Admit it! Have you taken after your parents?

dseag2

Dallas, TX
Location
Dallas, TX
When I was growing up, I never wanted to be like my parents. Now, I think of my father.
  • I saw many pictures of him with women around him. These were from conferences.
  • He majored in Music, although he became a financial advisor later in life
  • I used to take him on errands when he was older. Everyone at the bank or at the grocery store knew him and called him by name.
  • He traveled frequently since he was in sales for the Southeast region of the US.
I never identified with my father when I was young, but now:
  • I have many pictures of me with women around me from conferences.
  • I love music and listen to it all the time, either in my car or through my Airbuds.
  • I know many of the people at the bank and the grocery store. The woman at the pharmacy called me by my name the other day, even though I'm only there once a month.
  • I traveled frequently in my position, all over the world.
Yes, I have become my Dad.

Mary and Aimee.jpeg

Eva and Jeannie.jpeg
 

As I've gotten older I've definitely become more like my parents and I'm ok with that.

Both of my parents were somewhat reclusive irascible curmudgeons with few friends.

They always took great pleasure in the people, especially the young people, that stood their ground long enough to look beyond the gruff exteriors and get to know them.

They were both very generous and very private about helping the people and the causes that were important to them.
 
NO, NO - I never wanted to be like my parents and I'm not. I don't have photos or mementos of them. I sometimes regret not having had a positive relationship with them, but I didn't - and that's that. It's too late now.

This Be The Verse​

BY PHILIP LARKIN
They **** you up, your mum and dad.
They may not mean to, but they do.
They fill you with the faults they had
And add some extra, just for you.

But they were ****ed up in their turn
By fools in old-style hats and coats,
Who half the time were soppy-stern
And half at one another’s throats.

Man hands on misery to man.
It deepens like a coastal shelf.
Get out as early as you can,
And don’t have any kids yourself.
 
I wanted to be like my mom when I was a little girl and I learned many good things from her but also some things not so good. What can I say-I am my mother's daughter that's for sure, good and bad. There are a lot of ways I'm like my dad, too. We learn from examples. Then we try to unlearn or learn all over again. My parents were pretty good people despite it all. I guess I am too.😂
 
My mother was a very authoritarian German woman. When I was a kid and on into adulthood, I was afraid of her. Mostly, I realized not so long ago, she was bully.

On her deathbed, she told me that she had wanted to apologize to me for years for kicking me out of the house when I was 18. She came home from work and I'd moved out. She was shocked because "she didn't mean it, never expected it". I had already planned to move out, just did it a couple weeks earlier, so I was all set.

I always believed the consequences when she threatened me, and worked hard to avoid them. I don't remember why I was kicked it. Probably for not doing something to meet her needs instead of studying for school and working. For example, she made me get a job, which was fine, and she approved of it since it was within walking distance. I started working and then she screamed at me to quit because when I unlocked the front door at 9 or 10 pm, coming home from work, it woke her up.

Or maybe it was because she found a piece of lint on the carpet after I vacuumed, and she decided I never helped around the house. It could have been anything. Meanwhile, I carried on (until I moved out) trying to please her by doing everything she asked and trying to figure out what she wasn't asking so I didn't get in trouble for not doing it.

Now, I am like my mother in some ways. I love color, teak furniture (Scandinavian from the 1960s), love traveling, going to museums, symphonies, and plays. Love reading. So she had plenty of good points, too. But living with her was always like walking on a tightrope. When I visited her in her last 8 years of life, I just did whatever she wanted because I wanted her relationship with me to be pleasant for her, instead of her getting mad at me all the time for nothing.

My Dad worked all the time. He was in the USAF. After work, he attended college full-time, and earned his bachelor's and master's degrees in business subjects with 4.0 averages. He taught us to play chess. I hate playing chess. He treated his daughters like a protective bear with everything ranging from boyfriends to yard work (girls don't do it).

I am the only one of his kids from my mother who stayed in contact with him. I'm pretty sure that stems from my dad divorcing my mom and marrying his receptionist. In addition, my mom had nothing good to say about him and said it often. This includes telling us she would have killed him (literally) if she had not moved us to another state. He hated her, but never said one bad thing about her. I had expected them to get divorced for a decade because I could not see how my dad could stand being married to my mom. Of course, I did not see a complete picture -- my dad could do no wrong in my eyes, but my mother was scary.

I miss him a lot. He was excellent at problem solving. He was a high achiever. Making a B was the same as a failing grade to him (his expectations met our abilities, but sometimes a girl has to have fun). He didn't volunteer much personal information, but if I asked him directly, he always responded with a full and truthful answer, no matter how personal the question was. He also asked my advice once in awhile - like about whether to divorce his second wife. I said no, for very good reasons, including that he would rarely see the daughter he doted on (she was a young child) and she would very likely be turned against him. He and his wife, from what I witnessed, had the same marriage all through the years that they always had. They got along fine.

I liked my stepmother and half sister, and still do. Everyone thought my stepmother was weak and that she would literally fall apart (like mental hospital time) when my dad died. She did not do that. She is stronger than anyone gave her credit for.
 
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My Father used to do crosswords very often.
He had dandruff so was constantly lightly scratching his head with his free hand.
I do crosswords as well. One day I was in a coffee shop doing a crossword and saw my reflection in a mirror. I was scratching my head with my free hand. I did not have dandruff. That view freaked me out.
I taught myself not to scratch my head whilst doing crosswords. Though every now and then I slip back into the annoying habit.
 
I can't really admit that I take after my father, although I have worried to death that I may have. My mother would be the type of person one would want to emulate, but I worry that not enough of her has rubbed off on me. Sure, some things I learned to appreciate came from my father, but I think I would have appreciated those things without him. He had personality traits that I would wish on no one. I don't think I have those traits, but I'm guessing that his personality has affected me personally. I don't know this for sure. If I did, I would be in a better position to fix those things. I don't actually worry about this stuff. It's more like I think about it. My life is something I have truly enjoyed. Could it have been better? Well, everything in life could be better, but I've come to a point where I'm very satisfied, and that's good enough, really.
 
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My mother had some traits that I tried hard to avoid, she was very suspicious, paranoid and controlling, she'd give me books or magazines with things underlined (that I needed to do)...lol, later I'd laugh and throw them away. As I've got older I like to think I've kept some of her good traits, she had a great sense of family, always thinking about our future, she loved to work in her yard and there are others but those come to mind.
 
I am not like either of my parents, although there have been a few traits pointed out. About 10 years ago I was standing at the kitchen sink washing dishes, and my mom's hubby suddenly said, "You are standing on one foot, and the other is resting up on your toe. Your mom stands that way." Such a funny thing, but it stuck with me as I had often seen her doing the same. My mom was beautiful, an airhead for fixing things, but somehow relied on her husbands to wait on her hand and foot. I am most independent, always have been.

My Dad was as honest as the day is long. A carpenter by trade, he always had more work than he could handle, but charged about half of what his skill was worth. It set a good example for me to always tell the truth, no matter what. At times, it doesn't set well, but you know what comes with being my friend.....honesty and trying to do the right thing for all concerned.

Other than that, I am not like my parents at all.:)
 
One of my sisters' is so like my father it's horribly uncanny.. she not only looks like him, she has all his mannerisms, it gives me the shudders . It's not like she does it on purpose, because she didn't like him, but it gives me the judders being in her company
The same is true with my daughter and her father (my ex). She even sounds like him at times. I know how you feel!
 


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