Recovering From
Family Estrangement
Image prompt for Midjourney:
Wide-format landscape, person seen from behind standing at the edge of a body of still water — lake or river — early morning light, mist on the water, soft gradation from shadow to light on the horizon, solitary but not desolate, sense of stillness and forward orientation, muted palette of grays and pale golds, no face visible, contemplative rather than dramatic
Shock | Grief | Rebuilding | Peace
Parental Guilt
Image prompt for Midjourney:
Footpath diverging in a quiet park or woodland, autumn or early spring, soft light, no people, neither fork looks clearly better, contemplative mood
Many parents feel guilty about how they raised their children; estrangement simply amplifies that weight. But feelings are not facts. It is essential to examine whether the guilt you carry is truly proportionate to reality.
Your parenting occurred in real-time, amidst a life moving at normal speed, which often feels too fast. There were mortgages, health crises, career upheavals, and a thousand competing, legitimate demands. This context does not excuse every mistake, but it explains the reality of the environment.
The path forward involves three distinct steps:
Accept your child's feelings as real.
Decide whether you agree with their account of events.
Plan your future interactions to respect both your perspective and theirs.
This process is straightforward, but it is not easy. It is, however, entirely possible.
Questions to Explore
What is the difference between guilt rooted in reality and guilt that has simply become a reflexive mental habit?
When you look at the specific failures your child has named, which ones do you feel are valid, and which feel like a misinterpretation?
What was the broader context of your parenting years? What competed for your time and energy in ways your child couldn't see?