bee*
Super_Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- May 14, 2006
- Messages
- 12,169
charbie|1302123320|2889511 said:I personally would recommend to her to see a therapist. She needs an unbiased person to listen to her and be that sounding board. She has some relationship issues running waaaaaaaay too deep that you'll never get through to her.
Dreamer_D|1302237766|2890876 said:Ally You know your sister best and how to proceed, or course. If you wonder where her poor self-worth comes from, I think the answer is pretty clear in your description of how your mom talks to her about her worth and value, no? I study self-esteem and relationships, and though there are cultural differences in how parents talk to their children, for example cultural differences in focusing on strengths versus improving weaknesses, and even differences in how valued self-confidence is at all (most asian cultures value harmonious relationships and respect for elders over individualistic needs like "confidence", which I am sure you know)... despite all of that, there is no culture where one is immune to hearing from your mother that there is something wrong with you that scares men away. I cannot think of a scenerio where that is going to breed a healthy sense of one's own value in a child (and I don't mean ego here, or western self-aggrandizement, either, I mean quiet core security, the type that causes you to choose the right man and expect to be treated with respect). Unfortunately, insecurity is a self-fulfilling prophecy -- you don't think you are worth anything, so you settle for a man who treats you poorly, which confirms your view that you are worthless. And as her sister, you are relatively powerless to help her overcome her insecurity and the bad cycle of relationships is creates, unfortunately. That is a row that people have to hoe on their own, with help, if they are lucky, from a secure and loving partner. But I do think you need to separate out your sister's insecurity from her deserving of having basic information. I cannot think it is protecting her from anything to keep information from her that her boyfriend has a common-law spouse. You have a responsibility to love her and reflect back at her the valuable person that she is, but that is not accomplished by keeping secrets. On the other hand, she is unlikely to act on the information, so perhaps just sitting back is the best thing. It is a hard place to be in, watching someone you love choose a destructive path.