Dissatisfaction with the division of child - related labor may foster child insecurity and anxiety in particular when the dissatisfaction results in inter-parental disagreements about child - related duties (e.g., putting the child to bed) because these disagreements may make
the child feel unloved or unworthy.
If you as
a child felt unloved repeatedly for any reason, may be your parents very busy or emotionally unavailable and then you concluded that you are unlovable.
Not exact matches
I don't know about you, but I think it's more humane to terminate a cluster of cells that lacks the ability to
feel pain than it is to insist that a
child be born into a situation where it is unwanted,
unloved, unprotected and may end up abused or dead.
Separated from God by many - layered barriers of heavens, the Hellenist
felt caught in a situation similar to that of an abandoned,
unloved, and emotionally deprived
child with marvelous but remote parents.
Your
child will not
feel unloved by crying herself to sleep, as long as you have spent plenty of quality time with her, holding her, playing with her, loving her.
Some parents
feel guilty, or fear that their
child will
feel unloved, if they aren't always responding to their
child's attention - seeking behavior.
This means that time - out probably won't work, or if it does stop the behavior, the
child can end up
feeling rejected and
unloved.
When
children are subjected to trauma or neglect or when parental support is lacking, the
child is left
feeling unloved and sadly, unlovable.
This can have a devastating effect on a
child, who will likely
feel abandoned,
unloved, rejected, and may also
feel it is somehow their own fault, too.
Conversely,
children who
feel unsupported,
unloved, or over-pressured by their parents can experience a variety of emotional and social issues.