25 People Reveal The Moment They Knew Their Family Was Peculiar

Published 2 days ago

The relationships we have with our families can be complicated. Most people have experienced dealing with a problematic parent or sibling. However, some people’s family situations are more disturbing than others.

Recently, a Reddit question online asking, What made you realise that there was something ‘off’ about your family?” gained popularity. Respondents revealed stories of neglect, tense interactions, and more that they had thought were normal at first. But after being exposed to the peaceful dinners at friends’ houses, they realised that something was not quite right in their home environment. Scroll below to read through some of the answers from the thread. 

Read more

#1 I was maybe 11 and my friend was supposed to spend the night at my house. I was a bit embarrassed because we could hear my family fighting, but I didn’t consider it a bad fight because the walls weren’t shaking and no one was throwing or breaking anything. She told me if I ever needed somewhere safe to stay that her mom would come get me and I could stay with them. I knew her mom wasn’t the most stable person in the world, but that woman took care of me from 11-18 any time I needed anything. I could probably call her now, years since I’ve last spoken to either of them, and she would still treat me like family.

Image source: klovey2, RDNE Stock project

#2 When I heard a classmate’s mom tell my parents about how much she adored me and how much I lit the room up with my personality, and that she was glad I was friends with her daughter. I never heard anyone in my family speak with that level of positivity and depth about anyone, including family. I was confused as to why I could leave an impact on essentially a woman I interacted with in passing, but my parents couldn’t even remember what grade I was in.

Image source: 3D_Otters, Nicole Michalou

#3 My friends moms didn’t start undressing and rolling around on the floor in front of the TV when they didn’t get enough attention. That was odd to me.

Image source: Unusual-Shopping1099, Liza Bakay

#4 When I had to get a couple mandatory vaccines the summer before college because I had never had a single vaccine. (Anti-vax parents). I spent that entire summer getting 1 shot in each arm every week because I wanted to get all of them.

Image source: dinotattootime

#5 When I was told not to talk to my friends about certain things that happened home because “you don’t share everything with non family members” and “they won’t understand”.

Image source: PeakRepresentative14, August de Richelieu

#6 I went to a friend’s house after school one day, and her mum called us down for dinner. I was astonished that the whole family sat down at the table and ate together, and chatted and joked and laughed. They actually seemed to be ENJOYING each other’s company. There was no tension, no one was yelling or being sullen, no hint of threat in the air. Just a simple fun dinner. Apparently they did that every night! Shocking behaviour. I privately thought her family was really weird for that, but once I started making more friends, I began to realise it was MY family that was ‘weird’. ☹️.

Image source: saludpesetasamor, cottonbro studio

#7 I entered public school at thirteen. Was bullied by the kids who immediately picked up on my lack of social skills. I was as polite and pleasant to them as I would be to anyone. A month later, once I had established my first ever friend group, they told me how unusual my inability to be bothered by bullies was, citing my extraordinary ability to be unbothered by verbal abuse.

Image source: That-Condition9243, Mikhail Nilov

Being taunted for my physical appearance wasn’t unusual to me because that’s how my parents spoke to me. That’s when I knew my parents were different. It had never occurred to me that my parents were different because I had just always known they Didn’t Like Me and that being laughed at and called names by them was… just how they treated me.

Apparently it’s really unsettling to bullies when you genuinely laugh off their comments or double down and provide an even worse description of your failings without having any negative emotions around it.

It made me feel very proud of myself for the things I knew I was good at and in an odd way provided me the confidence to be curious. My parents didn’t care about me or anything I did so I had to seek out what was important to me and accept the influence of people I genuinely respected and admired.

#8 My father had an extremely bad temper. One time when I was 13 years old he picked me and my friend up from school and my dad was in a really bad mood. He started screaming at me for being too stupid to know something or other. I was used to it and totally silent. When I was with my friend later, he was in complete shock. I downplayed it and I told him it’s totally normal. He said “no, it’s not”. And, I never forgot that.

Image source: Blu3Ski3, cottonbro studio

#9 Realising there was a strange contrast between my dad owning a garage of 10 sports cars and owning an airplane and we flew by private jet when he wanted to go on a family holiday. But, my mom’s debit card would regularly decline in line at the supermarket and we’d have to put some items back. And when I realised my mom “owes” my dad money, and he charges her interest on her “loans”. They’re still together. Now I recognise it as financial (and emotional) abuse.

Image source: larra_rogare

#10 Probably around the time my step mom put a lock on the outside of my door and would lock me in my room with a little bowl of snacks and a TV that only got like 3 channels. Also how we went to Sea World and they just left me in the car (at least the windows were down.).

Image source: DatTF2, Lisa Fotios

#11 Hearing from other kids how generous their parents were: Taking them to a pediatrician, giving them basic advice, caring about their feelings, helping them out when they were struggling… Then realizing all these things weren’t about going above and beyond but rather what normal parents do.

Image source: DeathSpiral321, Fernanda De Freitas

#12 The first afternoon I spent with my best friend’s and now partner’s family I was six years old, I fell and scraped my knee, as six-year-olds do. His dad rushed over and helped me up, telling me it’d be okay and that I was okay and that we’d go clean it up inside. I had never had an adult clean my cuts before, no one had ever taken care of me before, not since I was old enough to feed, dress and bathe myself. I realised then that my parents were supposed to take care of me.

Image source: tired-activist-shit, RDNE Stock project

#13 When I realized I didn’t wanna bring my friends or future partners around them because I was afraid my family would be mean to them.

Image source: moonsonthebath, cottonbro studio

#14 When I was crying to my mom about my step brother choking me to the point I was turning red and some bystander had to pull him off of me and she just shrugged and asked if I had done something to him, I also told my dad and he got angry at me.. Definitely f****d up that’s for sure.

Image source: MailNo4142, cottonbro studio

#15 The big, grown-up Uh-oh realization happened when my mother asked me and my siblings to lie about our identities and claim to be visiting cousins when CPS showed up. Oh and then when we fled the state. I was nine, definitely old enough to know that was bonkers.

Image source: Girleatingcheezits, Josh Applegate

#16 When I told a funny story about the time my dad was getting ready to give me a belting but he was so furious he didn’t keep a good grip on me and I dodged the blow and he whacked himself across the shins. That was at a party in university. I’ll never forget how I finished the story with a chuckle only to be met by a wall of horrified silence. Later a friend took me aside and kindly informed me that it wasn’t funny or normal for a dad to routinely beat their child with a leather belt.

Image source: unrepentantgeraldine, Meruyert Gonullu

#17 I had multiple moments like that but the one I still think about the most is actually ironically menial.

Image source: Schattentochter, Tirachard Kumtanom

I’m 30. Seven years ago I had already been in therapy for years to work through, amongst other things, the trauma my family’s abuse has caused. I had already been through the “Wait, other parents don’t beat their kids senseless?”-epiphany.

But what broke me was my boyfriend’s mother telling me that “of course” she had used lactose-free products and “obviously” the dessert had no hazelnuts the **second ever time she met me**.

Not once in all this time had it occured to me that I’m allowed to expect people not to feed me stuff that will literally put me in agony.

Double awesome if you know my dad’s a doctor, my mom’s a nurse…

#18 When I spent an afternoon at my friend’s house when I was about eight. Her dad randomly asked us if we wanted to do anything fun and he ended up teaching me how to play Monopoly and how to ride a bicycle. It was then that I realized that spending quality time with their kids is something that normal parents did. In our house my parents would never do anything with us during their free time outside of going to the mall and eating out.

Image source: yodelingllama, RDNE Stock project

#19 When I was around at my best friend’s house and her dad happened to be there, he came in to say hello, my bf said something mildly cheeky to him and I held my breath and tensed up waiting for him to kick off… he just laughed and teased her back. I’d have been about 7. It was revelatory, and helped me keep my sanity until I could afford to leave home.

Image source: originallovecat, Ron Lach

#20 I think it was the first time I talked about what my house in California was like when I moved back to Florida as a preteen.

Image source: The_Jacob, Rupinder Singh

Yeah, it turns out living in a hand made shack of plywood and plastic tarps on a man made jetty as part of a homeless colony in Northern California for a year is not a “typical” thing families do.

Oddly enough, chopping up and burning your Christmas tree because it was the only fire wood available to you on said jetty 4 days after Christmas due to the fact that your parents abandoned their 7 year old and 2 toddlers under 3 to go “help” your dad’s brother with “cooking” is also not a universal experience and your 5th grade class and teacher will not think it’s a silly goofy story and have the most horrified looks on ALL of their faces.

Yeah.

My parents did a lot of questionable things whilst on m*th. Like cook m*th.

#21 Lots of Abuse and neglect, living in filth, mice, roaches, if something broke, oh well. We had a broken window for years, it was ridiculous.
My best friends mom used to have me bring my laundry on Friday nights in a pillow case, and she’d wash it for me for the next week of school. I used get PE as my last class on purpose so I could properly shower and wash my hair with actual shampoo, not Palmolive. My secret family made sure I had everything I needed from 12-17. Even bought my shark week supplies because my mom would buy the cheapest Kotex and cut them in half for me to use ( i was the only girl) .
When it was health week at school and they passed out hygiene kits, I took everything i could and if my taken care of friends didn’t want theirs, I took those too.

Image source: graeflamingo, Joseph Gonzalez

I left at 17 and never looked back. My dad was not as bad mom, yes neglectful, but he went thru alcoholism and worked A LOT, so we got left at home with the abuser. In did reconnect with him as an adult and they had divorced many years before that and he genuinely was a sweet man who changed his life and was so sorry.

But about at 14, I even stopped eating anything from the house because everything was contaminated with roaches and grime. . I was big into sports, so was my bff, so her mom would always have a salad or sammich for me in the car, and always a capri sun and some fruit. I ate breakfast and lunch at school with the reduced lunch program that I signed myself up for.

This was in the 80s and some relatives later told me that they called CPS a few times, but they only counted bedrooms and never once talked to me or my brother. CPS in the 80s, was a joke. I’m glad I was secretly adopted ?.

#22 When I travelled across the country and spent a few weeks with my partner’s family during Christmas. Honestly, it was the fact that when his brother forgot to bring the stuffing to Christmas dinner everyone reacted appropriately and in proportion to the situation. Nobody died…we just ate more of the potatoes. Sure there was some gentle teasing towards his brother for forgetting the ONE item he was in charge of but everything turned out just fine. It was such an appropriate response to such a small problem. In comparison, the preceding year at my family’s Christmas my uncle KICKED my mother because they had a disagreement (and I don’t even remember what it was about).

There was obviously more to it than just this incident, but that’s the moment where it really hit me. Aaaaaand then I spiralled big time. I tried to break up with him because I fully planned to kill myself once I arrived back home. I thought there’s no coming back from this, my family and myself are so completely irredeemably WRONG that I don’t have any hope of being a functioning person, let alone part of a real FAMILY! What am I doing here, why am I wasting everyone’s time?

It was a very dark moment, and nobody could figure out what was going on. But even though I seemed absolutely insane, everybody just…carried on and continued trying to include me. 5 years later…we’re still together (and I’m slightly less crazy!).

Image source: BabaTheBlackSheep

#23 At school in the bathroom, maybe 4th grade, my elementary school best friend saw the welts and bruises across my legs from getting “whooped” with a belt and immediately took me down to the school office crying, called her mom and told her, and the office ladies were kind to me for the first time ever. My bf’s mom showed up to the school and I went home with them that day.

Image source: TakeAnotherLilP

#24 I went to work as an Au Pair after university. I was shocked that people have family dinners and talk about how their day went and that children’s answers were taken seriously and not mocked or dismissed. I was shocked when the kids’ dad went out of his study to ask his children “How are you?”. I

Image source: fragielijs, Tima Miroshnichenko

was shocked that parents actually take kids to activities that their children like and not to those they, the parents like. I was shocked that you can have fun with your parents and have fun around them. Dance, sing, run and they won’t make fun of you. I was shocked to find out about movie nights for family. Like, parents actually watch a kids movie with children and don’t just turn on something they want to see.

I was shocked when the dad did the majority of the cooking and not because the wife was not around but because he actually liked cooking. And that he was affectionate towards his wife. I was so shocked when he just randomly brought her flowers, when they cuddled on the coach.

At first they seemed crazy, but then I realized it is my family who is not alright.

#25 My mom brought me to an evangelical church multi-media show/“play” that simulated a school shooting (you then watch all the “heathen” children go to hell after they die) to ensure that I understood the gravity of hell and what not choosing Jesus as my savior meant for me.

I was nine. Still have nightmares about it at age 31.

Apparently other parents don’t do that. Huh! /s.

Image source: Elegant-Baseball-558

Shanilou Perera

Shanilou has always loved reading and learning about the world we live in. While she enjoys fictional books and stories just as much, since childhood she was especially fascinated by encyclopaedias and strangely enough, self-help books. As a kid, she spent most of her time consuming as much knowledge as she could get her hands on and could always be found at the library. Now, she still enjoys finding out about all the amazing things that surround us in our day-to-day lives and is blessed to be able to write about them to share with the whole world as a profession.

Got wisdom to pour?

500-

Tags

family, parenting, parents, people, social issues, stories
Tweet
0