as opposed to others, since her detractors from her last job look down on her family, calling us โ€œweak, stupid, and worthlessโ€, and her children โ€œundeserving of the right to live,โ€ as thatโ€™s also whatโ€™s expected, or what I assumed at the time. Those toxic friends bring out the absolute worst in her, because thatโ€™s what they expect of her. Those toxic friends and her coworkers from her last job are all the same; spoiled, stuck-up, holier-than-thou, entitled, petty, self-righteous, self-centered, manipulative, hatemongering, expects her to destabilize, mistreat, and pick fights with her family just so they wonโ€™t legally be held responsible for attacking her family while her lowlife detractors raise their own families just to only cater to them, look down on my family, and are of opposite ends of the bigotry spectrum when it comes to Asians; one group who despises Asians (the toxic bureaucracy my mom used to work for), Asians who despise anyone who isnโ€™t them (Dadโ€™s toxic friends). Basically, Mom and her detractors are the epitome of the โ€œanti-role modelโ€ for oneโ€™s adult life. Sometimes, her bitterness and resentment towards others ended up leaking outside her household, where unfortunately, the cynicism, bitterness, and resentment carried over, along with those things about the people that turned her into what she is today, as I had often parroted from Momโ€™s short-sighted perspective, which ended up alienating one of my employers, and yet, she blames my employers for alienating her family. Because to her, employment means exploitation, denial is the only way to counter reality, every misfortune that occurs is prearranged by her detractors just to keep us โ€œin line,โ€ every obstacle in life is a statement that means the world is plotting against her and everyone she cared for, and family is the people most likely to betray her, and she has been undermining my employment standings just to protect me from the outside world based on her narrow-minded perspective, due to her claims of being misled, discouraged, and used. Her carelessness ended up costing me a job, which was when I slowly begin to realize how toxic she really is, I previously condemned the people of her last job for turning her into this state, then I realized both mom and her detractors were in the absolute wrong. She’s been controlling her family out of spiteful paranoia. To her, how she treats her family, along with her petulant fits of psychosis, and terrible anger issues is considered โ€œacceptable behavior,โ€ just because her attitude towards her family is encouraged and expected of by her detractors. I may be her child, but I should be adult enough to call her out, so I began to fight back against her, her mental behavior, and her loss of insanity, hard, once I put two and two together after realizing what actually costed me one of my jobs. Sheโ€™s always finding fault in every little thing, never finds faults in her own petulant self-destructive behavior, since she learns bad behavior from very bad people, and has no comprehension of cause and effect regarding behavioral patterns. Because of being misled, betrayed, and discouraged throughout life, sheโ€™s fallen too deep into the dark side, blackening her heart, where she relies on such negative emotions like suspicion, anger, rage, discouragement, disappointment, disillusionment, disheartenment, anguish, agony, angst, obsessive paranoia, and frustration to keep herself alive; even Anakin Skywalker had better self-control. To think that a concerned parent would be this callous, manipulative, petulant, self-righteous, and self-centered. Even inheriting her blood is a gigantic โ€œKick meโ€ sign that can never he removed until death. All in all, sheโ€™s absolutely inadequate to even parent an autistic child.

    Reply
  3. KK says

    May 31, 2022 at 11:07 am

    I desperately long for real connection

    Reply
  4. Sim says

    April 29, 2022 at 1:32 am

    Whatโ€™s the difference between building a relationship with them, and relating to them?
    (Referencing point 5. Relate to them instead of looking for a relationship)

    Reply
    • Mateo Sol says

      May 03, 2022 at 2:13 pm

      Hey Sim,

      Good question. Some people are just looking to be in a ‘relationship’ because they feel lonely or fearful when they’re single. This doesn’t mean they actually know how to ‘relate’ to their partners, which actually requires them to listen, communicate, compromise, etc…

      I hope that helps.

      Reply
  5. Shay says

    December 24, 2021 at 12:28 pm

    This is really nice and something I sent to my sister who is nearly everything listed here. She’s also the mother of a soon to be 4 year old and recently decided to get married for financial help from our church. The only issue I take with this is that you’re assuming the person that is emotionally immature is mature enough to read this and realize that they have a problem instead of feeling attacked. All she felt was attacked. So while this is nice it doesn’t work for most of the immature.

    Reply
    • Aletheia Luna says

      January 14, 2022 at 2:22 pm

      Hi Shay,
      This article is meant for personal reflection based on what our own parents were like. It would only be helpful forwarding this article to someone else if they had emotionally immature parents too, not as a way of trying to get *them* to not be emotionally immature. (Anyone would be offended in that case.)

      Reply
  6. adap says

    January 22, 2021 at 1:11 pm

    There is noticeably a bundle to realize about this. I think you made various nice points in features also.

    Reply
    • Karma says

      February 19, 2021 at 8:16 pm

      I have come to realize that I am a deeply wounded person with no ground of stability and balance as an individual a decade back. I am a real victim of my immature parents and their derogatory influences has made all my experiences of adult life full of pain and suffocation. No kind of self love and inner work has helped me solve the issues.

      Even this realization has breed a sense of unworthiness and self hatred inside me that run as a vicious circle that entrapped me with full of anger and resentment. The sense of disorientation and anger is costing me a calm and normal life. I feel a deep sense of separation from others or life itself and see myself always fighting against everything. I am stuck. I think I have already attracted a wrong job and a wrong person that I spend my time with. Or may be I am wrong to think this and rather i need to change.

      I don’t seem to enjoy constant power and courage as a person to live my life. Sometimes I get the courage and power of balance to live life with its flow but it tend to be short lived. It gets overwhelmed and overpowered by fear and shameful memories.

      I wish this constant power and courage of self acceptance and self love remain all the time with me. I don’t know how to break free from this terrible cycle of pain and suffocation.

      I just keep fearing about my anger that I may have to live behind bar for murdering my partner who is not compatible but who clings to me. Because I know she will never accept a discussion of getting separated. And she have the same problem of anger.

      I will be grateful if you suggest me with some sorts of advice and directions…

      Thank you.

      Reply
  7. Roxanne Cottell says

    July 26, 2020 at 1:44 am

    I never felt invisible, but that is only because my “sins” were always on display. All these years later, at 50, and just a few months after my mother passed away last year, I began to realize that it was not me that was a wreck, and that it was not even they who were trying to make me be that way, but, was from their own parents, their own siblings, trying to continue to follow the rules of dead people.

    It has taken a long time, is still taking time, because I am horrifically afraid of being abandoned. All my life I would wonder where this awful feeling of abandonment came from, why I did not feel like I was “the princess” like all my little friends’ were being called. I was called “uku,” which in my language means “flea” or “parasite,” and yeah, even as a kid, because my mother was teaching my our Hawaiian language, I knew what those and lots of other words meant and vowed to teach my own kids those things BUT, to also teach them that if someone told them those things, that they were to answer with that same word, tell that adult that they know what that word means, and to immediately come and get me so that I could get my kids away from those people.

    In my family, for many of the relatives, on either side, it seemed like it was an okay thing to do to all of the kids in the family – tease us, make us fight with each other, call us names, and if we got out of line, to smack the hell out of us in front of all of the other kids, just so that the person doing to manhandling could make their point.

    What that caused me is a very low sense of self worth, virtually no self esteem, always feeling like I have to (or rather HAD to) give up pieces of who I am just so that I would not have to hear “you know better than that – you were not raised that way” and oh my, my, my – oh yes I was! I was raised to feel like I was not good enough to be accepted as who I am for real. I was raised to feel ashamed if I did not conform to what the rest of the kids wanted, and when I flatly refused, I was shamed, teased by the other kids, told that I did not need to eat what was put in front of me but then was force fed (again, in front of everyone), and then expected to not be completely jacked up as an adult because I ended up married to an abuser who terrorized me for almost 30 years. And yeah…the reason that I stayed was for every reason that any one can think of OTHER THAN THAT I LOVED THIS MAN BECAUSE NO THE HELL I DID NOT, but, because my dad was a preacher, if I were to divorce this person, I would bring shame to the family AND would be going to hell.

    Throughout the course of my life my mother would tell me to stop being a doormat, even though that is exactly what I saw her and many of my family members on both sides do – allow it that the familial group think would win over, and when I was in high school, I figured out a lot of these things to the point that I could and yep, you guessed it- I was ALWAYS grounded, made to feel more ashamed because I would not conform to what my mind did not and stil will not believe.

    While I know that I have come a very long way, I also am very well aware of having a long way more to go, because my biggest issue is with rejection and abandonment. I am always asked how anyone could harm someone like me, and to their query I can only state that I was a kid, it was how I did not realize that I was being raised – to become another domestic violence statistic.

    When that happened, of course – my mom was horrified, my dad was not around (work) and my WHOLE FAMILY ASKED ME WHAT I DID TO GET HIT !!!!!!

    These days, my kids and I no longer have any contact with the majority of them. We might not have all of the nice things that they all have, and our lives becuase of them might be “skin of the teeth” but, the one thing that I do not miss is feeling that whole body tension at all times, and neither am I missing any of the adrenal fatigue, nor the nightmares, and it is lovely being able to NOT have to worry about which family member is going to be a complete jackass during the holidays because my kids and I have created our own family by melding all of our friends as one big ohana.

    It works
    Thanks for writing about these things
    It is very needed

    Reply
    • sasha says

      August 26, 2020 at 7:43 am

      Roxanne, I a sooo sorry you went through all f that. It truly broke my heart to read your story and I connect deeply to a lot you said. you are strong and a fighter hence you would not be here to tell your story. Keep healing, keep loving.

      Reply
  8. Laurine says

    May 24, 2020 at 4:50 am

    That was a violent hit in the face

    Reply
  9. Raymond Kraft says

    April 24, 2020 at 7:24 am

    Hah! My parents hit bingo on all 19 signs of emotionally immature parents. Of the four types, they were (1) unemotional, rather than emotional, (2) driven by workaholism and religious addiction, (3) authoritarian, rather than passive, and (4) rejecting of everything that didn’t fit with their religious fantasies.

    They’re gone now, it was a relief, finally I could relax, I didn’t have to protect them anymore, the consistent experience was that I always felt invisible, I never felt visible, their were only interested in their “fantasy me” and had no interest in the “real me.”

    I cannot remember either of them ever asking me a personal question, except once dad asked me how I envisioned God, I said “As a great old man of the mountains,” thinking of the image on the Sistine ceiling, I figured he’d take that, and he did, never said another word, I knew I was just asking for a blowup if I said “I don’t believe in God.” You learn to tell them what they wanna hear, i.e., lie, to keep the peace. No beating, no screaming, no molesting, bu it’s just as much another form of child abuse, a form of chronic neglect, I’ve spent the rest of my life working to feel visible, to myself and others, but at least I saw through it all at a fairly early age, I think many people do not, they get stuck feeling invisible for years, decades, for life.

    Reply
  10. Expecting says

    March 26, 2020 at 8:08 am

    Iโ€™m expecting our first child in a month. The issue is that recently, my conversations with my parents, especially my mother, have been slowly regressing into the same issues Iโ€™ve seen over and over again in the past. A benign comment is blown up into a major issue, the blame placed on me and then the comments that she doesnโ€™t know what to say or how to say things in ways that do not make me upset. In reality, her interpretation of what Iโ€™ve said is completely different than my original intent and seen as an attack vs. taken at face value. I came across this article, and it really resonates – I have an emotional mother, slightly rejecting father whoโ€™s transitioned to emotional over the years. My sibling is better able to follow the steps to disengage and look to relate vs have a relationship but I am so sad during this time, coming to the realization that I cannot fix this. At a time I need my mother the most, what I wouldnโ€™t trade for her to be emotionally mature. Our usual way of handling this is to hang up a call, ignore, sweep under – until the next time. And then itโ€™s back to the same ups and downs and the same avoidance. Itโ€™s so extremely sad to me go think that my only solution is to disengage, set boundaries, etc. Every time I try very hard to make her and my father see it makes the situation worse. The relationship between them deteriorated decades ago but they have stayed together, for social and cultural reasons, and neither of them ever had the space or opportunity perhaps to grow as individuals and gain emotional maturity. It has certainly affected me and my sibling – though we deal with it very differently. Neither of us are emotionally immature but I see various traits that both of us could work on to be better people. My husband is a god send – heโ€™s an emotionally mature, gentle, soothing person and is staunchly in my corner. I worry what our world will be like after baby, and what kind of relationship Iโ€™ll have with my parents afterwards as Iโ€™ll have less patience and time and emotional capacity to deal with their issues. It makes me sad and fearful that Iโ€™ll have to cut ties in order to manage my own sanity and Iโ€™m hoping it does not come to that but the past isnโ€™t predicting a better outcome.

    Reply
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