SeekinghopeNZ
New Member
I've found tremendous support in this forum on a difficult topic that many can't relate to. The detachment article was so powerful to read. Our 21-year-old daughter, L, has subjected us to years of emotional, financial abuse, and even physical threats. Despite moving out at 18 and us supporting her through various living and job situations, her behavior has spiraled, including abusing our family's generosity, failing to maintain any job and rent responsibilities, and accumulating piles of debt. Throughout this whole period, the breakdown of trust has been enormous and she is well and truly stuck in "victim" thinking. She has never once taken responsibility. It is all someone else's fault and we are the world's worst parents who have completely let her down.
L moved to Australia, hoping for a fresh start, but fell into old patterns, relying on my sister's support and refusing to return to New Zealand. Despite multiple attempts to help her become independent, including setting her up in new apartments and jobs, it all fell apart again. We have spent thousands. Last year she came back to New Zealand at our cost, and once again had a new place and a new job. 4 months in it all hit the fan and she abandoned her job and flat leaving piles of debt. We said no more. The bank of mum and dad is closed. She was so angry that we were "leaving her homeless" that she cut contact. We saw through social media posts that she returned to Australia and was living the fast-party life of clubbing, casinos and criminality. The severed contact with us was a respite and gave us the time to get counseling and start to restore our marriage and to see that we can no longer rescue or fix things for L. However, a week ago she reached out to say she is 18 weeks pregnant and seeking our support again. Her words were " You say you will support me. What support can you give me if the father steps away?'
My husband and I are divided on how to respond.
I have recognized I am the rescuer and I have done a lot of work on setting boundaries this part year. But this is a whole new level. L is completely incapable of looking after a child. I feel compelled to provide her and her unborn child a safe haven, but I also agree with my husband who says it is 100% not an option as it would only lead to us shouldering all responsibilities and our home becoming a place of tension and dysfunction. L's poor credit and debt in New Zealand pose significant obstacles to her securing housing, though she would have access to substantial services and benefits if she returned. She seems inclined to stay in Australia for the child's citizenship benefits, despite having no job or stable living situation, and there are signs she might be involved in criminal activities to get by. She has got support from a youth-focused service that helps people at risk of homelessness. I know that our friends and family would believe we should take L and the baby in, but my husband says it would jeopardize our marriage and any chance we have of caring for our own well-being and financial future. He says the social services need to get involved and the child might end up in foster care. I'm torn, fearing both for my daughter and grandchild's well-being and for the health of my marriage and my own mental state. How do I detach in this situation when another life is part of the picture?
L moved to Australia, hoping for a fresh start, but fell into old patterns, relying on my sister's support and refusing to return to New Zealand. Despite multiple attempts to help her become independent, including setting her up in new apartments and jobs, it all fell apart again. We have spent thousands. Last year she came back to New Zealand at our cost, and once again had a new place and a new job. 4 months in it all hit the fan and she abandoned her job and flat leaving piles of debt. We said no more. The bank of mum and dad is closed. She was so angry that we were "leaving her homeless" that she cut contact. We saw through social media posts that she returned to Australia and was living the fast-party life of clubbing, casinos and criminality. The severed contact with us was a respite and gave us the time to get counseling and start to restore our marriage and to see that we can no longer rescue or fix things for L. However, a week ago she reached out to say she is 18 weeks pregnant and seeking our support again. Her words were " You say you will support me. What support can you give me if the father steps away?'
My husband and I are divided on how to respond.
I have recognized I am the rescuer and I have done a lot of work on setting boundaries this part year. But this is a whole new level. L is completely incapable of looking after a child. I feel compelled to provide her and her unborn child a safe haven, but I also agree with my husband who says it is 100% not an option as it would only lead to us shouldering all responsibilities and our home becoming a place of tension and dysfunction. L's poor credit and debt in New Zealand pose significant obstacles to her securing housing, though she would have access to substantial services and benefits if she returned. She seems inclined to stay in Australia for the child's citizenship benefits, despite having no job or stable living situation, and there are signs she might be involved in criminal activities to get by. She has got support from a youth-focused service that helps people at risk of homelessness. I know that our friends and family would believe we should take L and the baby in, but my husband says it would jeopardize our marriage and any chance we have of caring for our own well-being and financial future. He says the social services need to get involved and the child might end up in foster care. I'm torn, fearing both for my daughter and grandchild's well-being and for the health of my marriage and my own mental state. How do I detach in this situation when another life is part of the picture?