What I Learned About That Difficult Childhood
Published on Nov 17, 2024, filed under philosophy, misc (feed). (Share this on Mastodon or Bluesky?)
Iâve had a difficult childhood. It was an unhappy one. Iâm over it, however, and even though it may be interesting to share details, Iâm not interested in providing any.
Being someone who likes to study and think, however *, and having reached my forties, that âbeing over itâ may still be of value. I think that value is going to be even higher, the younger you are. â Letâs see.
Your Memory Will Trick, Fool, and Leave You
One important lesson relates to memory, and itâs not age-related: When thinking about your past you will feel like you have all the facts straight. On further thinking, however, you should and typically will be not so sure. You will err about facts, and if youâre fair, youâll also want to hear the other sideâwhich, sadly, will also err about facts.
If you think about it even further, and then let some time pass, this creates a complete mess: Especially the high-ticket, high-trauma items need clarity, need comprehension, need truth. How are you going to heal (or âavengeâ yourself) if youâre not absolutely sure? To be a bit provocative, whoâs going to be the a-hole, if you miss important facts and context?
Over Time, Your Difficult Childhood May Get Ridiculous
Time is going to be a stronger factor not when it comes to facts, but when it comes to proportion. When youâre 20 or 25, your childhood and adolescence years are recent. Youâve only spent a small fraction of your overall life span outside of these troubling years.
Now fast-forward. Youâre 30. Youâre 40. Youâre 50. Youâre even older. You may still feel disappointed and hurt and violated. But youâre beginning and may have started to have your childhood dominate your life.
When youâre 30, you may have already spent almost half your life lamenting your childhood. By the time youâre forty, youâve spent more than half. After thatâit gets outright, and I say that in full empathy, ridiculous. You need to throw that sh_t over boardâyouâve long lived your own life; now own it.
If Siblings Are Involved, Just Forget About It
I have younger siblings. They were part of the challenges I faced when I was younger. It took me until I was 40-something to realize something: Yes, they didnât help. They did a few things that did quite the opposite of helping, adding to my felt misery. Butâthey were children.
What are you to do about children doing children things! How long do you want to resent and be bitter about injustice done by children? You can make that choice, and keep it up forever, butâI believe we can and must just forget about it. (Iâve later spoken with my siblings about this time, and then put it behind. Yesâthat can be a decision we can make.)
You Will Change Perspective Once You Have Children Yourself
A father myself, it didnât take myself longâdays, maybe weeksâuntil I was humbled how much there was to learn as a parent, and how easy it was to make mistakes. Parents, especially first-time parents, also young parents, make mistakes. I havenât had this situation with my child yet, but I donât consider it a stretch that the mistakes may include not realizing how much something hurts or lingers with a child.
Weâre not talking about neglect, abuse, or other drastic misconduct here, something parents are and should be responsible for. But it is truly humbling for everyone to be a parent themselves, to have and then accept the responsibility, that is raising a child, so that the child does not look back and only sees aâdifficult childhood.
Bonus: If Youâre Doing Well TodayâŚ
Finally, letâs consider (and hope youâre in) the situation that youâre doing pretty well. (That doesnât need a definitionâit may mean whatever it means to us.) It doesnât take a hardcore-determinist position to still see a connection with your childhoodâthat is, while it may contribute to some of your troubles, it also contributed to your well-being.
Where does this leave you? Itâs so close to the topic we cannot meaningfully talk about, I donât think we can dive in here and now. But it should mean enough to make us think about whether we can actually cherry-pick from our childhoods, and only see pain and unhappiness in them. (And when you reject that, and only feel that pain, youâre exactly at the gate that we need to cross in order to really understand something about âgoodâ and âbad.â)
For me, Iâm grateful to be well. I attribute this to a few factors, notably my choices and some of my decisions. Yet it would feel unfair to me not also to consider my childhood as a factor in play. What do I know why I chose these circumstances, and what they were good for in âthe end.â
For me, now, I donât know how to comment on my childhood anymore. Iâve made peace with everything and everyone. Itâs long over, and, as I just shared, Iâm far from waging war over details really no one recalls with any credible precision. The only thing that stays with me is something that cannot be changed laterânot having particularly close ties to my family. These want to be forged during the time you live together; but later, especially when you move a lot, thatâs hard to impossible to make up for. And that may then perhaps leave you with a lonely childhood instead.
* I donât know how well my studying and thinking is working, but if youâre interested, Iâve written articles about how to readâstudyâmore and faster, as well as a little book about working on oneself.
â Oh, age.
About Me
Iâm Jens (long: Jens Oliver Meiert), and Iâm a web developer, manager, and author. Iâve been working as a technical lead and engineering manager for companies youâve never heard of and companies you use every day, Iâm an occasional contributor to web standards (like HTML, CSS, WCAG), and I write and review books for OâReilly and Frontend Dogma.
I love trying things, not only in web development and engineering management, but also in other areas like philosophy. Here on meiert.com I share some of my experiences and views. (I value you being critical, interpreting charitably, and giving feedback.)