Disaster Why So Many Young People Are Cutting Off Their Parents - Hand-rubbing intensifies

Jordan was raised in a Southern Baptist household in North Carolina where she was expected to attend church multiple times a week, accept Jesus Christ as the way to salvation, and honor her mother and father. That last point was right there in the Ten Commandments. So when Jordan made the decision to stop talking to her dad, the choice stood in defiance of the lessons of her upbringing, but it was also because of them. She was tired of being told that women should submit to men, a belief ordained by the religion in which she was raised. She was finished obeying.

Family estrangement flies in the face of what most of us are taught as children: that family is forever and the bonds of blood cannot be replicated. Especially in cultures that value the cohesiveness of the group over more individualistic wants and needs, family is not considered a choice as much as it is a fact. But for families across America right now, that fact is fraying.

If it feels like whispers of estrangement are everywhere lately—in your group chat, at your happy hour, and of course on TikTok—it’s because the data is staggering. Karl Pillemer, a professor at Cornell University and author of Fault Lines: Fractured Families and How to Mend Them, found that in 2020, 27% of Americans over the age of 18 were estranged from a family member. That’s more than a quarter, although the actual proportion could be much higher because many people are still reluctant to discuss such a personal and stigmatized topic. Although there is a lack of long-term research, Pillemer believes estrangement rates are increasing in the United States and other Western countries, especially in white and non-immigrant people under the age of 35. The rise in millennials and Gen Zers coming forward to discuss their own crises—the hashtag #ToxicFamily has 1.9 billion views on TikTok—may suggest that American families are severing ties at an all-time high.

If TikTok is to be believed, attitudes about estrangement fall along generational lines: Boomers accuse millennials and Gen Zers of being too quick to cut contact, while younger generations push back by saying they don’t have to tolerate unacceptable behavior just because someone is related to them by blood. Today, certain young people appear to be far less rigidly beholden to the idea of family obligation above all else, even at the cost of their own happiness.

“The norms that forced families to stick together no matter what have weakened,” Pillemer said, noting that difficult childhood experiences, value and lifestyle differences, and unmet expectations are some of the factors driving estrangement. “There is less of an overwhelmingly normative guideline that you must stick with your family no matter what. There is a sense among younger people today that if the relationship is aversive over a long period of time, they have the ability to get out of it.”

How pervasive family estrangement has become is also evident in pop culture. On her daytime talk show, Drew Barrymore talks about her emancipation from her parents at age 14 and hosts celebrities like Jennette McCurdy, bestselling author of I’m Glad My Mom Died, and Brooke Shields, who opened up about her tumultuous relationship with her mother. But as ubiquitous as the phenomenon can seem, the reality behind each separation is as layered and individual as the families themselves.

When Jordan, 32, decided to leave the church in early adulthood, tension rose between her and her father. Because her parents were married, Jordan says she held back from cutting her dad off despite the fights they had about religion, politics, and her exit from the church. But after one last explosive call, Jordan hung up the phone and had a “moment of clarity.” She realized she was finished, done. Looking back, she says he’s lucky she waited that long. While he called and texted her repeatedly, Jordan didn’t budge. “It’s an extreme privilege to have a great relationship with your adult children,” she says. “I was always hoping [while we weren’t talking] that he would take my silence as a cue to get himself together and to apologize to me.”

The year after their estrangement, Jordan’s dad was hospitalized. She took a red-eye flight to be by her mother’s side and say her goodbyes to her incoherent father, who died after she got there. Now she finds herself grieving a complicated relationship. She thinks she did the right thing, but part of her grief is accepting that she’ll never know if, given more time, he could have ever changed.

Threaded into so many of these stories is the same hope Jordan had: that maybe the nuclear act of estrangement would eventually bring the estranged closer, like cutting hair to try to make it grow longer. That’s how it was for Rose, 21, who says she used to be “Daddy’s princess” before her father’s heroin addiction escalated to the point that Rose felt forced to make a choice. “I hoped that he would say, ‘Oh, my daughter’s no longer talking to me, I should try to fix that so I can talk to her or see her again,’” Rose says. “But sadly, he hasn’t chosen that.” There are so many things about her present life that she wishes she could tell her father: that she graduated high school and dyed her hair, that she got a job working with disabled children and brought a boyfriend home to meet her family. It all happens without her father and still, Rose hopes.

Quincee Gideon, PsyD, a Los Angeles–based psychologist who specializes in trauma therapy, explains that people’s reactions to familial estrangement are mixed and can change over a lifetime. “Some people have a lot of hope that their family can change,” Gideon says. “But by the time folks get to estrangement, they’ve spent years trying to set appropriate boundaries, live with disappointment, accept their family’s flaws, and negotiate in so many different ways that estrangement is a relief.” Such a significant step is best undertaken with the support of a therapist, recommends Gideon. In her own practice, she has clients take small breaks from contact with a family member to gauge the emotional impact. “Was it worth it? Was it relieving? Was it stressful in some way that we didn’t anticipate? Then we go from there.”

The relationship between Holly, 24, and her emotionally withholding and abusive mother was strained for years before she took the final step of estrangement. First, Holly had to make sure logistics were taken care of—she figured out a way to get her birth certificate and Social Security card, which were both stored in her mother’s security deposit box at the bank. Holly ended their relationship with a text message, writing, “I hope you choose a different path in this next part of life, where you choose healing over cruelty and misery. I won’t be there to see it.” Her mother blocked her number without responding. Instead of the grief she’s read about other estranged people feeling, Holly felt something else: a sense of peace.

She knows people may judge her for feeling relieved. A close family member told Holly, “She’s your mother—you should love her,” which Holly finds grating. “We would never tell a woman who’s been abused [by a partner], ‘You should go back to him, to the person who hurt you and will continue to hurt you.’ But we do for people with abusive parents, and it makes me very mad. If I wanted to be miserable and anxious all the time, I’d go back to my mother.”

These stories of family estrangement awaken something almost ancestral in me. I’m Albanian—my parents are both immigrants from Kosovo—and I have never understood family as something to opt in or out of. Being a part of a family is one of the main anchors of my identity—without the knowledge of where I fit as a sister and aunt and cousin, I’m not sure who I would be. In my family, even as relationships are stretched to the point of breaking, it is almost always with the understanding that eventually, they will heal or at least enough time will pass that we can sit at a dinner table together and pretend nothing happened.

Research shows that there are cultural differences at play here. Pillemer, the Cornell professor, notes that the rate of estrangement is highest among white families and lowest among immigrant groups, Latinx families, and Black families. “There is much greater pressure to remain in the relationship among non-white and especially immigrant populations,” he notes. “People may be in extremely conflicted relationships, but they are very unlikely to say, ‘I never want to speak to you again.’” When Pillemer explains this, I can’t help but laugh. I think of the passive-aggressive behavior that lives at the core of some of the dynamics in my family, the unexplored conflict that is swept to the side to make room for a shared morning coffee. Part of me wonders what my family would look like if we entertained the idea that we don’t have to love each other unconditionally. Another bigger part of me is deeply comforted that we will almost certainly always have one other.

But for some, the breaches are simply too profound to overcome. Take Ant, 24, an only child who lives in Florida. The path to Ant’s estrangement from their ultra-conservative parents stretches from an abusive and tumultuous childhood into their understanding of themselves as queer and non-binary. The breaking point came in the summer of 2016, when a mass shooter killed 49 victims at Pulse, an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Orlando. Ant, who had recently been on a date with someone who was supposed to be at Pulse that night, spent the morning after the shooting talking to their date’s sister as they tried to locate them.

Ant’s mother responded to the tragedy by saying the shooting hadn’t happened while Ant’s father used a slur against queer people. “That was the big moment,” Ant recalls. They waited until they turned 18 and graduated high school to make it official, although Ant’s mother still calls them sometimes. “She thinks that she has authority simply for the fact that she’s the mother and I’m the child,” says Ant. “Meanwhile, I can just hang up the phone at any point. I’ve found a chosen family that has allowed me to actually be myself and feel like I can do great things. I do feel very free.

After making the painstaking decision to cut off a family member, young people then face the daunting task of having to continue to justify their choice, compiling years of slights and heartbreaks into a quick explanation they can relay on a third date. Undoubtedly, millennials and Gen Zers have high expectations for their loved ones and place a higher premium on their own peace, even if it comes at the expense of something as steadfast as the family unit. It would be easy to say young people just don’t care about the sanctity of familial bonds, but I don’t think that’s true. How a family comes together and comes apart isn’t rational or easily explained—it is impossibly tangled. When one thread is pulled, the whole thing can unravel. And I don’t believe that anyone pulls it loose so easily.

 
I do believe we will see certain sects of christianity, such as southern baptist, dwindle into nothing within my lifetime. Religion appears to no longer be the opium of the masses, instead it now appears in the newer generations to produce nothing but rage. Regardless of individual motivations of the people involved it seems the main urge is within children to separate themselves from their parents because the parents refuse to separate themselves from their beloved religion. Cults are notoriously hard to escape and that includes the cult of skydaddy just as much as the cult of gender.

Times change, people change, but religion continues on the same stifling path, never evolving, as it always has and it appears that is what will be the death of it.
 
Yeah, this article is being intellectually dishonest. It’s conflating the usual tantrums over faith and sexual deviancy, with genuine cases of abuse and neglect, and equating them.

Cutting a parent out of your life isn’t just a flick of the switch decision. It’s painful, gut wrenching, and can lead to a lifetime of mourning over what never was and what never will be. There’s never truly any peace. Not 100%, anyway. It’s still unnatural, even if necessary.
 
Stopped reading after the first paragraph once I knew this would be some gay sperging about conservatively minded parents, more or less.

Sure, I think my parents failed me and my siblings and continue to live in this boomer delusion of theirs that you can succeed as long as you put effort in it and shit, but I'm not going to cut them off.

These people are all just the evolution of the 2000s enlightened atheist FUCK YOU DAD types.
 
sorry, but we dont want homo's.
Right, clearly I was referring to the cult of gender in my post because in no way have people evolved in their thinking other than to get sucked into a different cult. Only the last decade has ever existed and people act exactly as they did a century ago. My brother in make-believe christ, a lot more has changed other than this tranny issue.
 
Latifi is a name found mainly found in Afghanistan and Iran, or so DuckDuckGo informs me.

So she's an apostate Shia, I'm thinking. Time to round up the gang for a quick stoning?

Edit: I was wrong. Yes, Moon Worshipper, but not Iranian, Bosnian.
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Right, clearly I was referring to the cult of gender in my post because in no way have people evolved in their thinking other than to get sucked into a different cult. Only the last decade has ever existed and people act exactly as they did a century ago. My brother in make-believe christ, a lot more has changed other than this tranny issue.
Alice Cooper once said that he gave up his drinking habit for a golf habit.

That's the most honest thing I think I've ever heard about addiction. People who are addicted to shit are going to be addicted to something. Best to give them something productive to be addicted to.

What really that indicates to me is that people who have a particular personality trait (or fanaticism of any kind), be it addiction or need to be around and validated by like-minded individuals (or people who will tell them the thing they want to hear) are going to have that shit until either they die or they actively acknowledge that there's a hole in their fucking soul that needs to be filled with something.

Thread tax: As someone estranged from parents, it's pretty disturbing to hear when I hear about kids wanting to separate from their parents as a way to "own" their belief systems because some moron on TikTok told them he loves them more than their real family does and they just don't "understand" the kid the way TikTok moron does. Kids fight with their parents trying to find their identity; it's a thing that happens. But when was the last time that there was this idea that kids should full-on no-contact their parents so pervasive?

Beats me, but when people talk about the break down of the nuclear family, this is where that shit really hits the hardest.
 
Latifi is a name found mainly found in Afghanistan and Iran, or so DuckDuckGo informs me.

So she's an apostate Shia, I'm thinking. Time to round up the gang for a quick stoning?

Edit: I was wrong. Yes, Moon Worshipper, but not Iranian, Bosnian.
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If all these trannies and commies cut themselves off from their families where will they run to when the cities they live in have fiery but peaceful protests that burn down their apartment building?
 
Whilst I admit I only skimmed the article, the key points the "author" was trying to make were kind of obvious - conservative parents bad, fruitcake kids good, everyone should be hyper sensitive to "trauma" real or imagined.

At the end of the day, you can pour your all into your kid and there is no guarantee they'll grow up well. That's up to them. Same as being a good child and having a shitty parent. You aren't owed love from them.

It's all for naught, anyway.
This author - it's Cosmo after all - has a purpose to writing this article and it sure as shit isn't to present a balanced narrative. It's to inspire a stoking of the "eternally oppressed" flame that younger generations have burning in their hearts.
Nah, trick, some of the dumb boomer bigoted shit in this article is pure cringe. People have a right to get the fuck away from unserious empathy-lacking troglodytes regardless of culture war clickbait.
 
White parents are better than black & Latino parents by any metric, so the fact that white kids cut their parents off at such a high rate says it's the kids who are the problem, and I'm going to guess that there's a very strong correlation between having a university education and cutting off your parents.
 
whenever this subject is brought up, people are quick to point to the "honor thy father and mother" line, but here's the next line from Ephesians 6 that seems to get glossed over every time

> 1 Children, obey your parents in the Lord: for this is right.
> 2 Honour thy father and mother; which is the first commandment with promise;
> 3 That it may be well with thee, and thou mayest live long on the earth.
> 4 And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.


this passage is not "children should do whatever their parents want", it's telling parents and children to fucking get along and not be assholes to each other

if your parents are "provoking wrath" sounds like they're not holding up their end of the deal
 
>Fuck you mom and dad! I hate you for raising me to be an upright citizen!
>1 departure, several tons of debt and a shitton of drugs and partying later
>Why am I miserable? I can't even afford my own home! No matter how hard I work, I don't get anywhere....

There is a reason why the family unit is targeted the most.
 
>Fuck you mom and dad! I hate you for raising me to be an upright citizen!
>1 departure, several tons of debt and a shitton of drugs and partying later
>Why am I miserable? I can't even afford my own home! No matter how hard I work, I don't get anywhere....

There is a reason why the family unit is targeted the most.
In more cases than one would like to see, that's where bad things start.

All families are functional, in their own ways. All families are dysfunctional, in their own ways. In most families the functional far outweighs the dysfunctional for the entire family. In a number of families the functional outweighs the dysfunctional for only some members of the family. And in some families the dysfunctional outweighs the functional, from somewhat to almost totality.

Any human grouping, be it organization or a family, will be functional and dysfunctional, in their own ways. Just a matter of how much and what outweighs what.
 
On my Faceberg feed, I’ve seen millennials who cut off their parents for being “toxic” in their teens and twenties are now reconciling with their parents in their thirties. I guess this just means that the propaganda didn’t run deep enough so they hope it’ll stick with zoomers.

My parents pulled a bunch of bullshit in their time and I came to realize that they did as good as they could. I’ve also learned from their mistakes so I don’t repeat them with my own children. I’m not going to excuse or pretend those things didn’t happen but I’m not going to hold a grudge for the rest of their lives to serve a kike narrative either.
 
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