Learn how to protect your peace and spiritual life when caught in the crossfire of your parents' explosive arguments. Discover why you aren't responsible for being their counselor.

It’s important to realize that your parent's anger isn't your fault or your responsibility to fix. You are not a counselor; you are a growing person with your own path, your own spiritual life, and your own peace to protect.
My mom and dad are not abusive they are funny cool but some days when they get mad it’s awful mom wants to put a fist in my dads face he hates when she does that he is 35 and gets angry had kids young he gets frustrated smnegstive and battles with his thoughts I’m struggling with my spiritual life because of video games j think I’m not a counselor he’s talking tk me he yells ugly like he has nothing tk lose I’m not a ma I’m still growing dad is like a ticking bomb mom is annoyed by how he acts


This "ticking bomb" dynamic often occurs when a parent has an overactive amygdala (the brain's alarm system) and a weakened prefrontal cortex (the logical center). If a parent started having children before their own brain was fully developed in their mid-twenties, they may lack a mature "braking system" for their emotions. In these moments, anger acts as a secondary emotion—a red indicator light for deeper issues like fear, disappointment, or anxiety. When they are "amygdala hijacked," their brain loses the ability to empathize or think about consequences, leading to "ugly yelling" that feels irrational.
No. While it is natural to want to help, the script emphasizes that you are not your parents' counselor. Taking on this role is a sign of "enmeshment," where boundaries are blurred and you begin to define yourself through your parents' moods. It is a heavy burden that can cause you to lose touch with your own identity. A parent’s inability to regulate their emotions is not a problem for a child or teen to fix; recognizing that their "negative thoughts" are their own battle is the first step toward your own self-preservation.
When you live in a high-stress environment, your brain enters a state of "hypervigilance," constantly scanning for threats. This "toxic stress" shifts blood flow away from the parts of the brain needed for deep spiritual reflection and toward survival centers. Video games often serve as an "escape hatch" or "Reset Zone" because they provide a sense of control and predictable rules that are missing in a chaotic home. Rather than a spiritual failure, this is often a survival strategy for a brain that is too "tapped out" to engage in traditional prayer or study.
The best approach is to set "internal" and "time" boundaries rather than engaging in direct confrontation. You can use the "GIVE" skill—being Gentle, showing Interest, Validating their feeling (without agreeing with the behavior), and maintaining an Easy manner. If the situation escalates, you can set a time boundary by saying you want to listen but cannot do so while there is yelling, and then politely exiting to another room. By refusing to "take the bait," you stop providing the energy the conflict needs to continue, acting like a "curtain" that a tennis ball simply hits and drops.
Yes. Research, including studies mentioned in the BMJ Open, indicates that childhood verbal abuse—such as ridicule, disdain, or humiliation—can have a similar impact on adult mental health as physical abuse. This "toxic stress" can alter neurological pathways related to memory and impulse control. The script notes that even if a parent is "cool" or "funny" most of the time, those positive moments do not automatically erase the damage caused by verbal aggression. The unpredictability of the environment itself is what creates lasting anxiety and hypervigilance.
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