July fun facts https://www.almanac.com/content/month-july-holidays-facts-folklore
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I have only just come across this term and it appears to be being laid at the door of us Baby Boomers. It is apparently a "toxic parenting style that prioritises superficial peace over genuine resolution, prominent in the boomer generation". Well I take real umbrage to this.
My parents were born in 1914 and 1917, my mother bore me when she was 40. If you want toxic parenting styles, look no further than them - I don't know why they had three children tbh, they should have stuck to stuffed toys.
I did my utmost to be a different kind of mother to my two girls, born in 1982 and 1984, and feel that even allowing my understandable blind spots, (for which I have apologised to my daughters) I did a not too bad job. I am sick to the back teeth with being criticised by millenials and younger, for all our many sins. Humff!
Having had a good rant, I can see that many families do practice dishonest harmony - but it is not confined to one generation.
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That's an interesting way to describe the practiced avoidance of "unpleasant" topics that my parents also practiced. They taught me to not trust what I saw, what I heard or what I felt. At 59 years old, I am still working to undo their programming, but I am happy to say I've never been a "let's ignore the dead elephant in the living room" type of person, so I was WILDLY unpopular with my family and conveniently the black sheep.
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This kind of thing makes me nuts. The part about “prevalent with Boomer parenting” is just wrong. If there is data, cite it. Otherwise, there is no place for criticism.
My parents (born 1916 and 1917) were totally of the “if we don’t talk about it, it doesn’t exist” mindset. I wasn’t a perfect parent either, but that was not my style. AT ALL.
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Oh, my husband is a pro at dishonest harmony with his kids--but I think it has been driven by fear and hopelessness more than anything else. He only has addressed issues when they got to the point that they couldn't be ignored. Otherwise, he just goes along like he's floating on a raft and, while he knows things are not ok and there are a lot of underlying issues (anger, disrespect, etc.), he acts like all is ok. But, since we live so far from the skids and they are no longer allowed in our home (he hasn't told them why), the dishonest harmony really doesn't affect me.
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WanderLustre1066 wrote:
That's an interesting way to describe the practiced avoidance of "unpleasant" topics that my parents also practiced. They taught me to not trust what I saw, what I heard or what I felt. At 59 years old, I am still working to undo their programming, but I am happy to say I've never been a "let's ignore the dead elephant in the living room" type of person, so I was WILDLY unpopular with my family and conveniently the black sheep.
I despise gaslighting. I have also always been the truth teller in my family--not a mean truth teller, but a truth teller--since I was a teenager. Therefore, oh yes, I was the black sheep and the scapegoat. But it kept me sane. I knew if I didn't state the truth as I saw it, I would lose something in my soul. I would lose myself. Interestingly enough, two sisters who did not do that--who went along with the gaslighting and dishonesty--are both severely dysfunctional and bat-crap crazy (in different ways).
Even today, if my 50-something brother stands up to one of our dysfunctional family members, they accuse him of his thoughts being influenced by me, as if I have implanted any of his opinions they don't like. I jokingly say (over these and other accusations), "I'M MAGIC!" and "I am all-powerful!" ha!