You are in the pool with your parents, enjoying your time as a happy family. Then your mom gets out of the pool, then your dad steps out, they are out of the pool of love and happiness, and its cold outside of the water. You are left, swimming in the pool alone, and eventually you get bored, and step out as well. You are cold, and scared because you felt safe in the pool. So you jump back in the, but in the deep end and you don't know how to swim. So you sit there struggling and gasping for air because you are drowning. Eventually you get pulled out by one of your parents and they comfort you outside of the pool. This metaphor describes how after parents leave, children feel alone and neglected, so they often fall into relationships that are unhealthy and toxic. When, and if they get out of those relationships, they may fall into their parents footsteps, living a life guided towards mishap. Watching our parents marriage fall apart, we learn to love cautiously or hazardously. We don't want to suffer through heartbreak and misery, we have been through it before, and it sucks! We take commitments seriously, which is why we don’t make them often. Relationships end in one of two ways, marriage or
You are in the pool with your parents, enjoying your time as a happy family. Then your mom gets out of the pool, then your dad steps out, they are out of the pool of love and happiness, and its cold outside of the water. You are left, swimming in the pool alone, and eventually you get bored, and step out as well. You are cold, and scared because you felt safe in the pool. So you jump back in the, but in the deep end and you don't know how to swim. So you sit there struggling and gasping for air because you are drowning. Eventually you get pulled out by one of your parents and they comfort you outside of the pool. This metaphor describes how after parents leave, children feel alone and neglected, so they often fall into relationships that are unhealthy and toxic. When, and if they get out of those relationships, they may fall into their parents footsteps, living a life guided towards mishap. Watching our parents marriage fall apart, we learn to love cautiously or hazardously. We don't want to suffer through heartbreak and misery, we have been through it before, and it sucks! We take commitments seriously, which is why we don’t make them often. Relationships end in one of two ways, marriage or