Friday, May 1, 2015

Parent abandonment - SocSci 10 Z Group 2

Parent abandonment


This blog post is about abandonment by family members.

My mother’s cousin’s father-in-law has two families. During World War 2, Lolo A was enlisted within the US Navy as a cook. There he served, until the end of World War 2. During World War 2, he married a woman in Panama and started a family with her and had three children. When World War 2 ended, Lolo A was shipped back to the Philippines, leaving his family behind in Panama. In the Philippines, he married another woman, and started another family.

Lolo A’s youngest child actually found Lolo A’s other family (the family situated in Panama) through Facebook. She was typing in their family name when a suggestion came up of someone she does not know. Coming from a very close knit and communal barrio where everyone knew everyone, she was curious as to who this person is and she started a correspondence. She asked if he knew Lolo A and he said, “Ah that is my grandfather.” So she explained that Lolo A is actually her father, and so, both of them asked the history of their family and finally uncovered Lolo A’s secret (Lolo A died many years ago, so they had to rely on Lolo A’s wives for information).

The two families kept contact and they all had a family reunion in Las Vegas last year. There is actually no bitterness and they actually gave a warm welcome to each other. Lolo A’s family in the Philippines asked the family in Panama why they didn’t look for Lolo A after World War 2. The family in Panama explained that they didn’t bother looking for him because they worked on the assumption that Lolo A perished in the war, and so, instead of feeling abandoned, they accepted Lolo A’s “death”, moved on and felt at peace.

This brings us back to the topic of abandonment by family members. The family in Panama didn’t feel like they were abandoned at all (even though they wrongly assumed that Lolo A died in the war), so there was no bitterness and familial problems left, even after Lolo A left them. Lolo A’s children left in Panama actually grew up to be successful and they have a healthy outlook on their lives and families.

Abandonment and neglect can leave a large impact and emotional scar on children. Children who were abandoned by a parent tend to develop poor self-esteem, difficulty expressing their emotions, develop insecure or avoidant relationships, have an irrational sense of shame of themselves (they tend to think that a parent left them because they don’t have any value to the parent; i.e. “I wasn’t good enough for Father/Mother.”) and other psychological problems concerning their families and relationships. Abandonment also comes in the form of divorces for children, when the father or mother divorces, leaves, and doesn’t look back on the children. Children who were abandoned also become more insistent with what they want, more rigid with their routines, and more repetitive to create security (they actively search for security to avoid having to be abandoned again).

This shows just how big the effects of abandonment and neglect on a child can be. However, all hope is not lost for an abandoned child. Providing reassurance and support is of primary concern for the abandoned child. With time and consistent reassurances of the child’s worth, the child can eventually begin to accept the parent’s choice and move on.

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