How We Pass Our Baggage Onto Our Kids
Amy got to the point where she dreaded picking her son up from pre-school. When Tim saw Amy coming to get him, he would run away shrieking, or throw a tantrum on the floor.
In the supermarket together, he would ignore his mother’s orders. When she tried to discipline him, he would make a scene in front of the other customers. Amy just didn’t know what to do anymore. Her husband criticized her efforts, and she would alternate between sobbing despair and furious screaming at Tim. Sometimes she felt like running away from him—like she didn’t even want him as her son. The distance between them seemed to be growing, and she decided to call a child psychologist.
Why does one of our kids always seem to act out, even when we give them so much love and attention? As parents, our worst nightmare is to pass our baggage onto our child. But that’s exactly what we will do unless we learn to spot what psychiatrist Murray Bowen called the Family Projection Process. For simplicity’s sake, let’s call it “projecting our baggage onto our kids.” The main thing we need to remember is, when it seems as though there’s a problem with our child, the real problem is between the two parents.




