Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » Once you are a parent you are STUCK FOR LIFE WORRYING ABOUT THEM! EVEN WHEN THEY ARE MIDDLEAGED! When does worry STOP?

Once you are a parent you are STUCK FOR LIFE WORRYING ABOUT THEM! EVEN WHEN THEY ARE MIDDLEAGED! When does worry STOP?

Posted - May 8, 2020

Responses


  • 10719

    Worry never stops.  Worry comes about when we want to control the outcome things but cannot. 

    Humans like to be in control.  We want things to go exactly how we want.  We want the security - the guarantee - that things will be always ok throughout our lives.  We want to know that we’ll pass that test or get that job – before it even comes up.  We want to know that our children will be all right out in the world when they leave the nest.  We want to know that we will have enough money to last us for the rest of our lives.

    Yet, no matter how much we desire it, we will never be in control.  We can’t see the future.  We cannot see all the outcome of all choices before they are made.   We can do our best and hope that it turns out for the good, but we can never know for sure unit it actually happens – if it even happens.  “If”.  Oh, how we hate that word.  “If” is conditional, it implies doubt and uncertainty...  “If it doesn’t rain this weekend …”, “if you clean your room…”, “if they find a vaccine…”.    Doubt generates worry.  “What if I don’t get the job?”  “What if I get the virus?”  Our minds don’t do well with “if”.  Instead of going to the best outcome, our minds always seem to go to the worst-case scenario - “If I don’t get the job we’ll have no food, we’ll lose our home…”.   Worry keeps awake at night.   Worry causes pain in our bodies.  Yet 9 out of 10 times, that “worst-case scenario” we worried about never happens.

    Parents have double the worry – per child.  As kids, we think that life will be “perfect” once we move away from home.  Many of us can’t wait until were 18 so we can be free of our parent’s tyrannical rule and live in “bliss”.   Then we become parents and suddenly everything changes.  What if that cough a sign of a serious disease?  What if something happens to him on the way to school?   What if she actually marries that degenerate?   But our parenting worries don’t stop when our kids finally leave home.  What if he can’t pay his bills?  What if she gets pregnant?  What if they move so far away that I won’t be able to me see my grandkids?    In fact, we find that our parenting worries last us for the rest of our lives.  However, this kind of worry isn’t just because we can’t control the outcome of things, it’s because we love them and can’t control the outcome of things.  If only they were little again.

     

      May 8, 2020 1:29 PM MDT
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  • 113301
    You lost me with your first sentence Shuhak. "Worry comes when we want to control the outcome of things but cannot". It does not compute at all. Now that may be due to my limitations of comprehension and understanding or it may be due to it not being true. It isn't true for me at all...consciously. I cannot speak to what is going on in my subconscious.

    We do not want bad things to happen to those we love or like. Right? As a parent we create the product and bring it to market after years of shaping guiding protecting it. Now once the product is on the market we have no way to manipulate what happens to it. We don't forget about it. We worry that all the bad out there might possibly encounter the product. We don't want anything unfortunate to happen to that product. We want that product to thrive flourish succeed survive. Woujldn't that be true of any manufacturer? Controlling outcomes to me is dictatoring not caring. In order to control outcomes you cheat lie steal pretzelize manipulate to effect that. Dictators control outcomes. Wackadoodlenoodles are obsessed with it. None of that applies in my mind. See my problem. Thank you for your reply. This time it didn't connect with me. We are not even in the same book on this, much less the same page. It happens! I've never asked because it's none of my business but are you a parent Shuhak?
      May 9, 2020 1:58 AM MDT
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  • 10719

    After consulting several thesauruses, "control" was the best word I could find to express my thought.  Not control as in “dominate”, more like "have charge of". 
    Worry is uncertainty (doubt).    We're not sure how an outcome will turn out, so we worry about it.  We can't "control" the outcome (meaning we can’t be 100% sure of what it will be - if we were sure, we wouldn't worry), so that uncertainty causes us to fret.  For example, say a person knows they're going to have a big test at school on Friday.   Even though they studied hard for the test, they still may lie awake the night before the test worrying about it.  Why?  They studied; they know the material.  So why does the person worry?  Uncertainty.  What if they studied the wrong chapter?  What id they show up and the test is already over?  What if they somehow show up to school in their underwear?  (When we worry, our minds can go to some bizarre places).  Now, if the person could “control” the situation (have charge of), say, they could know (ahead of time) exactly what the test questions will be (not the answers), they wouldn’t have to worry.  They’d simply memorize the material on those questions and ace the test.  

    What word would you have used instead of “control”? 

      May 9, 2020 10:05 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    Worry comes when we are IGNORANT of the outcome. No control at all Shuhak. KNOWING is everyting and it is in the NOT KNOWING that we worry. I reject control absolutely. Just me. No disrespect to you. If I KNOW what the outcome will be there is no purpose in worry. Not liking it is one thing. Worrying about the inevitable? Seriously what's the point in that? Aren't you better off KNOWING? Thank you for your reply m'dear. Semantics is a bitch isn't it? This post was edited by RosieG at May 9, 2020 2:19 PM MDT
      May 9, 2020 10:10 AM MDT
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  • 6023
    Shuhak's first sentence hints at it.

    Worry stops when you accept there are things beyond your control.
      May 8, 2020 2:25 PM MDT
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  • 113301
    No. Not for me. I WORRY when I don't KNOW what lies ahead. When I am ignorant I worry. When I have information about that which is coming there is nt point worrying about. Perhaps with you and Shuhak it is merely a matter of semantics. Whatever. Thank you for your reply Walt and Happy Saturday! :)
      May 9, 2020 10:38 AM MDT
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  • 6023
    Perhaps it is semantics.

    I don't worry about things I can't control ... though I may be concerned by them.
    EG: I don't worry about the loss of rain forests, because I have no control over that - but I am concerned it is happening.

    I found this definition of the difference between worry and concern:
    Worry is when our head is filled with negative thoughts of anxiety. 
    Concern is when you have neutral or positive doubts or queries about something, someone or some aspects.
      May 11, 2020 8:45 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    I still like the one definition of worry I think I quoted somewhere. "Worry is the interest you pay on trouble". If trouble never comes you paid interest for no purpose. If it happens how did worry mitigate anything? Still I doubt that it is intellectual. It's emotional. Thank you for your reply Walt! :)
      May 11, 2020 9:42 AM MDT
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