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  • All of us were parented. For many of us, it went well. We were loved, our views were respected,

  • our needs were tended to. It helped to make us the more or less sane people we are now.

  • For others among us, things went really rather badly wrong. Perhaps there was unreliability,

  • anger, humiliation, violence or worse.

  • If there was, we're liable to have been deeply marked. We may, even if it all happened

  • quite a number of years ago now, keep noticing new ways in which the past is getting in the

  • way of a good life in the present. Our inadequate parenting experiences undermine our ability

  • to have sound relationships, the right sort of confidence and to extend adequate nurture

  • to ourselves.

  • We would like, of course, to move on. There is something unbalanced and deeply cruel in

  • the idea of the first 12 years determining the next 50.

  • We cannot change the past, but it does remain open to us to correct at least some of its

  • repercussions.

  • We may learn to do this through a neglected and yet deeply powerful process we call re-parenting.

  • How our parents behaved will have laid down a template in our minds about how we should

  • respond to challenges. But we don't need to remain forever stuck with the kind of care

  • which we imbibed in the early years.

  • We by nature have an ability to parent ourselves. What this means is, an ability to

  • - comfort ourselves at moments of difficulty - to interpret the troubles that beset us

  • with imagination and kindness - to encourage ourselves in the face of anxiety

  • and loss - and to reassure the more fragile, agitated

  • parts of us by drawing upon our experience and our serene aspects

  • All this is what good parents do for their children, but if this did not happen to us,

  • we can still - in adulthood - step in and do it for ourselves. One part of the mind

  • can speak to the other, one part can act as the sane, resilient counterweight to the bruised

  • more immature side of the self.

  • We don't need to be limited in our spirit by those who were meant to care for us, we

  • can figuratively put an arm around our own shoulder.

  • Our experience of the shortfalls of our own parents offer us an expertise that is wasted

  • if it stays stuck at the level of criticism. It should become the template for a far more

  • useful project: the creation of an inner ideal parent, who acts in all the ways in which

  • the real thing should have done, but didn't quite.

  • Knowing so much about what we did not have enables us to be experts at what we need - and

  • should believe we can provide for ourselves.

  • We already have the perfect inner parent; it's simply in many ways the opposite of

  • the one we had.

  • Though childhood is a one off event in material time, in psychological time, it is endlessly

  • recurring. The eight year old us is still there - and we can talk to it and respond

  • to it in a way that allows it to mature and strengthen in the way it always should.

  • We should make use of a much underestimated capacity of reparenting ourselves.

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All of us were parented. For many of us, it went well. We were loved, our views were respected,

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