Growing Up in Dysfunctional Families

1990 Words4 Pages

“People who come from dysfunctional families are not destined for a dysfunctional life,” - (Bo Bennett). In today’s society dysfunctional homes have been a major issue in the United States. Many people hope that once they leave home, they will leave their family and their childhood problems behind. However, many people find that they experience similar problems, as well as similar feelings and relationship patterns, long after they have left the family environment. In the eyes of Americans today, children grow up in family environments which help them feel worthwhile, valuable, and appreciated by their family. According to experts at University of Illinois,“Ideally, children grow up in family environments which help them feel worthwhile and valuable. They learn that their feelings and needs are important and can be expressed. Children growing up in such supportive environments are likely to form healthy, open relationships in adulthood” (Counseling Center). Children in the United States today learn that their feelings and needs are important and can be expressed through many different forms of communication. Children growing up in these supportive environments are likely to form healthy and open relationships in adulthood. However, in society today some families fail to provide for many of their children’s emotional and physical needs. As some people have observed, the communication patterns between the family and the child have severely limited the child’s expressions of feelings and needs, “A dysfunctional family is is a family in which people feel out of control people feel frustrated and angry with who they are and what they've become life of the dot they would dysfunctional family is a family that doesn't that is not attached... ... middle of paper ... ... there is no such thing as a perfect family, so never stop working and always strive for more. Works Cited "Bo Bennett Quote." BrainyQuote. Xplore, n.d. Web. Apr. 2014. “Counseling Center » Understanding Dysfunctional Relationship Patterns in Your Family.”Counseling Center » Understanding Dysfunctional Relationship Patterns in Your Family. University of Illinois, 2007. Web. 18 Feb. 2014. Hartwell-Walker, Marie, Ed D. “Why Dysfunctional Families Stay That Way.” Why Dysfunctional Families Stay That Way. Pysch Central, 17 Jan. 2000. Web. 11 Feb. 2014. “John Bradshaw.” Newsmakers. Detroit: Gale, 1992. Discover Collection. Web. 11 Feb. 2014. Lewis, Max. Personal Interview. 20 February 2014. “Santa Clara University.” - The Wellness Center. Kansas State University, 1997. Web. 17 Feb. 2014. Watson, Larry. Montana 1948. New York: Washington Square Press, 1993. Print.

Open Document