Notes:
The last chapters were my favorites....although, the background from the first chapters is probably what made them so good.
Chapter 8
Our early dependance on our parents creates patterns. As an adult, don't expect the relationship to get better. That requires two people and isn't always possible. Try to relate to your parent in a neutral way. Approach interactions between the two of you on an observational perspective. Manage the interaction rather than engaging emotionally.
You can't expect immature people to be different than they are - but you can decide on your own goals for interactions. You might have a goal to express yourself, even though you're nervous. You can't make the other party understand - but you can control how you communicate. Focus on the outcome, not the relationship. If you focus on the relationship and try to improve it, an interaction with an emotionally immature person will deteriorate and then you'll be disappointed at the lack of improvement.
Managing, not engaging: Instead of emotionally engaging with immature people, set a goal of managing interaction, including length of time and topics. Gently ease past uncomfortable topics. Be prepared to respond with the exact same thing as many times as necessary. Also manage your own emotions by observing and narrating your feelings to yourself, rather than becoming reactive.
Observe objectively and manage the interaction when the interactions don't go well.
Mentally describe what's happening when conversations go awry. It allows you to move from the emotional part of your brain to the logical part. Another strategy is to count. "How long did your parent go on that time?" You could look at a clock and decide how much longer you're going to listen. When time is up, politely interrupt and disengage.
Be okay with doing what is all you can emotionally do. Just relate as a fellow adult, not a child hoping for a parent to give the love you need. Step out of your old role self. This is where emotional healing begins.
Chapter 9
Your first job is really your own self care. You no longer have to exhaust yourself with excessive empathy for others so that you can find acceptance and love.
Chapter 10 Identifying Emotionally Mature People
1. They're realistic and reliable
2. They work with reality rather than fighting it. They see problems and try to fix them. If changes aren't possible, they try to make the best of what they've got.
3. They can feel and think at the same time. Because of this, it is easy to work things out with them.
4. Their consistency makes them reliable. They have an integrated sense of self and will respond basically the same across different situations.
5. They don't take everything personally. They can laugh at themself and their foibles. They realize they're fallible and are doing the best they can. They realize people can put their foot in their mouth now and then and forgive people for social gaffs. It's just a mistake, not a rejection.
6. They're respectful and reciprocal. It feels like they're looking out for you.
7. They respect your boundaries.
8. They tune into how other people are feeling. Their ability to tune into people's feelings becomes second nature. Emotionally immature people tell you what you really meant. It's motivated by a desire to be in control. Mature people don't pretend to know you better than you know yourself.
9. They give back. They want to help and are generous with their time. They will give back more than they get for a while, but won't continue relationships that seem too unbalanced.
10. They try to be fair and objective. If you have to change your plans, they don't feel personally rejected. They can let you know if they're disappointed without holding it against you. They will give you the benefit of the doubt. They're collaborative and open to other's ideas. When you work together, both of you feel satisfied. Compromise means a mutual balancing of desires. (Emotionally immature people pressure people into unbalanced compromises and they think relationships are about compromise).
11. They're even tempered (the sooner temper shows up in a relationship, the more of a red flag it is. Emotionally immature people show anger by withdrawing love). Emotionally mature people will ask you what's wrong and work to solve the conflict. They won't give you the silent treatment.
12. They are willing to be influenced. They have a secure sense of self. They don't feel threatened or feel weak when others see things differently. They'll listen and try to understand your point of view.
13. They're truthful. Telling the truth is the basis of trust. They understand why you're upset if they lied or gave you a false impression. When honesty really counts, they're genuine and forthcoming.
14. Their empathy makes you feel safe. Along with self-awareness, empathy is the soul of emotional intelligence, guiding people towards pro-social behavior and fairness in dealing with others. Non-empathetic people overlook your feelings.
15. They make you feel seen and understood. They remember things you've told them and bring it up later.
16. They see you positively and keep a mental library of your best qualities. They seem to know you better than you know yourself. You feel like you can be completely yourself with them. The more you share with them, the more they share with you.
17. They aren't afraid of your emotions. They don't tell you you should be feeling another way.
18. They like to comfort and be comforted. They have an emotional engagement instinct that works naturally. They know how important friendly support can be.
19. They reflect on their actions and try to change. They understand how people affect each other emotionally. They're willing to absorb feedback. They have interest in and curiosity about other people's impressions and are willing to take action as a result of self-reflection. If you're clear about what bothers you, they'll listen and attempt to change as appropriate.
20. They can laugh and be playful. They can use light heartedness to relieve stress. Emotionally immature people use humor that makes fun of people so that they feel better about themself. Humor with an edge such as sarcasm. In excess, it reflects cynicism, which is hard to live with.
21. They're enjoyable to be around. They have an overall positive vibe. For the most part, they're able to generate their own good feelings and enjoy life.
When meeting people on-line:
- all personal writing reveals something about what people think
- reading what people have written gives you time to reflect on how they make you feel
- are they respectful of your boundaries in how fast or slow they want to get to know you? Are they okay with your pace of responding?
- are they reciprocal? Do they reference what you said in your previous message or do they immediately launch into something else?
- is it easy to schedule things with them?
- take a moment to jot down your thoughts after reading their profile...how do feel inside? Will you feel comfortable being yourself or do you need to watch what you say and how you say it?
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I asked AI to make a list of action items from the book to help readers heal, set boundaries and grow emotionally as well as a worksheet:
🌱 1. Identify Emotionally Immature Behaviors
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Reflect on your childhood to recognize traits like:
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Lack of empathy from parents
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Chronic invalidation of your emotions
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Parentification (you taking care of the parent)
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Journal examples of when your emotional needs were dismissed or ignored.
🛡️ 2. Learn Emotional Boundaries
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Practice saying “no” or expressing discomfort even when it feels hard.
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Use “I” statements (e.g., “I feel uncomfortable when...”) to communicate needs.
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Limit contact or set time boundaries with emotionally immature individuals.
🧠 3. Stop Taking It Personally
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Remind yourself that their behavior is about them, not your worth.
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Use cognitive reframing to recognize that emotional immaturity stems from their limitations, not your failings.
💬 4. Engage with Emotionally Safe People
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Seek out relationships where emotional reciprocity, empathy, and support exist.
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Build a "support team" of friends, therapists, or support groups.
🧘 5. Reparent Yourself
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Practice self-compassion daily: “I am worthy of love and respect.”
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Develop internal validation: Check in with your feelings and affirm them.
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Nurture your inner child with affirming messages and care routines.
📚 6. Learn About Emotional Maturity
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Understand traits of emotional maturity: accountability, empathy, consistency.
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Model these traits in your own behavior and relationships.
🧩 7. Stop Over-Explaining or People-Pleasing
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Give brief, clear answers—don’t justify or over-defend your decisions.
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Practice tolerating the discomfort of someone’s disapproval or confusion.
🛠️ 8. Use the "Observer Self"
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Notice your reactions with curiosity rather than judgment.
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Step back mentally during interactions to reduce reactivity.
🔄 9. Break the Cycle
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Consciously choose new ways of relating to others—especially in conflict.
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Acknowledge patterns that don’t serve you and experiment with alternatives.
🧠 Healing from Emotionally Immature Parents – Self-Reflection Worksheet
Name: _________________________ Date: ___________________
1. Recognize Emotionally Immature Behaviors
Reflect on behaviors you experienced growing up.
List 3 examples where your emotions were dismissed or ignored:
2. Define Healthy Boundaries
What boundary do you need to set with someone in your life?
🗒️ Example: I will not answer calls after 8 PM.
How will you express this boundary clearly and calmly?
3. Detangle From Guilt or Shame
What negative message did you internalize from your upbringing?
Write a new, self-compassionate belief to replace it:
💬 “__________________________________________________________”
4. Build Emotional Safety
List 2 people you feel emotionally safe with and why:
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______________________________________ – Why: ___________________________
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______________________________________ – Why: ___________________________
One way I can nurture a healthy relationship this week:
5. Practice Self-Reparenting
Write a message your younger self needed to hear:
💌 “Dear younger me, _______________________________________________________”
What’s one comforting thing you can do for yourself this week?
🛁 Walk / rest / journal / art / other: ____________________________________________
6. Notice and Reframe
Describe a recent situation that triggered an old emotional wound:
What was your automatic thought or reaction?
What might a mature, self-supporting perspective sound like?
7. Stop Over-Explaining
What’s one recent time you over-explained yourself?
Practice a shorter, more confident response:
💬 “__________________________________________________________”
8. Use the Observer Self
Write about a time you stayed calm and curious instead of reacting:
What did you notice about your feelings in that moment?
9. Break the Cycle
What is one generational pattern you are consciously changing?
What’s one action you can take this week to reinforce that change?
✅ ________________________________________________________
📅 Weekly Check-In
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One boundary I honored: ___________________________________
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One thing I did for myself: _________________________________
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One lesson I learned: ______________________________________
Let me know if you'd like a version with checkboxes or in PDF format!
Goodreads says:
If you grew up with an emotionally immature, unavailable, or selfish parent, you may have lingering feelings of anger, loneliness, betrayal, or abandonment. You may recall your childhood as a time when your emotional needs were not met, when your feelings were dismissed, or when you took on adult levels of responsibility in an effort to compensate for your parent’s behavior. These wounds can be healed, and you can move forward in your life.
In this breakthrough book, clinical psychologist Lindsay Gibson exposes the destructive nature of parents who are emotionally immature or unavailable. You will see how these parents create a sense of neglect, and discover ways to heal from the pain and confusion caused by your childhood. By freeing yourself from your parents’ emotional immaturity, you can recover your true nature, control how you react to them, and avoid disappointment. Finally, you’ll learn how to create positive, new relationships so you can build a better life.
Discover the four types of difficult parents:
The emotional parent instills feelings of instability and anxiety
The driven parent stays busy trying to perfect everything and everyone
The passive parent avoids dealing with anything upsetting
The rejecting parent is withdrawn, dismissive, and derogatory
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