Got an email from my dad, where he makes an argument for doing something he wants to do and feels will help me. The email is sectioned into titled chapters, including the preamble.
The reason that this is a noteworthy topic is because I have a somewhat strained relationship with my parents; what with their worshiping the ground I tread upon and my avoiding them because of their contributions to my deteriorated mental state. I lived an extremely listless, codependent, sedentary lifestyle when I was growing up with them, and ever since I moved away and tried to get help for my illness I've been trying to do things as independently as possible. After all, I had over 20 years of catching up to do on the whole "learn how to do things on your own" front.
So I've rejected offers of them buying me a house to live in, or of them buying a house for themselves that I could live in, or them making all the necessary arrangements and payments to move me down onto a boat in the Mediterranean or some shit, or them just throwing money at me so I never have to think about anything. I've brought up arguments about not wanting to feel beholden to them or in any way controlled by their influence, or even the chance of my being able to imagine that strings might be attached to anything. They've retorted by saying that I would of course maintain full agency over any and all affairs, that they would respect my wishes at every turn, and there would be no obligations hidden or unhidden.
But for all the talk of respecting my wishes; every time I ask them to stop trying to push help onto me, it normally lasts a few months before they're at it again. Such is the case now, after we had a good ol' talk all of us together with my psychiatrist, wherein I put my foot down and said just fucking stop.
And now I've got this formal, formatted email with the exact same topic. It's "beneficial for them" to move funds around in a way that they end up in my control or advantage. It's "nothing they can make use of personally". It comes "free of insinuations".
It comes with a finishing statement of "If I don't get a specific response before April, I'll just assume consent and move the funds anyways".
I realize how amazingly stupid it sounds to refuse free money/house/Italy, but I'm terrified of going back to who I used to be. I'm terrified that if I let them handle things, I'll slip back into my old ways of just letting them brush everything away. I've come so god damned far from who I used to be, and it has been one immense cockblender of a painful journey, and it scares me to my very core to think that I might lose all of it and just fade away back into being a shell of a living being.
Like, I recognize that I'm already kind of a fuckup parasite what with living on social benefits, and that from an objective standpoint it's not exactly worse having my parents pay for me than having the government foot the bill... But it's really, really hard for me to look at things that way.
...and I keep getting disappointed every time I push back and think "Maybe this time they'll understand", and then it just flies back in my face shortly after. That's the real problem. Even if I could get comfortable with the idea of accepting something big from them, saying "Yes" now feels like giving up and admitting defeat. But I'm also conflicted about saying "No" or outlining (again) the problems I just listed here, because of how dumb it is to turn down free support.