DNF. Let me begin by saying I am a parent. This book insists that *everyone* has origin wounds, you just have to figure out which one you have. At one point in the book, it says that this isn’t a witch hunt to blame your parents, and that there are other places that origin wounds can come from. But then on every other page it tells you that your parents have left you with an indelible wound.
I believe that all parents are damaged sinners, and that there are generational patterns of sin in every family. I believe that there are genetic predispositions to certain sins, just as there are to certain diseases and mental illnesses. And yet, I recoil at the idea that it is impossible for me to raise kids without leaving them with origin wounds, and that one day they will be able to trace all their dysfunctions back to me or their father. Nor do I think it is fair to blame all my failures as a parent on my own parents.
Do our families form us? Yes. Do many, many people have origin wounds that they should work through in order to grow past them? Yes. And yet…
Life is really hard, a lot of the time. Growing up is hard. Raising kids is hard. We live in a fallen world. We don’t understand ourselves very well. And yet… we are not simply a product of the home we grew up in. There’s a lot more to it. There is personality, culture, circumstance, school, community. I am a Christian, so I believe there is the work of the Holy Spirit.
I came to this book looking for something in the vein of Bowen family systems theory. I wanted to find a book that helps us identify and disrupt harmful patterns in our families, but with an emphasis on personal agency and pursuit of maturity. This book talks about family systems but frames everything with the idea that you are a victim. Everyone identify your origin wound! Embrace your victimhood! After you identify your victimhood, you will need to return to it over and over during the course of your lifetime! Yuck.
Instead of healing my inner child, I’m going to keep working to grow myself up (as Jenny Brown puts it). And more specifically, to grow myself up in the Lord. A good measure for which approach is better is to look at which will benefit my own children more. If we believe that wounding our children for life is inevitable, and that our weaknesses are simply the product of our own damaged parents, that can only weaken our confidence and maturity as parents. And that is the last thing we need.
PS: any book that contains the sentence “you have to feel your feels, my friend” is just not for me.