
Originally Posted by
Mike Dura
Whenever there be a holiday, you're expected to spend time with family. "Blood is thicker than water" someone droned. I'm more swayed by the argument that family is a myth. By this I mean families create a kind of family mythology about itself and it's members. One common pattern is one in which there is a black sheep (the outsider) and the other members are relatively more cohesive (the insiders). In fact, it's been argued that the "black sheep" or the family scapegoat functions to stabilize the rest of the family system or build cohesion.
What seems to follow from this family mythology is scripts and politics and if you see through it...it actually seems like an absurd game or one big "collusion." In fact, if you expand your inquiry transgenerationally (across generations) you can see that the same mythology was in play (with different actors playing the same roles) way before your family put on it's own performance.
Is there anyone out there who has "seen through" their family myth or failed to buy into it? You ever feel fundamentally estranged from your own family and holidays seem like just going through the motions in some inauthentic, histrionic drama?
My family has what I call "emotional ways of understanding." I've learned at a young age that persuading my family members means appealing to them in emotional terms (vs. abstract reasoning). This often means playing into their egos for practical purposes. Not the ideal picture of a family is it?

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Muscle Asylum Project Athlete