Becoming a MOTHER opens up deeply rooted wounds. Wounds and pain we thought we had “worked through” and processed successfully.
All of sudden we wake up into our own ambivalence, confused emotions, broken fantasies about the Mother we thought we would be.
Have we mourned enough our own story? Our own parenting wounding?
Children who are intelligent, alert, attentive, sensitive, and completely attuned to their Mother’s wellbeing are entirely at her disposal.
Transparent, clear, amd reliable they are incredibly easy to manipulate, puppeteer and control.
“Will do anything that mummy needs me to. Will cater to HER needs. This will ensure mummy’s love for me. It will also give MY life a meaning”
It will also, unfortunately…keep my locked inside an unconscious glasshouse. 💔
Image by Sandra Apperlon
As long as their true self, their deeper emotional inner world remains “in the cellar of the glasshouse” in which they have to live, such children will not be able to access their own emotions, or trust their own experience, sense of self or ability to Mother.
Alice Miller suggests that those children usually live stuck inside there, sometimes until puberty or until they come to therapy, and very often until they have become parents themselves.
How do you project your own Unmothered parts onto your children?
Aleksandra
She, who remembers.
I work at the threshold, where psyche speaks in symbols, and the soul remembers. Rooted in Jungian depth psychology and Internal Family Systems, my work invites women and seekers into the quiet, often forgotten places within: the underworlds of grief, the wild terrain of desire, the sacred chambers of the inner child, inner mother, the Shadowlands, and Self.
With a background in women’s heath research, in ritual, and in lived experience spaces, I do not offer diagnosis or treatment, I offer devotion to the unfolding Self. On the threshold of becoming- where we always are.
Through dreams, parts work, myth, and the body, I walk beside those ready to meet themselves fully, fiercely, and tenderly.
This is not fast work. It is sacred work.
It is not about fixing, it is about remembering.
I do not promise certainty.
I promise presence, and a deep trust in the wisdom already within you.
My work is rooted in the wild: in the seasons and the body, in the wisdom of the land, and in the deep ecology of the soul. I honour the personal as political, and the psychological as inseparable from the cultural. Feminism, ecopsychology, and embodied awareness are not add-ons here, they are the soil this work grows from.
I offer one-on-one soulwork sessions, women’s circles, and immersive psychoeducational experiences that weave together depth psychology, parts work, and embodiment. Some of this work unfolds indoors, some in wild places—always with reverence for the wisdom of nature, the nervous system, and the feminine psyche.
Welcome to the HORÓ nest.
I think you might just be ready to re-member your Self.
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2 thoughts on “On the unconscious manipulation of our children”
Thank you Aleksandra for your considered piece. In my work I’ve emphasised the importance of relationships with our infants and children, while not letting go of the need to be responsible for their health and wellbeing. But I think it’s important for our kids to get to know us as people, mums and dads. No one is perfect, we’re human, in the best sense of the word with all our frailties, vulnerabilities and capacities. My aim is for an authentic relationship, whereby my (now grown) offspring get to know me – well as much as I can know and show myself. I read an interesting piece yesterday by Julia Lane, ‘The poetics of maternal failure’ which is a chapter in the Demeter Press book – Everyday World-Making (link below) in which Lane talks about the other side of success and the importance of failure – failure is the mother of success. I don’t think I can do justice to the argument here, suffice to say, I think it’s worth a read. The piece has reminded me that we are social beings, and sadly because our social framework and cultural practices, largely leave the work of care to mums, we can often feel overwhelmed. Maybe recognising and owning up to our vulnerabilities will be our strength, would be interesting to know what you think in this regard. Best, Joan Garvan, Australia https://demeterpress.org/books/everyday-world-making-toward-an-understanding-of-affect-and-mothering/
Thank you so much for this comment, Joan! The importance (and inevitability) of maternal failure is something I am deeply intrigued by! I will surely check out this Demeter book. In terms of your insight regarding recognizing and owning up to our vulnerabilities – this must be the way we can become more self-lead, more aware, and ultimately more human, as we mother, and re-mother ourselves. My belief is that only through the deep and uncomfortable sitting with our own vulnerability we can show up to our children from our best and wiser self. Warmly,
Aleks
Thank you Aleksandra for your considered piece. In my work I’ve emphasised the importance of relationships with our infants and children, while not letting go of the need to be responsible for their health and wellbeing. But I think it’s important for our kids to get to know us as people, mums and dads. No one is perfect, we’re human, in the best sense of the word with all our frailties, vulnerabilities and capacities. My aim is for an authentic relationship, whereby my (now grown) offspring get to know me – well as much as I can know and show myself. I read an interesting piece yesterday by Julia Lane, ‘The poetics of maternal failure’ which is a chapter in the Demeter Press book – Everyday World-Making (link below) in which Lane talks about the other side of success and the importance of failure – failure is the mother of success. I don’t think I can do justice to the argument here, suffice to say, I think it’s worth a read. The piece has reminded me that we are social beings, and sadly because our social framework and cultural practices, largely leave the work of care to mums, we can often feel overwhelmed. Maybe recognising and owning up to our vulnerabilities will be our strength, would be interesting to know what you think in this regard. Best, Joan Garvan, Australia https://demeterpress.org/books/everyday-world-making-toward-an-understanding-of-affect-and-mothering/
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Thank you so much for this comment, Joan! The importance (and inevitability) of maternal failure is something I am deeply intrigued by! I will surely check out this Demeter book. In terms of your insight regarding recognizing and owning up to our vulnerabilities – this must be the way we can become more self-lead, more aware, and ultimately more human, as we mother, and re-mother ourselves. My belief is that only through the deep and uncomfortable sitting with our own vulnerability we can show up to our children from our best and wiser self. Warmly,
Aleks
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