The Oprah Podcast - Oprah Explores the Rising Trend of Going No Contact with Your Family
Episode Date: November 25, 2025Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@Oprah?sub_confirmation=1 In a groundbreaking conversation about one of the fastest-growing cultural shifts of our time: Oprah talks with leading experts and a li...ve audience about the decision to go “no contact” with a family member. It’s estimated one third of Americans have cut off ties or is estranged from their family. Once considered taboo, family estrangement is now being openly discussed by people of all ages who are redefining what healthy boundaries look like in family relationships. In this revealing episode, Oprah and best-selling psychologists unpack this rising trend of people distancing themselves from parents, siblings, or relatives they consider toxic. Adult children and parents who have chosen to go "no contact” share their stories and their reasons behind this difficult decision. Oprah and the audience explore the emotional, cultural and psychological issues behind the movement - ranging from trauma and generational patterns to mental-health awareness and the expanded definition of abuse. BUY THE BOOK! DR. JOSHUA COLEMAN - RULES OF ESTRANGEMENT https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/622584/rules-of-estrangement-by-joshua-coleman-phd/ DR. LINDSAY GIBSON - ADULT CHILDREN OF EMOTIONALLY IMMATURE PARENTS How to Raise an Emotionally Mature Child by Lindsay C. Gibson, PsyD: https://www.newharbinger.com/9781626251700/adult-children-of-emotionally-immature-parents/ NEDRA GLOVER TAWWAB - DRAMA FREE & THE BALANCING ACT https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/706826/drama-free-by-nedra-glover-tawwab/ https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/760457/the-balancing-act-by-nedra-glover-tawwab/ Chapters: 00:01:00 - One-third of Americans are going no contact—what it means 00:02:00 - Younger generations choosing no contact for mental health 00:02:50 - Guest: Dr. Joshua Coleman, Rules of Estrangement 00:03:40 - How the concept of family has shifted 00:06:27 - Guest: Dr. Lindsay Gibson, Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents 00:09:30 - How to tell if a parent is emotionally immature 00:10:25 - Guest: Nedra Tawwab, Drama Free 00:12:20 - Dr. Coleman on his daughter cutting contact 00:14:22 - Chris shares going no contact 00:18:48 - Why Chris made the decision 00:19:30 - Talking to kids about going no contact 00:23:04 - What kids learn from cutting off difficult relatives 00:24:39 - Bristyl shares her no-contact story 00:26:20 - Will the longing for a mother–daughter bond fade? 00:29:00 - Expanded definitions of harm, neglect, trauma, abuse 00:30:00 - Bree shares her no-contact choice 00:33:37 - Is forgiveness possible? 00:37:26 - Christy shares her daughter’s estrangement 00:39:40 - Do some estranged kids lack conflict resolution skills? 00:43:20 - Kendall on going no contact with her adult son 00:44:50 - Why parents are criticized for going no contact 00:47:20 - Aaron shares his daughter cut ties with him 00:53:25 - Have we gone too far? 00:54:48 - The one thing that can save your family relationship 00:58:10 - There are separate realities in every family 01:00:17 - Hadley shares her experience as a hospice nurse 01:05:00 - Why Hadley went no contact 01:09:00 - Parent child dynamic has shifted from role to relationship Follow Oprah Winfrey on Social: https://www.instagram.com/oprahpodcast/ https://www.facebook.com/oprahwinfrey/ Listen to the full podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0tEVrfNp92a7lbjDe6GMLI https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-oprah-podcast/id1782960381 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today, officially marks one year no contact with my parents.
I've been basically fully no contact with my parents for the last three plus years.
We're talking about the rapidly growing epidemic of estranged children who walk away from their parents.
What are they protecting themselves from?
You know what? I'm over it.
I'm over the idea that parents are supposed to sit around in emotional timeout until our kids decide we're worthy again.
And when somebody new in my life finds out that I've been no contact with them,
Without failure, the number one thing that they tell me is, but they're still your mom.
Hi, everybody.
It is my pleasure to welcome you to the Oprah Podcast.
We are here in New York City with a live audience of our listeners.
Hello, New York, hello, New York, hello, New York.
So maybe you all can relate in some way to this growing,
phenomenon known as going no contact. That's when a person cuts off ties to someone in their family.
A Cornell University study now shows that almost one-third of Americans are, one-third, are
actively estranged from a family member. That is incredible to me. I want to ask a few people
in our audience to help us understand what that means. So Bristol, go ahead.
I have been no contact with my entire family for a year and a half now.
No contact.
No contact.
Not a phone call, not a text, not a nothing.
Nothing.
For a year and a half now.
Okay.
Chris, how about you?
It's been four years since I've had contact with my parents and my siblings.
Four years?
Not a word.
Not a word.
Okay.
And Kendall.
I've been no contact with my 30-year-old son for two years.
By your choice?
By choice.
Okay. So some experts believe that there's been a shift in how younger generations protect their mental health and their boundaries or have an expanded view of what is considered abuse. And that has led to a silent epidemic. So social media has millions of videos with the hashtag no contact from adult children who say that their parent or their sibling is toxic.
and they've had enough.
So what is going on?
So we gathered leading experts, leading experts,
and people with different experiences
and points of view on this issue,
including parents whose adult children have cut them off,
and we'll hear from other adult children
who chose to go, no contact with their parents.
I know this is a Tinder hot button topic.
My hope is that we can open up the heart space
and really listen.
I'm not on anybody's side.
I just want to hear
what everyone has to say.
So let's start by introducing Dr. Joshua Coleman,
who's a psychologist and best-selling author
of Rules of Estrangement,
why adult children cut ties and how to heal the conflict.
Now, he's a frequent contributor
to the Washington Post column Ask a Therapist.
Welcome, Dr. Coleman.
Thank you for having me.
So is this a new thing?
Because, I mean, for many, many, many years
of doing shows and talking to families
from all over the country,
and the world, when there's a crisis,
people just sort of figured it out
or came together at Thanksgiving
and had a big fight.
But is this new?
Yeah, I mean, there's always been estrangements, right?
Forever there's been estrangements.
But it's new the way we think about family.
There's been a radical change in the way that we think about family.
The old days of honor thy mother and thy father,
respect thy elders, families forever,
has given way to this much more of an emphasis
on personal happiness,
personal growth, my identity, my political beliefs, my mental health, so much so that today
protecting my mental health is the single most common thing that I see in every single
letter from every estranged adult child.
Has this been exacerbated or has this increased because of social media?
Oh, there's no question. Absolutely.
Yeah.
Because you've got two billion hashtags toxic family and everybody's got a, you know,
if you line up and you're an estranged parent, you're going to get onto a Facebook side.
if you're in a strange adult child,
you're going to probably get onto Reddit
or something like that,
and you're going to get support for your perspective.
But these aren't people who actually know your parents
or know your adult child.
They're going to kind of tell you what you want to hear.
So there's this very inflammatory reaction
that people have as a result of it.
And partly that happens because we've become so divided
as a society.
People are kind of looking for their tribes
because their tribes are, you know,
they don't have them anymore.
We're lonely.
We have rising rates of mental illness.
Your tribe used to be your family.
Your tribe used to be your family.
Your tribe used to be your family, exactly, and it still could if we figure out how to talk to each other.
Well, it's so interesting because, you know, I've been talking to people for a number of years,
and I remember back in the day, meaning 80s, 90s, the aughts, the very idea of having a disagreement with your family
and the very idea of divorcing your parent or removing yourself from a toxic situation was a foreign concept to people.
But now it's like common understanding.
It's common understanding, and it's also positioned
as this sort of virtuous act of protecting our mental health.
And you know what?
Sometimes it is.
There are truly abusive, difficult parents and family members.
But there's a lot of people getting estranged today
who aren't abusive, who are loving, decent, hardworking, loving, caring parents
and they're being cut off.
And part of the problem is us as therapist,
as I hope we'll talk about,
because as therapists we become with the sociology,
Allison Pugh calls detachment brokers where we help people not feel guilty about feeling responsible
for our parents. That gets sort of pathologize as being codependent or parentified or that kind of
thing. And therapists are sort of green lighting a lot of estranged, which particularly when you use
language like, oh, your mom's a narcissist or your dad's a borderline, or they're a sociopath, they're
gaslighting you, or they're a boundary crosser. And once you say that to somebody, once you tell
somebody that their parent or their family member or their child is that way, you just green-lit
them cutting them off. Because now it's a virtuous act of protecting your mental health. I think that's
a problem. Okay. Dr. Lindsay Gibson is here and she's a clinical psychologist and New York Times
bestselling author of adult children of emotionally immature parents. And I hear it is sold now
over two million copies and many people credit your book as the catalyst.
actually, for this surge in adult children going no contact.
Now, her upcoming book is How to Raise an Emotionally Mature Child.
So Dr. Gibson, what is it that you were seeing in your own practice?
Yeah, as a psychotherapist, what I was seeing was people coming in,
not identifying the problem as being with their parents or their family members.
Usually it was some other kind of stress.
could be work stress or friend's stress, that kind of thing.
And then about three or four sessions in,
they would start talking about what was going on with the family,
sort of like their daily life stress.
And from there, we would begin to get a picture of this old underlying tension
that had been going on for a long time with the family.
But very few people early in the day would come in and say,
I have a problem with my mother or I have a problem with my son.
They would come in with some other life stress and then we would get to the family issue.
What I...
Is the family issue at the root of most things?
Well, I don't know if it's at the root or whether it just resonates with what's going on now.
It's very hard to tell.
But what I found was that the coping mechanisms that they had learned to use with their parents,
when their parents were either trying to control them,
or get them to do what they wanted,
were being transferred to their current relationships
or their work relationships.
Could you give us some factors that you believe
make it necessary to protect somebody's emotional health
by going no contact?
I mean, when you say to someone, or do you say to them,
perhaps you should go no contact?
Yeah, I don't say that.
You don't say that.
You don't say that.
Let them decide for themselves.
therapist is to help people...
Come to their own conclusions.
Well, not only come to their own conclusions,
but I want them to be able to turn within
and test out their own inner guidance.
In other words, get back in touch with their own feelings
and how things affect them.
And lots of times when you've had a dominant parent,
that ability to know what you actually feel and think
has been messed with, okay?
Because it becomes an issue of
you love your parent by agreeing with what they see,
they see. So actually, no, I'm all about helping people to understand the dynamics of the
relationship, how it's affecting them, and then they make the decision about what they want to do.
Well, how do you talk to them about your emotionally immature parent, and how do you determine
whether a parent is emotionally immature? Yeah. I really stay away from those terms in
psychotherapy because I'm not there.
But you wrote a whole book about it.
I did write the book.
I did write the book.
When I'm coming in, I'm coming to the lady.
I'm coming to the lady who wrote the book about emotionally immature parents, okay?
Absolutely.
Whether you mention it or not in our session.
Yeah.
Right.
But when I'm talking with them in this session, I'm describing behavior.
They're describing behavior, and we're talking about the effect of those behaviors on them.
them. Down the road, once they've read the book, then we might use that shorthand about emotional
immaturity. But at the time, we're just trying to understand their subjective experience of that
parent. Okay. I want to bring in Nedra Goldberg to Wab. Nedra is a licensed therapist and a relationship
expert known as the Boundary Queen on social media. And she's the author of the New York Times
bestseller, drama-free, a guide to managing unhealthy family relationships.
And her upcoming book is The Balancing Act, Creating Healthy Dependency and Connection
Without Losing Yourself.
Welcome.
I see you nodding here, and you're nodding for both of them.
So what does that mean?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's such a thin line between, like, what's appropriate and what's gone
too far.
Because as therapists, we do see our clients suffering.
And as Lindsay mentioned, I don't say, like, you need to leave this relationship,
but I might think, like, I wonder how you will feel if you did.
Because there's so much pain for so long for some people.
But you wrote that no contact is not the first option as much as a last resort.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yes.
And when is it a last resort, do you think?
I think when you've assessed whether the relationship is safe,
if you can handle the consequences of actually leaving that relationship,
it's our work to help our clients determine,
is the relationship just toxic or is it annoying?
Are these some behaviors we can live with with people?
Is it possible for us to have less contact instead of no contact?
Have we set expectations?
Are they even clear about a problem?
Because sometimes we haven't talked to people about the problems
we're talking about in therapy or with our friends.
And they need to know in order for us to have a better relationship with them.
So I think what's so interesting, Dr. Coleman, you lived through this with your own daughter.
I did, yeah.
Who caught off contact with you.
She cut off contact with you for several years.
For several years.
Okay. Tell us what this was like for you to go through this.
Oh, it was hell.
I was completely heartbroken.
I was married and divorced in my 20s and my daughter's in her 40s now.
We're blessedly very close.
and she has a child that I'm also very close to.
But, you know, she's in her early 20s
and she wanted to talk to me about what it was like growing up
being in a blended family
and how she felt, you know, after I became remarried
and had kids from my second marriage,
which is my current marriage.
And, you know, how she felt in some ways neglected
or like I didn't really have her back
and in some ways unloved by me,
which is very, very painful to hear your own child say that.
And at the time, of course, I responded
defensively, angrily,
explained myself, blamed other people.
Yeah, and for some weird reason, it didn't really bring her back to me.
I don't understand why.
But so it really wasn't until I realized I just needed to empathize with her
and take responsibility and find the kernel of truth, if not the bushel of truth,
and what her complaints were that things really began to shift.
Because up to that point, I was making it about me.
And it was really about her and her suffering.
But going through that was, it was hell.
I felt ashamed.
I felt embarrassed.
inform your ability to write rules of estrangement, did it?
Yeah.
And was it harder for you because you're supposed to know?
Exactly.
You're the person that's advising other families
and other people about their lives,
and in your own family, it happened to you.
Yeah, I wrote my first book on the topic
when parents hurt in 2007.
And as it was once we'd reconciled,
I wouldn't have written this book if he hadn't reconciled.
But once we'd reconciled, I wrote it.
And as a result, got a really wide following
of other parents who were going through it.
And they all said the same thing, which is, I thought I was the only one.
As a result of that, I did a study of 1,600 estranged parents and published that in that book.
So, yeah, it's just been really my works for the past almost 20 years.
Time for a quick break.
Up next, adult children who have cut off contact with their parents and what led them to make this difficult decision.
Stay with us.
This episode of the Oprah podcast is brought to you by booking.com.
Listing your vacation rental and booking.com opens the door to more guests.
Booking.com is one of the most downloaded travel apps in the world that makes it the place to list your vacation rentals if you want to earn more with consistent bookings, reach new markets, and turn hosting into a steady income.
Over the past 25 years, they've helped more than 1.8 billion vacation rental guests find places to stay. So why not help them find yours? You can manage your bookings and have control over your property's calendar and finances. It's hosting on your terms. The best part? Getting started is super easy. In less than 15 minutes you can register your property,
And nearly half of partners get their first booking within a week.
If you've already listed on another site, booking.com makes it easy to import your property
info and get going right away.
Whether you're looking to earn that extra income or fill those vacant weekends, head over
to booking.com to see how you can get started today.
The reach is global, the bookings are consistent, and the control is yours.
For the bookings you've dreamed of, list your property on booking.com.
Welcome back.
We're about to hear from adult children who don't speak with a family member.
It's now known as going no contact.
If you think this is a conversation, someone you love needs to hear, share the link to this episode with them.
Let's get back to it.
Well, we have a number of audience members who are going through this right now.
So, Chris and Bree, what's going on?
Yeah, absolutely.
So I grew up in a very performance-oriented household.
It was attend an Ivy League school, get the money, the power, the status, be someone that we can feel,
proud of, and Brie very much did not come from that background.
Did you have other siblings in the household, too?
Yeah, I had two younger brothers.
Okay.
So I was the oldest, so I was trailblazing in that way.
So tell us again, you've not had contacts with your parents now for four years.
Four years, that's right.
Is it parents and siblings?
That's right.
Okay.
Nobody in the family?
There's some extended family, but not in the core family.
Yeah, that's right.
All right.
And so when Brie and I first got together, we very much felt like she was, remember my parents were
apathetic towards her.
they were not super interested in getting to know her and they didn't like her yeah yeah that's
the feeling that we got that's the short answer that's that's the feeling like her they didn't like
yeah and the way that that really surfaced was a was uh what we perceived as a disinterest in getting
to genuinely know her yeah and for you know what we started dating so be it but as it became
clear that this was a real relationship that this was an intense relationship that we were in
loving and i said this is the woman i'm going to marry and as we moved into that
more serious realm, it went from what we perceived as apathy to more of, we don't like this.
And the way that that took form for us was my parents, we found through friends, were
scheduling lunches to have conversation with my friends, where the topic was, we're worried
about Chris. That was the first thing. And then it became, can we delay this engagement or can
we? Ask you to your friends. Yes. And can we take this marriage off the table?
In spite of that, we really worked hard to figure out what is our new family going to look like going forward.
We're going to get married.
So when you hear that they're conspiring with your friends, what'd you do?
You have a conversation about it?
Yeah, we have a conversation about it.
I very much grew up in a house where, again, because of that performative aspect, there was a compliance aspect.
And so, frankly, something I've had to really work on and grow in is being comfortable in that conflict.
And at the time, I wasn't really, I could bring that up.
I'm unhappy with this, but am I going to really pursue that?
The answer is no.
And so, you know, we got married.
They were invited to our wedding.
They were a part of that.
And for a time, we were able to have this kind of tacit piece.
Wasn't there something with the bridal shower?
Are there something that she tried to mess up the bridal shower?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Try to mess up the bridal shower.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we were trying to kind of construct it.
Well, that's a sign.
Yeah, that's a sign for sure.
That is fun.
Yes.
Yeah.
And where the tables really turned was when we found out that Brie was pregnant with our first daughter.
And?
And so we were nervous. We called up my parents. We said, this is what's going on.
And we were profoundly hurt by what we were met with, which was disappointment.
They were disappointed that she was pregnant.
That's right.
Okay.
Yeah.
The way that we perceived it is that they were expressing that this wasn't the pace that they expected us to move at.
And we had already gotten married before they had wanted.
wanted and now we were having children before you know was their timeline yeah and we i left that call
i said let's let's regroup let's have another conversation and when we did have that conversation
and i expressed how i had felt and how hurtful that was rather than being met with the empathy
and some repair that we would have really hoped for it i was met with um what they described as
they were embarrassed by us and that was actually the last conversation that i had with my parents
before going no contact four years ago and I just remember walking out of that conversation thinking
for the years that Bree and I have been together I've had to watch her enter that treatment of not
feeling accepted and the last thing that I would want to do is bring a daughter into the world
where she will walk into the world on day one and experience that treatment from her grandparents
okay and so you just decided no contact so I'm curious Chris so can I ask how old are you are
I'm 30 okay you're 30 so you grew up in a world
up in a world where you said you there was compliance and there was the household was performative.
So you didn't grow up in a world where you thought about, you know, removing yourself or distancing
yourself from your parents. Where did the idea even come from that, all right, I'm not going to cut you
off. I'm not going to talk to you anymore. Yeah. I don't think there was one moment. I think it was
very incremental. And I think that actually it all began when we first got together. It really
highlighted the emotional distance between myself and my parents, and I think with each step
over years and years where I saw my parents being less and less a part of my life, the idea
that they could not be a part of my life at all became something that seemed possible.
So did you reach a point where you felt if I don't comply, then they don't love me unless
I'm complying?
That's right.
Yeah, I would say I'm not accepted unless I'm complying.
Not, not accepted.
Okay.
Do you have a question for one of our experts here?
Yeah.
you think about parents raising children and you know as us as parents were not connected with our
families what would be your advice for talking about that with our children right how how as parents
can we best support our children as they grow up you know potentially with their grandparents without
grandparents without grandparents right yeah because are you speaking to your parent you're not speaking
to your parents either no why aren't you speak to your parents i grew up in a very religious
households uh-huh and when i became an adult and was not
not necessarily having some of the same morals and values and political beliefs and religion,
they basically disowned me.
Okay.
They disowned you.
Yeah.
Okay.
All right.
So your children are grandparentless right now.
Okay.
And so you're asking the question of how do you manage the grandparentlessness, right?
Nedra, is it a tragedy if as a grandchild, their children are two and four, you never even knew your grandparents?
Yes, but they will still have some idea of what a grandparent is.
and I think for you two, it'll be very important in an age-appropriate way to explain the situation.
We have chosen to not have this contact as a protection for our family, right?
And as they get older, you express that more. I don't think they need to know, like, all of the painful stories.
That's not appropriate. But being clear that this is a choice that you made and trying to find other people in the world who,
can be grandparent-like, right? So that could be a neighbor. If you're a part of a social community,
that could be someone in that social community. But being open and honest is really important.
Not trying to erase your childhood. So, you know, not doing the thing of never talking about your
childhood, never talking about your parent. Share some of those good memories with them as well.
So, you know, don't make it seem like these are people we don't talk about because they will have
some curiosity. And if you want to have that emotionally connected relationship with them, the one
that you didn't have, you'll have to be vulnerable and honest with them about this situation.
So you shouldn't act like these are people we don't talk about even though you're not talking
about them? Well, they should be clear that these are people that you have chosen to not have a
relationship with. We don't want to make it seem like they just disappeared. No one ever existed
because you were raised by someone. Okay. What do you say, Dr. Gibson? Yeah, I was just, I was just thinking
about when your children begin to be curious about it or when they bring it up, I think
that's when you're in that position of what do we say now, what do we do now?
But I don't think that, you know, for little children, two and four, yeah.
I mean, they're not in the position yet where, you know, Johnny's grandparents had him
over for supper, where are our grandparents? I mean, that day may come. And when it does,
I think you can let them know that we're just not that close to them.
We don't have contact with them.
It's sort of like when children ask, you know, the facts of life.
It's like, be careful about how much you lay out for them at once
because they can only digest so much and age appropriate, right?
But I think it's very important to wonder and ask the child,
honey, why are you asking that right now?
What brought up the thought about grandparents?
I'm curious, it's been four years.
You think it's going to go on forever?
Do you see it going on forever?
You see never, ever, ever communicating with them again.
Right now, yeah?
Yeah.
Both too.
On a cautionary note, you are presenting your children
with a role model of how to handle conflict.
And that's a concern.
You are showing them that people can be cut out of your life.
And so that is a role model.
Because I'll sometimes work with a parent who will say,
well, you did it, Mom.
You cut out your grandma.
So why can't I cut out you?
So I mean, it's an adult child.
So we just have to be very mindful of every layer of this.
Yes.
I thought about that.
I think you will try knowing what you all do about the importance of your inner subjective experience
as being an individual.
You're going to pass that on to your child, that what people make you feel inside matters, okay?
And that has to be taken into account.
It's not a solution just to cut somebody out for no reason, of course.
But if there are reasons, there are people that we, the role model that you're becoming is
if there are people that are harmful to you emotionally, you do have the right to keep as much
distance, maybe not total cut off or whatever, you have the right to decide the optimal distance
that you're going to have in your relationship with them.
That is preparing them for adult life.
So I don't see it as you giving them carte blanche about cut anybody out that you don't like.
You're saying, you know, you have to come to that decision about what's best for you,
and we would be here to talk with you about that if you ever needed that.
Thanks, Kristen Greene.
Thank you. Thank you.
Bristol?
Hi.
I first want to start off by saying thank you for creating space to have this conversation.
When I first made the decision to go no contact,
I felt so alone.
So this conversation means the world to me.
So when did you first make the decision to go no contact?
As sad as it is to say, ever since I was young,
I knew I would be no contact.
I knew I didn't want my family in my life.
You're still young, Bristol.
Let me tell you that.
Yeah. No, but...
So what do you mean?
What do you mean by young?
Okay.
No, like just being eight, nine years old.
Yeah.
And I had family.
that saw how I was treated as well and tried to step in.
So it's something I sadly always knew what happened.
Is it like what Chris said,
there isn't one thing, but there was a series of things?
Yeah, it is multiple events.
It's not just one traumatic event.
What was the final straw for you that you said,
that's it, no more, I've had enough?
It was a phone call, actually, where I, you know,
I spent my whole life trying to change every aspect,
of myself to be the perfect daughter and to make the relationship work.
And it was a phone call where I tried to set a boundary of just don't talk so rudely about your
children.
Like, we were not punching bags.
And my mom is actually the one that blocked me initially.
So she's the one that laid down that foundation.
And I followed Sue and just cut off contact everywhere else.
I hear you have a question for Dr. Gibson.
Yeah, I do.
So I have no regrets about my decision to go no contact.
But every time I see a girl with her mom or dad,
it physically aches in my heart.
And so does the longing for that connection,
despite never experiencing it myself, ever go away?
Or do you just learn to live with it?
Yeah, I mean, it's like any terrible loss.
Yeah.
Do any of our terrible losses ever go away?
We all know that it never goes away.
okay but i think our job in this kind of situation is to enlarge ourselves so that we know
ourselves better so that we're expanding our own life so that this terribly hurtful loss
becomes a part an integrated part of the tapestry of your life of your overall life
It'll never go away, but it's not all there is to you.
And so you carry this.
I see it as part of your increased complexity as a human being,
your increased depth, and your ability to know what it is that's good for you and not good for you.
And when you bring all that together, yes, that feeling is still there,
but the context is now so much bigger because you're a much more complex person.
person.
Nidger, you wanted to say what about this?
Yeah, I think that void gets smaller as time passes, but there will always be something
there because you do have a mother, you do have that part of your family, and both things
can exist.
You can miss people and decide to not have that relationship, and you don't get to erase the
feelings in either direction.
So it's something that you'll come to live with.
Thank you.
But how is your life otherwise?
Do you miss, miss, miss, miss the contact with them?
Or have you been able to create a life that's full and vibrant without them?
I love my life.
I have five animals.
So I've created my own family.
When I went off to college, I am used to spending holidays alone.
So it's not like much has changed.
I'm just not being walked all over, actually.
So I know peace for the first time.
It's amazing.
I felt my nervous system leave, fight or flight.
And I think this is so fascinating to me
because I've been doing this so long.
And I remember in the early days doing this, people just suffered.
They just went through hell with their parents,
and we were always talking about relationships with your parents.
Have you, a therapist, seen it evolve over the years also?
Oh, absolutely.
You know, and I think one of the things, Oprah,
is that there was a study done in 2016,
which showed that our ideas,
about what constitutes harm, abuse, trauma, and neglect
have radically expanded in the past three decades.
Radically expanded.
So what often happens is an adult child,
like any of you may come up to your parent,
go, you emotionally abused me, you neglected me,
you traumatized me, and your parents are going to be like,
what the hell, I would have killed for a childhood like yours.
So generations are talking past each other.
I mean, it's kind of incumbent on us as parents
to really learn how to speak the language of our adult children
if we want to have a relationship with them.
But that is one of the most significant changes is our expanded views of what constitutes abuse and harm.
And that has changed.
That has changed.
And it has evolved exponentially in the past several years.
Exactly.
Well, the past few decades, but social media is an enormous amplifier of that.
Yeah.
Thank you, Bristol.
Thank you so much.
We need to take a break.
Next, we're going to hear the parent side of going no contact mothers and fathers speak out.
Thanks for joining me on the Oprah podcast.
we're talking about the dramatic rise in estranged families.
People who've chosen to have no contact.
My hope is that this conversation can help you
or someone you know who might be going through the same thing.
We have another Bree in our audience.
This Bree is with two yeas in case you're going to get them confused.
Okay, so you've decided no contact with your mom.
What happened?
Yeah, so my mom abruptly stepped away from our family
when I was six years old to be with someone else.
And not only did she leave my dad,
she didn't want to be a mother to me at that point either.
And so throughout the-
So your mom basically abandoned you.
Yes.
When you were six.
Yep.
She was just like-
She left to go with an old boyfriend.
Yep.
She decided to go be with her college boyfriend.
And she wanted to kind of just live this new child-free life.
And it was very jarring and traumatic for me because I was used to having a two-parent
household and doing things with them.
And just, it was just a night and day.
And at that point, she just kind of stepped away, didn't really have as much contact.
would see her sometimes. It was very often on, and I would try. And whenever I would try, I felt like I would be let down. I had a wonderful dad who, like, filled the gap, but it's just like, just no mom. And I would see all these girls being raised with their moms, and I wanted that. And so when I was in college, I extended out of the branch, and I invited her to my college graduation. And she ended up humiliating me. I was on the floor with the graduates, and I saw this crowd of people walking towards me, security, the counselors, and,
looked in the middle, it's my mom.
They brought her towards me.
They said, Bree, it's been an emergency.
So I'm like, you know, what's going on?
And she's just like, I'm ready to leave.
Like, we're about to go, her and her boyfriend.
And that was what the emergency was in front of all the graduates before I even walked.
And so I was bawling, crying.
The whole stadium's looking at me.
And from that point on, I was like, this is done.
Like, she does not have a care for me.
And with me being a mom now.
She couldn't leave quietly?
And she couldn't just get up and go.
I know.
So she had to cause a scene.
A whole scene.
And so, like, I'm a mom now and I'm a single mom.
And so there's points in motherhood where I'm like, who, like, I get that it can be a lot.
Like, you know, but I could never just walk away from my child.
Like, I just couldn't understand doing that.
And so I get a lot of judgment for it.
Like, when something happens and people are like, you know, your mom isn't feeling well or something like that.
Like, it's like, you know, I don't have that empathy because it's just like, you know,
she didn't really have it for me.
And it's hard for me because it's like, you know, I understand, you know, like that she is my mother and this whole you only have one mother thing.
However, we did not have that relationship.
And so what weighs on my heart and mind a lot is the forgiveness.
And sometimes I'm like, will I ever be able to just forgive her and let this go?
Because it's like, you know, some people's mothers have passed away.
My mother lived 20 minutes from me my whole life, you know, and just didn't want to be there.
And didn't see you.
Yeah, I just didn't want to see me by choice.
Well, I think that's so interesting because people use that phrase, particularly in our culture.
You only have one mother.
And they use that to guilt you no matter what's been done to you, no matter what you've been through, you only have one mother.
And it sounds like that you allow that sometimes to bother you, right?
You feel embarrassed or the shame of that in some way.
Absolutely.
I'm very empathetic.
And it's the fact that it's like, I do understand she is my mother.
However, it's like we just, we don't have that relationship, you know?
And so it's just like, you know, she was never there for me.
Like, you know, and whenever I would try, it would be, I would be met with her.
And so it's like, you know, I want to be able to like forgive her for my own peace in mind,
not to bridge the relationship, but just to like have some kind of a start to healing.
So your question is?
So my question for Nedra is, how do I carry the void of the,
disappointment and the hurt and the distance, but also, like, is there a chance that I could
truly forgive her and be able to kind of move on, even though we obviously are both still,
you know, here in the world?
I think you have to accept that people can birth a child without parenting them.
And what I'm hearing in your situation is you have a mother, but you don't have the nurturing
of one. And it's very hard to reconcile that while you're mothering, right? And other people
are being mother and they're telling you about their mother and you should do this for your
mother, but you don't have that role or that connection with your mother. And so it's very
important for you to accept that you can give birth without parenting. I think you also need to
allow yourself to be angry because sometimes we're not making room for that and we're just rushing
toward forgiveness.
I have to hurry up and forgive.
Especially if you live in a culture that says,
but it's your mother, and it's the only mother you have.
But you are her daughter.
But you are her daughter.
And so on both sides, if we're going to say,
but this is your mother, this is your father,
you are also a daughter,
and you get to be upset about not being parented.
Yeah.
After you work through that stuff,
what does forgiveness mean for you?
Because you can forgive and reconcile.
You can forgive and continue
to not have her be a part of your life.
You can forgive and readjust what the relationship he is.
Maybe she's not a mother, but she's a great friend.
So you get to decide what that forgiveness.
Did you see her just do this?
Or maybe an associate.
Maybe she's an associate.
I'm not sure.
But perhaps there is something there.
If you can remove that expectation of parenting
from her because she hasn't done it and she's not doing it.
Maybe there's a little bit left there that you can have.
I don't know what that is.
And maybe it's nothing.
But you decide what that forgiveness looks like.
And it sounds like you have learned how to be a nurturer even though you didn't have it.
Yeah.
And may I say this, that in all the years of all the shows and all the experts,
my best example or best definition for me of forgiveness that has carried me through
many a situation is that forgiveness is giving up the hope that the past could be any different.
I don't even remember who said that so many years ago, but when they said, the hairs on my
arm raised because I was like, wow, it's not even about that other person.
It's about you giving up the hope and you accepting finally, that this was, as Bristol has
already done, that the relationship is what it is.
and this is not going to be one thing you can change.
You cannot change yourself.
You cannot change that situation.
Give up the hope that it's going to be anything other than what it is
and accept the reality of it.
That's what I hear Ned just saying.
Once you accept the reality of it,
you can meet her where she is or not meet her at all.
Yeah, you wanted to say what happened.
Yeah, the only thing I would add to that is we can't really forgive people
who've hurt us unless we really believe we didn't deserve to have what happened.
I mean, you were abandoned by your mother.
She treated you really poorly.
And you probably don't yet fully know that you really didn't deserve that.
You might consciously feel like you don't deserve that.
But we can't really forgive somebody until we really know in our guts
that we didn't deserve to be mistreated.
So usually compassion can follow from that.
Well, we have some parents here who have a different perspective.
First, watch this short clip of what a mother named Christy posted on her social.
So I'm going to ruffle some feathers with this one, but I don't care.
So I'm going to address a comment that,
repeatedly gets commented on my post
and other people talking about estrangement.
And it's the comment that says,
your children are not estranging from you to hurt you.
They're doing it to protect themselves.
I call BS.
What are they protecting themselves from with us?
Loving parents who've always supported them,
loving parents who's always done everything in their power
to be there for them, who financially has supported them,
who has went,
went out of their way and put their life on the back burner for their kids.
What are they protecting themselves from?
Okay, Chrissy.
So you've had no contact with your daughter now for what?
Three years?
My daughter, yes.
She's estranged from my side of the family three times and seven years.
The last estrangement came as a shock because we had reconnected for two and a half years.
I let my guard down.
We got matching family tattoos, beach vacations with me and her brothers.
And so I thought we made it.
We're golden.
We're not, I'm not going to lose her again.
And bam, a little conflict happened and out the door.
And I tried to talk to her.
And I was like, we need to sit down.
Can we just please sit down and talk?
And like, why are you so upset?
It was something so minor.
And she refused to communicate with her brothers and I.
She's cut my mother off, the only grandmother she's ever had who's completely heartbroken.
Her brothers don't have a sister.
You know, they're kind of contact with them.
Yes.
And in the beginning, the first estrangement, I will be.
give, you know, it wasn't her fault. She was 17, 18 years old. I went through a divorce. She felt
she had to choose, and she didn't choose me. We worked through that, you know, and she explained some
things to me, and I understood it. But now she's 25, almost 26. She knows I'm a good person.
She even, you know, we made TikToks together. She made me beautiful TikTok that I have pinned on my
profile, you know, and, you know, literally Mother's Day, and then two weeks later, there was a
conflict. So my daughter, she is smart. She's funny. She was a joy to raise. She's a college graduate,
but I feel she lacks conflict resolution skills. And I just feel like my question to the therapist
is how do we move forward to help parents and children that weren't an abuse of parents? Like,
a lot of us are really good parents. We aren't deserving of this. How do we teach parents and
children that we can work through the messy hard stuff so that we can talk and not go no
contact because I'm not going to lie like it's been three and a half years no word at all
and the glimmer of hope of us ever reconnecting is is going away you know I talk about a platform
and give parents a place to be seen and heard and you know when I when it first started happening to
me I was like you I was like I thought I was alone so
Now I have a platform where parents can be seen and heard because we are villainized.
And that video was about how villainized we become on that out.
What was the response to that video?
Parents were thankful.
And, you know, so many, I felt like I was alone.
And to be honest, so many of us parents, I'm not a therapist, but I've heard hundreds of stories.
So many of us never even got the opportunity to sit down and talk to our children.
Listen, I'm all about we don't decide what hurt.
We don't get to decide.
what hurt someone. They don't get to decide what hurt us. So if my daughter came to me and said,
Mom, can we talk? Heck, yes, absolutely. I would take ownership of anything she said I did
to hurt her because I don't get to decide what hurt her. But she refuses. Well, you know, that brings me
to the point. When you said the thing, the reason we are not talking now, it was such a little
thing. We all are wondering what little thing was that. What was that? And you know what? I was
going to say, but I didn't want to interrupt you. Maybe it was a little obviously.
and was a little thing to you, but it wasn't a little thing to her.
It was something.
She didn't get her way.
Okay.
She didn't get her way.
And, you know, my boys are in my life.
I'm a mom of three.
They reassure me all the time, mom.
You were not a bad mom.
Do you have a specific question for, for, my question is, how do we, how do we work on teaching
conflict resolution skills so that the no contact doesn't start?
Because we all know once it starts, it's a hard thing to go back from.
Yeah.
So.
I mean, what I always tell parents.
You have to start with telling your adult child
that I know you wouldn't do this unless you felt like
it was the healthiest thing for you to do.
Now, it may not feel that way to meet.
Is that the first rule of estrangement?
That's the first rule of reconciliation.
Okay.
Yeah. The first thing is you have to reach out to your adult child
and say, you wouldn't do this unless you felt like it was
the healthiest thing for you to do.
Now, you may not feel like, you probably don't,
feel like it's the healthiest thing to do.
I, as the therapies, may not feel like it's the healthiest thing to do.
But it doesn't matter.
Your kid does.
And there's no way they're going to come to the table unless you do.
you do. Second of all, you have to find the kernel, if not the bushel of truth in the complaints,
and maybe you did all that. I mean, I get it. You're right. Some of these adult children who cut
off contact, their conflict avoidance, they don't know how to have a conversation. And they tell
their parents that they're gas-sliding them, or they're, you know, emotionally mature, sorry,
or they're, you know, narcissism or whatever. And it's actually that they have mental health
issues, you know, or they're being negatively influenced after a divorce. Or they're married
to somebody who says, choose them or me, you can't have both. Or they're involved with the therapist,
who assumes everything's a result of parental trauma.
Or they don't know any other way to feel separate from the parent
other than to cut them off.
But this idea that it's only bad parents
who are getting cut off.
I'm sorry, I call it bow on that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You agree with my TikTok.
So we have another motherhood.
Kendall.
Kendall?
Hi.
Yes, I am estranged from my 30-year-old son by choice.
And what I do notice, even in the room,
when the children were speaking,
people were kind of nodding in a good.
agreeing with them, but the moment Christy started telling her side of the story, people were kind of like,
you know what I'm saying? My platform speaks similar to hers on behalf of the parent, because parents
are suffering in silence. And when children become estranged, they are celebrated, they're supported,
people rally behind them, but when a mother decides to go no contact with her child, she's demonized.
And that's been my experience. You made the decision to go no contact, why, with your son?
My son has been, he's caused me verbal, emotional, physical trauma, and financial trauma for over 15 years now.
And you just decided enough?
Two years ago, he threatened my husband and myself, and I made a conscious decision that that was the last straw.
Yeah.
Because he didn't get his way.
He didn't get his way.
Yeah.
And has he respected the no contact?
No.
He is not.
No, he has not.
He sends threats that if we don't unblock him, he just threatened my husband yesterday.
as I got off a flight, saying if we don't unblock him,
if I don't speak to him,
he's going to do some harm to us.
Wow.
So that's been my experience.
And parents don't go no contact for very small reasons.
It takes a lot for a mother to make that conscious choice.
And I've been experiencing this for over 15 years
since his dad and I got a divorce and I got remarried 18 years ago.
And you have a question?
My question is, why are parents always demonized when they speak their truth?
or when they make a conscious decision to go no contact.
But estranged children are celebrated and rallied behind.
Good question.
Who wants to answer that?
If someone was coming in to see me as their therapist,
I'm listening for what that person's experience is,
and I have had parents come in whose children are asking for money
or they're making the parent feel morally obligated
to give them exactly what they want.
It's the emotional immaturity switched, okay?
I mean, you don't have to be the parent or the adult child to be emotionally immature.
And so whatever it is that is crossing the boundary of the relationship or the other person's right to their own life or to their right to say no,
I mean, that has to be dealt with every time in order to keep your own stability and mental health.
So I see it very much as going both ways, whoever it is that's going across the boundary
and saying, you have to give me what I need because I'm the most important person in the
relationship here, in effect, whether that's parent or child, that has to be addressed.
And it's for your own mental health.
I would add to that that for a parent, when they're estranged, there's no upside to be a
in a strange parent. It's all downside. It's all heartbreak. It's all shame. It's all getting
cut off from your grandchildren. It's all guilt. It's all sorrow. It's regret. Whereas when you're
an adult child, it's, I mean, you're not doing it unless you were in pain in the first place. I get
that. But it's also wedded to our very powerful themes of identity and personal growth and personal
happiness and protecting my mental health. And those are much more resonant themes in our
culture. So they're much more likely to catch fire than
You know, some parent is getting cut off.
Thank you so much.
After the break, can you rewrite family patterns without cutting off contact with your loved ones?
That is next.
This episode of the Oprah podcast is brought to you by Booking.com.
Listing your vacation rental and booking.com opens the door to more guests.
Booking.com is one of the most downloaded travel apps in the world.
That makes it the place to list your vacation rentals if you want to earn more with consistent bookings,
reach new markets, and turn hosting into a steady income.
Over the past 25 years, they've helped more than 1.8 billion vacation rental guests find places to stay.
So why not help them find yours?
You can manage your bookings and have control over your property's calendar and finances.
It's hosting on your terms.
The best part? Getting started is super easy.
In less than 15 minutes, you can register your property and nearly half of partners get their first booking within a week.
If you've already listed on another site, booking.com makes it easy to import your property info and get going right away.
Whether you're looking to earn that extra income or fill those vacant weekends, head over to
booking.com to see how you can get started today. The reach is global, the bookings are
consistent, and the control is yours. For the bookings you've dreamed of, list your property
on booking.com. Hey there, welcome back. If you or someone you know is going through a strained
relationship with a relative, our experts have advice and guidance on navigating family
estrangement. I encourage you to send a link to this episode to someone, anyone who may need to hear
this conversation. Let's jump back into it. I wanted to now bring in Aaron. Aaron is a husband and
father of four whose oldest daughter chose to go no contact for three years before reconciling.
Correct. Take a look at what he shared with other parents about that experience.
Parents, no one prepares you for the silence after no contact with your adult children.
One day you're texting, I love you.
The next, you're staring at a phone that doesn't ring.
That's silence.
It doesn't just hurt.
It haunt you.
Well.
Painful.
It's painful.
It's very, very painful.
So what's your story, Erin?
So my story was my daughter, I think it was around 20.
2021, she decided to go no contact.
That turned into three years of no contact, three years.
And I'm going to be honest with you guys.
I thought I was a great father.
I really did.
I thought I was a great father.
I did the best that I could provide her with everything, took care of her.
Just did everything I thought that I was supposed to.
Yeah.
But what she told me.
And when we had the conversation, she said, Dad, you're a helicopter parent.
I said a helicopter parent, I didn't know what that was.
Again, I didn't know what that was.
She told him I was a helicopter parent.
And a parent, a helicopter parent is a parent that wants to fix everything.
And then I started thinking about it.
She was right.
I was a helicopter parent.
I was trying to fix everything.
I was always doing too much.
I was overstepping my boundaries.
And I had to realize that and understand that.
But weren't you doing that as a man providing for his family,
trying to protect his family, wanting the best for your children.
You were not doing that because you were trying to inhibit her.
You were doing that because you wanted the best for your children.
Correct.
Yes.
But then she also told me I didn't listen.
She wasn't wrong about that either.
I don't listen.
Okay.
I'm hard-headed.
You know what I mean?
You know, so she wasn't wrong about that.
But she told me, she said, you're a helicopter parent.
So is she having this conversation after the three years?
Correct.
Okay.
After the three years.
So for three years, she said nothing.
Nothing.
You thought everything was great.
I thought everything was great.
And then my wife reached out to her, and she didn't respond to my wife.
And my wife kept trying to reach out to her.
Is your wife her mother?
Her mother, correct.
Okay, okay.
Yeah, she kept trying to reach out to her.
And then we went through a situation when we started talking to her roommate,
just trying to figure out what's going on.
No contact, no communication, no nothing.
Yeah.
So then she needed some help, of course.
So she calls me, Dad, can you help me?
I'm enrolling in college again.
Okay, cool.
I was just happy to hear a voice.
Yeah.
So I haven't heard from her so long.
So she came over, we talked, and that's when she told me.
She said, Dad, you're a helicopter parent.
And I'm looking at it.
So you were willing to help her even though she hadn't spoken to you all these years?
Oh, yeah, that's my baby.
Yeah, okay.
Oh, yeah.
I got you.
You know what I mean?
I'm going to help you as long as I'm living.
So then after the conversation, she said, I said, well, how can we work on our relationship?
What can we do?
She said, I'll tell you what we can do.
We can go to therapy.
As a man, I did not want to go to therapy.
I'm going to be real with y'all today.
I did not want to do it.
I didn't want to go and be vulnerable to somebody that I don't know.
So went to therapy because I wanted to get my baby back.
So I went to therapy.
And the therapist told me, she said, listen here.
What you got to do and you got to understand,
you have to parent your children at different stages differently.
You're still trying to control her like she's a teenager.
You're still trying to do too much like she's a teenager.
She's a full-fledged adult.
Yeah.
Understand that.
You know what I mean?
That changed my whole outlook.
And then the therapist also told her she has to learn how to communicate and stop running.
A lot of adult children run and hide when they don't get their way or when their parents don't.
I think this is so interesting.
I have a friend who just went through, is going through this with her daughter.
And she said, we've gone out for Thai food and bowling.
Correct.
I thought everything was fantastic.
And then I get a letter.
A letter arrives in the mail telling me from that.
this day forward, no contact.
And she thought something had happened to her daughter.
She thought, like, it was like that her daughter had been kidnapped
or somebody had done some harm to her.
She calls the police.
They go to the park.
All of that.
So I think it's harder when you don't even, you don't know where it's coming from.
Yeah.
And in this situation where they tried to work it out,
you tried to get them to accept your new wife.
You tried to get them to accept that you're having a child.
Very different than if you just suddenly disappear
and nobody knows what it is.
Correct.
Yes.
No, I totally agree.
Yes.
So the positive, our relationship now is phenomenal.
We worked it out, we learned how to communicate.
I backed up, like I backed up.
So what I started doing now, and I'm going to tell you parents out there,
this is how you can help your situation.
First thing first, stop overstepping boundaries.
Stop overstepping boundaries.
Just have a normal conversation with your adult child.
You know, if they ask for any more information,
Or if they need a question to answer, answer that question.
But stop overstepping boundaries.
That's what I did.
That changed my relationship.
Yeah.
We're so happy to hear that your story worked out,
but I also can hear that every situation is different.
Correct.
I mean, in Kendall's situation where there is verbal and physical abuse,
uh-uh.
No.
Not tolerating that.
And I agree what you said earlier, too.
In our generation, the way we grew up, you know,
you loved your parents no matter what.
Yeah.
They're not doing that no more.
They're not doing that anymore.
And now that you think about it, you know, I can see some of these situations, I understand.
Yeah, I know.
I mean, listen, I've been doing it so long that people were, like, severely abused physically, emotionally and still felt like they had to, you know, tolerate whatever from their parents.
So I think some of it's good.
Some of this being able to, I think, reaching a state where you're able to honor and protect your own emotional and mental health, that's a good thing.
That means that we are evolving as human beings.
Have we gone too far?
That's the question.
Well, what I'm hearing a little bit of is if someone isn't coming to me with an issue,
it's very important to ask ourselves, why?
Do they not feel safe with me?
Is there something maybe I've done in the past that has prohibited them from wanting to clear the air,
talk about an issue with me?
Sometimes we don't recognize that with ourselves.
We think, oh, I'm just being a dad.
I'm just being a mom.
But what's actually happening is you're overstepping their adult boundaries.
But isn't it also true, though, because Erin and I were talking about being raised in a different time,
that a lot of the parents who are parenting kids, they're raising kids the way they were raised.
And so you're raised not to come to your parents with your problems.
You're raised not to have conflict with your parents.
You're raised not to disagree with your parent.
So nobody knows how to even begin to have that conversation
because your whole life you weren't allowed to disagree
because you always had to be compliant.
Correct.
Yeah, but just as the kids have more information
and we know gaslighting and we know nurses,
we know all these terms,
it's also available for parents to find and understand these things as well.
Okay. You want to say that.
Yes, Dr. Gibson.
Yeah. No, I was just going to say that you show the one thing
that turns this thing around.
And that's the willingness to self-reflect.
You, I mean, that is the change agent.
Because if you can't reflect on your own behavior and say, gee, I wonder if there was
something I did that may have contributed to this.
A lot of times when people are scared and they're in fear of loss,
their first reaction, of course, is to be defensive and to find all the reasons
why they're not the bad guy, because that feels horrible.
Which is what Dr. Coleman did the first,
when his daughter had the conversation.
Anybody would do that because it's what we do.
It's your natural reaction.
It's just, it's like you've just been injured, okay?
Your first reaction is going to be to clench and to defend, okay?
But nothing can change until you ask that question,
which is, gee, I wonder if there was something that I did too.
Once you do that, you begin to become more objective,
and you certainly become more receptive to your adult child.
And that is the platform from which you can have
a different relationship.
So I just wanted to point that that is a hallmark
of emotional maturity that you can self-reflect
and understand that you are not the most important person
in the relationship.
Erin, you are the hallmark of emotional maturity.
All right.
Fantastic.
Thank you for saying.
I appreciate it.
I think that absolutely you would want to hear what your daughter had to say, that you would
want to work it out and do that conflict resolution.
Absolutely.
The problem is that some of us have such a strong personality and such a strong way of engaging
other people, that it becomes a little intimidating.
And we don't know we're doing it because we, this is our energy.
Okay, this is who we are.
So one of the things we have to remember
is that when you're trying to get someone
to engage with you in conflict resolution,
that you have to be aware that you may have more power
than you actually think you do.
And they may be backing up from that
in a way that feels unnecessary to you,
but to them it may feel like,
I can't stand my ground with this person.
And if you feel like there's no hope
standing my ground, there's no hope of the conflict resolution. So I think we have to just be aware
of how we come across with our energy. There's nothing wrong with it. There's nothing wrong with being a
strong personality. Yeah. My sons communicate well with me. The problem is, it's not all on my daughter.
I'm not saying that, but she has cut her father off. She's cut other people off. When there's a
conflict, I feel like she lacks those skills with anyone, not just me. Well, is it that she lacks the
skills or that she lacks the feeling of personal power that she could that she could that she could
that she could say and you just said something and this is definitely not a criticism but i'm just going to say
but because i said it's not a criticism you even think it is a criticism uh but it's just
to it i take it all the time on ticot this is just this is what what i noticed that you said
and i just wanted to bring up this point uh from dr coleman's book that there are separate
realities in every family and for years i've had multiple discussions with lots of
families. And lots of parents say what you just said, Chris, they say, but my sons did this and
my other child did this and my other. Everybody in the family, in the same family, you're doing
the same thing with all the kids. They're all having a different experience. Correct? Yeah, not only
is it correct, but, you know, our children also have, they kind of come into the world with a certain
temperament. If you've got, you know, three kids, they might all have really different temperament. Some
might be really assertive, others might be really resilient, others might be really conflict
avoid, anxious, depressive. And, you know, how they see us as parents is going to be reflected
through that filter. So if you have a kid who's sort of prone to depression or anxiety,
they're going to see, they're going to be much more reactive to you. They're going to be much
more sensitive. And they're going to later say, well, you were emotionally abusive.
You're going to be like, the hell I was, because you're not really reading the world from
their perspective. And that's why I agree with what Lindsay's saying that we need to sort of see
it through their eyes, not through just our own eyes.
All your kids see their experience in the family.
And I understand that.
And like I said, I've never had the opportunity to talk.
Like we didn't come from a family where we just fought and yelled.
That wasn't our family, you know.
And in fact, you know, a lot of things were shoved under a rug.
And I have thought to myself, did I teach her how to communicate?
You know, because a lot of things in my marriage was shoved under rug, not on my end,
but it takes two people to talk.
And if there's not communication, so I've thought, did we teach her that?
Did we teach her to just shut things under a rug and not talk?
Where did she learn not to have conflict resolution?
But I can't make her talk to me.
Like she has to be wanting to come to me and say, let's sit down.
Let's go to therapy.
Let's talk about this.
Because I've said so many times on my platform, I will own it.
Bring it to me.
I will own it.
I've not had that chance.
And so many other estranged parents haven't had the chance either.
Does she know you want that chance?
Yes.
I'm sure she's seen my TikToks.
So we thought this was interesting.
Thank you all so much.
We thought this was interesting.
Hadley, stand up.
So Hadley, y'all, is a hospice nurse
and a New York Times bestselling author about her experience.
And she says that sometimes her dying patients
will ask her to call their estranged adult children
who have gone no contact.
And when my team saw one of her videos,
We, you know, want her to join us in this conversation.
Here's a quick look.
If you're the top of person who continues to be no contact with your dying family member,
even after I as the hospice nurse call you and say that is their final dying wish to talk to you,
then I think that's totally fine.
I don't judge you, and I don't think you owe people who abused you peace.
I don't mind being the bad guy and telling them no, I'll even update you when they pass
if you asked me to and be your shoulder to cry on.
And if all you feel is relief, that's totally normal to, and you're not a bad person.
I, you know, when I first heard your story and I hadn't seen you on TikTok, I was like, wow, what an interesting thing.
You're putting these strange children with their dying parents, but it's not that at all.
In most cases, in most cases, they don't, right? They say no. I don't want to see them.
They do in most cases, but it's difficult. I've had to.
had conversations before where they say, what should I do?
And they asked me, and that's very difficult when I became a hospice nurse 10 years ago.
I was not estranged from my own biological father.
And about seven years ago, I did become estranged from him.
So I really began to understand more how those children are and what they're feeling
whenever they're getting that phone call.
Wow.
And so what do you find when the people who are,
are dying, asked to see their children.
Are they asking to see their children,
they're estranged adult children
because they want to apologize,
because they have regrets,
because they want to have final words?
I don't believe, personally,
that they usually want to apologize.
Because they're telling me, do they know that I'm dying?
It almost feels like a guilt trip to me.
Like, please tell them that I'm dying,
and maybe they'll talk to me.
Has anybody expressed, you know, regret or grief that they were estranged from their adult children?
I did have one person in particular I think of that really told me that they had a lot of regrets
and they wanted to make amends.
And I did with our social worker make that phone call to the child and asked if they wanted to hear them out and give them that chance.
They ultimately decided not to.
They went really back and forth.
They ultimately decided not to.
so what myself and the social worker did is we offered for that patient to write a letter to the child
and we said after you pass we'll make sure that they get it we can't promise that they'll read it
and the patient decided to not write that letter really you told my team that you think that
this is oftentimes a form of control on the part of the parents I do yes yeah well first of all
what it takes to be a hospice nurse.
Can we just give that around?
Thank you.
Thank you.
That is the Lord's work you are doing for sure.
And do you find that when you're asked to reach out to these estranged children,
adult children, that the adult children appreciate being reached out to or not?
Not always.
I think that sometimes they have no idea that,
anything about their parent at all.
And I'm usually making these at, like, 11 a.m. on a Tuesday, and they're in the middle
of a work day, and I think it's very jarring, understandably.
Yeah, right. And how long have people been estranged from their children?
I think the most I've seen has been, like, 20, 30 years.
Yeah. Yeah. Well, I can understand it's been 20 years.
Yeah, to get that phone call on a Tuesday while you're working.
Yeah. Yeah. Hard.
And then you call them after the person is.
passed if they want you to?
I ask them, are a social worker
will. I ask, and most times
they do want to know, which I find interesting.
They want to know that they've passed.
And I understand that.
I mean, being estranged myself, I think it would
also be extremely daring to find that out from, like,
Facebook.
Yeah. So you said
you now are estranged from your
biological father. Yes.
Why? Can we ask?
I say it's a million cuts that bled me dry.
And I could give you one reason, but I
think that it wouldn't reflect the entirety of the situation. And I think that someone would
judge that one situation and say that wasn't enough of a reason. And in reality, it wasn't
just that. It was a million things before that that led up to that. Yeah. It sounds like it's
never one thing. Yeah. Nobody does it over one thing. So thank you so much, Hadley, for sharing
that with us. I want to close with a word from our experts, Nedra. Let's start with you.
Well, I think there is hope because we have more information on the topic.
And if we want to preserve relationships, we have to be open to hard conversations.
And sometimes we have to be the person to start it.
Whether that's the parent or the child, we have to get out of these patterns that we've been in with our parent.
If they've been domineering, if they've done something to us, we have to learn to use our words and speak up.
I think that the boundaries that we're starting to see with so many adults is not necessarily a new thing, but people are more vocal about wanting emotional connection with their parents or not wanting to be told who to marry or what they should feel in certain situations.
And that's not necessarily a bad thing because we want to feel closer to our families, but we also have to learn to deal with the conflict within our family.
And I don't think everybody is just like,
I'm out of here.
I've never had a conversation.
Sometimes people make it hard for us to talk.
Some people are intimidating.
Some people become defensive.
And so it's hard to tell a person who's doing that,
that they're actually doing that.
But if you are disconnected in a relationship,
you have to look inward,
and you have to own your part of it
and not just assume that this other person is wrong.
It's two people.
perhaps we both did something.
So being open to that conflict is really important for repair.
That's what you said, Dr. Gibson, self-reflection is the key.
Yeah, I mean, it's the key for any relationship
to have things get better.
But I just wanted to mention that, you know,
societally and culturally, what we're all up against
is that everybody has tremendous stress
in dealing with a very complex
world now. I mean, this is not the world of 30 years ago even. The things that adult children
are having to think about way, succeed in are very different, and it's very, very stressful.
We don't have the energy to put into relationships where someone is going to be continually pushing
back and making us feel that what is going on inside us is not valid or is not to
true in some way. This old way of the respect for the role itself, I think for the role of the
parent or the authority figure. Honor thy father and my mother. Yes, exactly. Yes, it says honor them.
It doesn't say obey them, agree with them, do whatever they say, make them the most important
person in the relationship. So those days of the role trumping everything else are gone. People do not have the
energy now to sustain a relationship that is draining or difficult or constantly
conflictual.
They do not have the energy to keep on maintaining that and live this very complex life.
I think it's a very interesting thing you just said, the days of the role being the
almighty in the relationship, because it's not about the role.
it really is about the relationship.
And that's what's happening to these poor parents,
because they're thinking that there is some security there
for them in the role, okay?
But what it's happened is that...
And that's what people mean when they say,
oh, she's your only mother, that's your only one.
They're talking about the role.
You actually haven't had a relationship
with a mother who mothered you.
Yeah, it shifted from the role to relationship skills.
and to empathy and to understanding the other person's subjective experience.
There has been a ground shift in that.
That's not going to go backwards.
People are not going to become less aware and less conscious
of their own inner experience.
The ship has sailed.
And so we have to find ways of understanding
that our kids are stressed.
They're exhausted in this very complex society.
They don't have a lot of extra energy to work stuff out.
with you. And so you have to, if you want to get along or regain the relationship,
you have to treat them like a treasured friend. Like, how would you keep a friend that you
wanted to keep? A cherished person, that's how you have to treat them, because they're exhausted.
You'll have to improve the relationship skills.
Yes. Thank you. That's what I'm trying to say.
If the relationship skills have to take the place of the role...
You have to do that and not use the I'm your mother, I'm your father, and
so automatically you should give me whatever.
Yes, exactly.
But see, nobody comes along and tells the parent,
you have to undergo this shift.
And you have to understand now that it's
going to be the quality of the relationship
and the empathy that's going to count.
Nobody told them that.
Everybody's being caught unaware by that.
Well, I agree with all that.
But I know there's a but coming.
Yeah.
But I would add that, you know,
the surgeon general recently came out and added parenting
as one of the risks of adulthood currently.
And parents are under enormous pressure,
including parents of adult children,
in part because the criteria of what constitutes
good parenting has gone through the roof.
I mean, it's what I call the soulmate parent.
You're not only supposed to be, you know,
get your kids out of the house and independent.
You're also supposed to be sensitive and empathic
and psychological and a coach and a learning disability
specialist and a psychiatrist.
And that's a lot of pressure on parents.
And then later, you're done.
child and I estranged you because you didn't do one of those things.
I mean, I'll see letters from adult children saying, well, you didn't see that I was
depressed when I was young and get me help, so I don't owe you a relationship.
I'm like, well, your parent isn't a damn psychiatrist, you know?
I mean, they didn't know that you were depressed.
And to cut off a parent for that reason, to me, that just seems wrong.
Okay, now final comment.
Two things.
One is I have close family who are in recovery, and I've learned a lot from the fourth step,
which is that you make a fearless and searching moral inventory of yourself.
This is similar to what Lindsay and Nedra are saying.
You make a serious and searching moral inventory
of your own character flaws
because we all have them.
You all have them.
We have them as parents.
Everybody has character flaws.
And what I often tell parents is,
you know what, it's about humility.
It's not about humiliation.
Because parents don't really necessarily
want to write that estranged letter.
It's probably hard for you to hear
what your daughter had to say.
It was hard for me.
You hear what my daughter had to say
and to really open myself up and be vulnerable.
But I think what we're all saying
is nothing's going to happen
unless we can do that, unless we can sort of see our own character flaws.
But I think adult children, also, you have to see the ways
that you push your parent away, or you don't give them credit for the things that they did,
or you don't recognize that they might have grown up in a culture that, you know,
didn't, wasn't so psychological, wasn't so emotional and sensitive,
and love them in any way, see that their efforts were still loving.
And so those are my final words.
Okay. I thank you, all of you, for being a part,
of this conversation. And for all of you who were thinking, oh, you were alone, well, there's
rules of estrangement, there's adult children of emotionally immature parents, and drama-free.
People are writing about it, and now we're all talking about it. And hopefully, this has been
eye-opening for many of you, particularly those of you were going through it. Thank you so much
for joining us. Go well, and we'll meet up again next week.
You can subscribe to the Oprah podcast on YouTube and follow us.
us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen. I'll see you next week. Thanks, everybody.
