Woroni Edition 1 2022

Page 38

36.

ARTWORK: Navita Wijeratne

do we become our parents? VAISHNAVI RATHINAM EDITED BY CHETHA NAWANA This is a difficult question, especially when you have parents you don’t even speak to anymore. I’ve been estranged from my abusive family for a few years. It’s never an easy process. COVID-19, lockdowns and the constant state of tension that an unprecedented global pandemic has provoked has inevitably tested all of our close relationships. This has made me reflect further on my experiences with my now estranged parents. I live with my partner currently. Since the mayhem of 2020 and COVID-19 began, I’ve experienced long periods where I can’t go to class, my partner can’t go to work, and we’re left to breathe down each other’s necks all day. And then there’s the addition of our cute but often infuriatingly naughty cat. Whilst this hasn’t been easy, I’ve felt that there’s no one else I’d rather be ‘stuck’ with. Being spontaneously confined to the household you are currently in prompts you to consider the relationships you value the most, and the ones that may be causing you harm. You gain a deeper sense of gratitude growing up in a toxic and violent household, when you manage to finally escape. When you are not forced to ‘stay safe, stay home’ in an unsafe place that never did feel like home. Having

narrowly escaped lockdown with my own abusers, I feel even more joy in the relationships in my life that now are loving and nurturing. I’ve spent nights in lockdown building cardboard box obstacle courses for my cat or trying whacky cooking experiments with my partner. During these times, I’ve realised the gift of having a family of choice, where you always feel safe. We get to know ourselves and each other very rapidly during periods of crisis. During the stress of the pandemic, it hasn’t been easy to see that I often reflect the dysfunctional way I was raised, whether that’s with anxiety, fear, anger or shutting down. The circumstances of lockdowns and the pandemic overall have prompted me to work harder to develop better coping mechanisms and responses. A lot of households that have struggled with dysfunctional or abusive dynamics have had these issues brought to a head. Living in much closer emotional proximity to one another, it’s not as easy to avoid the unsaid. Through this period of extreme stress, I’ve often been disappointed or scared when I recognise a similarity to my parents within myself. However, I’m aware of this process now, and the fact that I have agency in it. There are deep and unavoidable links I share with my parents and childhood - appearance, personality traits, my memories. I don’t necessarily want to get rid of all of these. But the more unhelpful traits, I can choose to work on. I think the answer is that yes, we are shaped by where we come from and who raises us, but ultimately, we have the chance every day to wake up and decide who we are.


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Articles inside

Disillusioned Millennial

5min
pages 62-63

A Rich Ticket’s World?

2min
page 64

Sapiens to Systems A Road to Nowhere - Part I Another

5min
pages 60-61

Senate Candidates

3min
pages 57-59

Jean-Michel Basquiat: Darling of Corporate America

7min
pages 52-54

An Evolving View of Science Why We Need Fewer Progressive ACT

2min
pages 55-56

How It Begins

0
pages 49-51

Who Speaks

4min
pages 47-48

My Childhood Bedroom

2min
page 46

Irresolute

2min
pages 44-45

Telstra State of Mind

3min
pages 32-34

Dear Time

4min
pages 41-42

Do We Become Our Parents?

2min
pages 38-39

An Insider’s Scoop And Guide to the C(r)apital

4min
pages 35-37

Productivity Culture VS. The Art of Nothingness

2min
page 40

Growing

2min
page 43

Club Culture

5min
pages 30-31

Sign Me Up Interview: How COVID-19 Changed Campus

0
page 29

Unilodge For Alleged Wage Theft ‘Ventilation’, Travel and Functions Amongst

3min
pages 10-12

ANU’s Compliance With ACT Health Questioned

2min
page 7

The Serious Business (And Subsequent Party) of Mullets: A History The Impact of COVID-19 On Our Mental Health... According to Evolutionary Science Euphoria: A Beautifully Grim Representation

9min
pages 16-20

We Deserve Better Than Matt Haigh’s The Midnight Library

5min
pages 23-25

Un’hinged: The Call of Nature

6min
pages 26-27

of Adolescence

4min
pages 21-22

Changes at ANU

1min
pages 13-15

NATCON 2021 Wrapped Class-action Lawsuit Prepared Against

4min
pages 8-9
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