For children of immigrants, there's a number of reasons why it may be difficult to show up wholly and authentically in your everyday life and relationships. >>
1. You may not have been taught how to handle failure or setbacks and/or you may not have been taught that quitting, walking away, or saying no can be acts of strength. These may manifest themselves as you "powering through" even when it's unhealthy or you're unhappy.
2. You may have been (and may still be) constantly compared to your peers so it may be difficult to genuinely support others' success without it feeling like you failed in some capacity. Or this may manifest itself as struggling to trust others to hold your own ideas & goals.
3. You may have been taught and modeled that happiness derives from what you can show for what you've done. So your self-worth may be tied to your ability to obtain material things and it may be hard to be content in the present moment and fulfilled with what you already have.
4. You watched your parents chase security & safety in this country, so you may avoid taking chances or pursuing unconventional paths even if they're what will make you happy or live authentically as you.
5. You may curate parts of your image and how you act / what you say for certain environments because you fear your wholeness being rejected -- by either your desi community because you're not desi enough or your American community because you're still categorized as an "other."
6. You may have been expected to always aspire for the next milestone/thing/goal. This may be why your self-worth is tied to your productivity and why it's hard for you to celebrate the small wins and honor your Big successes as something earned.
7. If/when you do pursue something your parents don't understand or don't initially support, you're often incessantly questioned & have to continuously prove that it makes you happy and it was the right choice for you. This can make it hard to find peace within your choices.
8. Your parents navigated a new life, country, & culture w/o any guidance. As such, they may believe you shouldn't need help, & if you do they will have the answers. So not only have you never been taught how to ask for help, it may feel like you're failing your parents if you do
Identifying our experiences is the first step, but remember: You are enough & whole as you are. If you need to ask for help, you're not letting anyone down. Your joys deserve to be celebrated. You are allowed to slow down & find happiness within. You are more than what you do.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Sahaj Kohli

Sahaj Kohli Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @SahajKohli

10 Oct
ONE in FOUR children in the U.S. has at least one foreign-born parent. So for World Mental Health Day, I want to highlight the unique mental health struggles that immigrant children & bicultural folks, like me, can experience at the intersection of our two differing cultures >>
1. In one culture we may be taught that seeing a therapist and/or talking about our mental health struggles is selfish and shameful, and in our other culture, we are taught that caring for our mental health is a sign of courage and bravery.
2. In one culture we're taught that groupthink -- or maintaining the harmony of, making decisions as, & considering the betterment of a group/family/community -- is most important, and in our other culture we are often encouraged to nurture our individuality & our self-efficacy.
Read 10 tweets
1 Sep
For children of immigrants, it's not uncommon to develop self-sabotaging behaviors for various reasons. >>

1. You may have been told that you're one thing or that you should be or do one thing, so now you may try to make your life work in that box, even if it doesn't feel right.
2. You may have grown up in a household where you had to learn to be comfortable with instability, so now as an adult you set your own upper limit potential -- or your own comfort for success -- that inhibits your growth.
3. You may have been told to do things well or don't do them at all. So at the first sight of a hiccup, mistake, or roadblock, you just give up altogether because it feels like you're a failure.
Read 10 tweets
3 Aug
While this is not an exhaustive list, here are 10 benefits of going to therapy for children of immigrants >>
1. Therapy can help you navigate your bicultural identity, multiple cultures, and the differing norms, values, and expectations.

2. It can provide a confidential, productive space to vent and work through struggles without fear of your community finding out.
3. Therapy can help you manage, and heal from, generational and unspoken trauma.

4. You can learn to explore your need and desire for boundaries in your relationships and how to effectively set and hold them in a way that works for you.
Read 6 tweets
11 May
Happy Mother’s Day to the immigrant moms who left their own homes before they even knew themselves and moved across the world w/ partners they may not have known very well only to birth life in a new country and plant roots in an unknown land.
Happy Mother’s Day to the immigrant moms who nurtured their children’s growth regardless of where it would take us. The ones who spent their whole lives putting themselves last, catering to our every whim, and making our everyday lives easier, often without appreciation.
Happy Mother’s Day to the immigrant moms who found their own voice by nurturing their children’s. The ones who argued with our fathers so we could have the freedoms they never experienced themselves. The ones who never felt strong but were adamant on raising strong women.
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!