INFLUENCE OF PSYCHOPATHIC QUALITIES OF PARENTS ON MENTAL DISORDERS IN CHILDREN

Abstract

The ability of a newborn to quickly adapt to the demands of parents leads to the fact that the child's needs for love, respect, responsiveness, understanding, participation, and sympathy are often repressed into the unconscious. The same can be said about emotional reactions to situations fraught with grave consequences, in which the child is deprived of something vital. As a result, a person, both in childhood and adulthood, is deprived of many emotional experiences such as jealousy, anger, envy, feelings of loneliness and helplessness, and fear.

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Askarova Nargiza Abdivaliyevna. (2024). INFLUENCE OF PSYCHOPATHIC QUALITIES OF PARENTS ON MENTAL DISORDERS IN CHILDREN. American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research, 4(10), 367–371. https://doi.org/10.37547/ajsshr/Volume04Issue10-30
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Abstract

The ability of a newborn to quickly adapt to the demands of parents leads to the fact that the child's needs for love, respect, responsiveness, understanding, participation, and sympathy are often repressed into the unconscious. The same can be said about emotional reactions to situations fraught with grave consequences, in which the child is deprived of something vital. As a result, a person, both in childhood and adulthood, is deprived of many emotional experiences such as jealousy, anger, envy, feelings of loneliness and helplessness, and fear.


background image

Volume 04 Issue 10-2024

367


American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research
(ISSN

2771-2141)

VOLUME

04

ISSUE

10

P

AGES

:

367-371

OCLC

1121105677
















































Publisher:

Oscar Publishing Services

Servi

ABSTRACT

The ability of a newborn to quickly adapt to the demands of parents leads to the fact that the child's needs for love,

respect, responsiveness, understanding, participation, and sympathy are often repressed into the unconscious. The

same can be said about emotional reactions to situations fraught with grave consequences, in which the child is

deprived of something vital. As a result, a person, both in childhood and adulthood, is deprived of many emotional

experiences such as jealousy, anger, envy, feelings of loneliness and helplessness, and fear.

KEYWORDS

Mental health, children, parents, psychopathy, disorders, psychoanalysis, neurobiology, antisocial disorders.

INTRODUCTION

The main indisputable characteristic of personality is

self-awareness, separation from the surrounding

world. In this sense, we say that a baby is certainly a

unique individual, but still not a personality. But already

at 2.5-3 years old, a child begins to be aware of himself,

to distinguish his feelings, to evaluate his behavior. And

this property rapidly develops in preschool and school

age. The child forms ideas about the world and himself.

This happens in mandatory interaction with other

people, primarily with parents. Therefore, the child's

future largely depends on how seriously, respectfully,

and truly parents treat the personality of their child.

Research Article

INFLUENCE OF PSYCHOPATHIC QUALITIES OF PARENTS ON MENTAL
DISORDERS IN CHILDREN

Submission Date:

October 20, 2024,

Accepted Date:

October 25, 2024,

Published Date:

October 30, 2024

Crossref doi:

https://doi.org/10.37547/ajsshr/Volume04Issue10-30


Askarova Nargiza Abdivaliyevna

Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology, Lecturer at the Department of Pedagogy and Psychology of the Tashkent
Medical Academy, Uzbekistan

Journal

Website:

https://theusajournals.
com/index.php/ajsshr

Copyright:

Original

content from this work
may be used under the
terms of the creative
commons

attributes

4.0 licence.


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Volume 04 Issue 10-2024

368


American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research
(ISSN

2771-2141)

VOLUME

04

ISSUE

10

P

AGES

:

367-371

OCLC

1121105677
















































Publisher:

Oscar Publishing Services

Servi

Raising a child is a part of life, and without mistakes it

is inevitable. Moreover, as you know, none of us are

taught to be parents. However, there are such parental

mistakes that determine the child's life and

development for many years. Mistakes that children,

having grown up, continue to remember with pain and

resentment towards their parents. Parents are

constantly near their child, and it is no wonder that

sometimes they do not have time to notice how he has

changed. Maybe he is already able to do independently

what others continue to do for him. Maybe he is

already able to reason and make decisions, and you can

rely on him in many ways. However, it can also be the

other way around. We get ahead of events and it

seems to us that the child is already old enough, we

demand too much from him, we impose responsibility

that he is not yet able to bear. The process of growing

up, fortunately or unfortunately, happens on its own,

beyond our control.

But another law of developmental psychology states:

only a fully lived stage of life gives the opportunity to

be successful in the next one. In other words, only if a

child lives a full, fulfilling, real childhood, only then will

he be able to become a real, successful and... happy

adult. In the post-war years, during large-scale

observations of children in boarding schools, one

pattern was revealed. Children in boarding schools

received absolutely everything necessary for life (food,

treatment, clothing, etc.), but had absolutely no

emotional communication with adults. As a result,

many of them developed serious health problems,

intellectual and social development disorders.

Emotions are an important part of any human

relationship, be it business or personal. And, of course,

there is always an emotional component in the

relationship between a parent and a child to one

degree or another.

Joy, anger, pain, tenderness, resentment - any

emotions "color" communication, making it something

more than just an exchange of information. In

emotional communication, we learn to understand

ourselves and other people, we learn to empathize and

understand the feelings of our interlocutors. Finally,

we perceive and remember emotionally colored

information better. For a child, emotional contact with

parents and close adults is of particular importance.

There is no particular point in proving this statement; it

can be considered an axiom. Although the experiment

described in the example left no doubt at all.

Nevertheless, someti

mes parents “cross out”

emotions from their relationships with their child,

doing this more or less consciously and for a variety of

reasons.

Often, the stereotype that parents brought

from their mom and dad comes into play, when it is

believed that expressing warm feelings for each other

is something not quite decent, and simply “not

accepted”. This is not necessarily a variant of some


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Volume 04 Issue 10-2024

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American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research
(ISSN

2771-2141)

VOLUME

04

ISSUE

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AGES

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367-371

OCLC

1121105677
















































Publisher:

Oscar Publishing Services

Servi

kind of family trouble. After all, it may be similarly not

accepted to express negative feelings for each other.

It is simply a family model where restraint becomes one

of the main virtues. Politeness and goodwill may reign

in it, but communication will be quite formal. Such

coldness is due to the personal characteristics of the

parents themselves. First of all, the type of

temperament. A phlegmatic mom or dad is withdrawn,

reserved in themselves and do not experience violent

emotions. Accordingly, they do not need special

manifestations of love and may not give this to their

children (“I do not like these calf

-like tenderne

ss!”).

Having grown up a little, the children of such

unemotional parents usually understand that this is not

a lack of love. Grown-up children who resented their

mother/father for the lack of warmth in childhood

should realize that this could be connected with

serious problems in themselves. Various psychological

traumas can lead to a person avoiding any contact with

other people, especially physical contact. It is worth

mentioning affection separately. There is an opinion

that a child really needs physical contact with his

mother. Someone even calculated how many hugs and

kisses a child needs per day. Perhaps, this rule is

absolutely true only for children under one year of age.

Babies who do not yet separate themselves from their

mothers really do need physical contact. Older children

may express this need very individually: some still need

a lot of touching, some need to hear warm words, and

some need to see their mother or father smile more

often. Therefore, first of all, we are talking about

emotional contact.

Everything else is just a way to maintain it. Sometimes

parents explain their lack of communication with their

child by their own busyness. This can be heard

especially often from fathers. More often than not,

there are other, internal reasons behind this. The same

lack of confidence in oneself as a parent, isolation, and

others, which were discussed above. It is very

important to remember that a child needs emotional

communication with parents (and especially with

mother) as a way to feel safe, as a way to form a stable

positive self-

attitude (“if they show me love, then I am

worthy of it, I am good”). In addition, this is necessary

for the development of personality: the interest of a

close adult in the child's emotions helps to realize and

feel their value. This is also the path to developing

empathy, that is, the ability to sympathize with

another, to share feelings and thoughts with another

person.

If a child does not receive enough expressions of love,

he or she may try to earn it with all their might, and if

they fail, on the contrary, they may provoke irritation

or fear for their life. In order not to see indifference

towards themselves, the child will constantly strive to

confirm their importance in the lives of their parents.

What happens to a child who receives the message

“Don’t feel this” from a parent? Yes, they will suppress


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Volume 04 Issue 10-2024

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American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research
(ISSN

2771-2141)

VOLUME

04

ISSUE

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AGES

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367-371

OCLC

1121105677
















































Publisher:

Oscar Publishing Services

Servi

“wrong” emotions, which in the future will lead to the

inability to “hear themselves” and adequately assess

the states of other people. But what’s more, this is the

beginning of the development of an inferiority

complex: “Parents are not angry, it’s not good to be

angry, but if I’m angry, it means I’m somehow bad,

wrong, unworthy…”. These prohibitions on certain

feelings are not always heard out loud. Hidden

messages about the inadmissibility of love for one of

the family members are very common in conflict

families and in families after the parents’ divorce.

Parents' words generally have much more significance

in a child's fate than parents would like. Therefore,

they should be handled very carefully. It is very

important for a child to distinguish between the

attitude towards him and his behavior. The child's

actions, deeds, words may not please, make him angry.

But the child himself must be loved, this is important.

So, not "I don't love you when you do this", but "I don't

like it when you do this". In the eyes of an adult, the

difference in wording is almost imperceptible, in the

eyes of a child it is enormous. Unconditional love, love

without any conditions, gives a child a vital sense of

security. This is the rear that a child feels behind his

back throughout his life. Parental love that a child

needs like air. And also about sincerity in relationships

with a child, no matter how old he is, about openness,

readiness to accept and understand another person

with all his emotions, problems, doubts. It is not easy

to do this under the weight of your own problems,

affairs, habits and feelings.

But you can strive for this. Thus, it is not easy for a child

to express his own feelings. This creates an inseparable

connection with parents, in the presence of which it is

impossible to autonomize your inner world. After all,

the imaginary I of the child allows parents to gain the

sense of self-confidence that they so lack, and the

child, in turn, first consciously, and then unconsciously

makes himself completely dependent on his parents.

He cannot rely on his own feelings, he has never gained

the necessary experience, does not know his true

needs and is extremely alien to himself. In this

situation, he cannot internally separate from his

parents and in adulthood turns out to be dependent on

people who replace his parents. These people can be

partners, comrades and, above all, his own children.

Inherited memories, repressed into the unconscious,

force him to hide his true self from himself as carefully

as possible. As a result, the feeling of loneliness

experienced in childhood in the parental home and not

given a proper outlet leads to the isolation of a person

from himself. No matter how insignificant the reasons

may seem, no matter how inappropriate the feelings

may seem, the child has the right to be taken seriously

by those closest to him.

By devaluing emotions, we devalue the child's

personality itself. Parental interest in the child's

everyday life is very important: Not only in his school


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Volume 04 Issue 10-2024

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American Journal Of Social Sciences And Humanity Research
(ISSN

2771-2141)

VOLUME

04

ISSUE

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OCLC

1121105677
















































Publisher:

Oscar Publishing Services

Servi

grades and bad behavior, but in all his little joys and

sorrows, so insignificant at first glance. The main thing

is the willingness to understand your child, even if he is

different from you, to help him in his ideas and hobbies

and support them, even if they do not seem the most

promising, and finally, to change your vision of the

child following how he changes himself. Doing this

consciously or not, but behind the wall of their own

expectations and ideas, parents often do not notice a

little person, special and unique from birth. But you just

need to open your eyes to this uniqueness, and see

how interesting it will be to communicate with your

own child. You will not just educate and teach - you will

open up a whole world of real, living interaction

between two people, with all its joys and sorrows. Your

child will have a chance to live his own life - a real one.

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