Spoiled Children of Divorce


Anna Park, Artist
September 24, 2021, 11:44 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized

Don’t know if South Korean/American artist Anna Park is from a divorced family. My computer seems to be hacked so I’m trying to change passwords and nothing is working quite right.

Some of her huge charcoal drawings came up on social media and I realized that her crowded images of people in various stages of mating reminded me of my impressions of people after my parents’ divorce in the 1970’s.

I found an article called “Meet Anna Park, The Artist Channeling Chaotic Energy Through Charcoal” from Interview Magazine. The article used a lot of words to explain the crowded, frenetic, black and white imagery, that I realize expressed how I felt. I was 14 so my views would have been related to being a teenager.

I have this theory that Children of Divorce don’t talk about how they felt because they didn’t have the words and there are so many others who want the feelings to not be spoken.

Here are the words from the article:

old rituals

strangers

crowded floor

constant motion

pandemonium

celebrations

social gathering

crescendo

euphoria

farcical

monstrous

flurry

frenzy

impermanence of the moment

party

unmasked

uninhibited

club

party scenes

overwhelming senations

reflected

energy

bombarded every day

Here’s a link to one of her images. Still don’t know how to insert pictures.

Thank you to Ella Huzenis for writing the article and giving me these words. And thank you to Anna Park for giving me the images.



Mental Illnesses of Children of Divorce

Someday Children of Divorce will be able to be treated for mental health conditions related to their childhood experiences. A wrong diagnosis which fits a psychologist’s personal needs just adds insult to injury and makes the C-PTSD much worse. It’s almost like being a silent victim of some sort of gang mentality. Omertà. Don’t talk about the crime.

I have seen three examples of grown men from divorced families who I assume have Intermittent explosive disorder as adults. The first one I met had just been released from jail for going to a business and ripping the place apart. He even broke some windows. He said he had blacked out. Maybe he was drunk or high and just didn’t admit that part. He said that this was something that had happened before. It was bewildering because he was such a nice guy, otherwise. And another guy I knew did the same thing at his job. The same MO, bashing glass. Both were from divorced families.

Girls may be diagnosed as Borderline Personality Disorder because of the lack of trust and fear of abandonment. I’d say it’s internalization from watching your mother go on date after date after date and then trying to grow up in the meantime. Trying to defend one’s self from what will probably go wrong. I knew a girl in high school who probably had Borderline Personality Disorder. Her whole family was trying to help her, she had therapists and psychiatrists and it seemed as if there was no real stress in her life. Have never actually met a grown woman from divorce who was diagnosed as Borderline but did a project on this website of looking at the childhoods of actresses who were diagnosed and found that a lot of them came from divorce. Probably cutting is a big expression. When I was in high school I used to scratch my legs until they bled just so that I could feel the pain somewhere.

Girls also fly off into rages so are also probably vulnerable to developing Intermittent Explosive Disorder later on in their 20’s, etc. My step-sister and I didn’t talk for ten years. Then, probably when we were about 27 years old, I came home one day and she and her husband were standing in front of my house. (She always had a weird stalking thing going I think). Anyway, we went off and had a chat. Our big revelation was that, although as kids we were both very quiet and gentle, we had both developed this ability to fly off into rages that seemed to come from out of the blue. We both knew that it was the stress that we had gone through. I was in therapy and she refused. She was right. All those years of powerlessness and chaos and having to remain silent.

Many divorces probably happen as a result of one parent having a serious mental illness. I did once meet a Father who was being denied visitation because of his Bipolar diagnosis. He was totally desperate to see his children. And did know a woman with Bipolar who was denied visitation. And, after getting to know her, I can say that that was a good thing. The word “narcissism” probably gets thrown around a lot now in divorces as well.

Since Children of Divorce can’t be treated for trauma later on in life maybe the Courts’ ideas to deny children access to a parent is the correct remedy. But, there is a grief there that probably also won’t ever be addressed because of the magic rule not to mention the Big “D.” And that probably can’t be talked about either.



Single Mothers and Their Sons
September 3, 2021, 12:56 am
Filed under: Uncategorized

I have bad housing Karma and one of the worst set of people to live with or next to are single Mothers and their sons. Doesn’t matter if the son is a child or an adult but this is just a formula for bullying hell. Stereo goes all day because the bass I guess is a Father substitute. The adult sons are homeless and carless and always sneaking around. Pot and alcohol at center of everything. Really strong klan mentality. Somebody, please speak out. This is just damn ugly.