![]() If it’s a particularly difficult secret or you think the fallout will be really negative, make an appointment with a family therapist to talk about it first. Start with disclosing it to the person most affected by the secret, and then allow that person to decide if and when to widen the circle. I usually find that telling a secret in a big group is not a good idea,” Imber-Black says. “Some people think ‘Oh, I’ve got everybody here,’ but you will be forever the person known for ruining Christmas.” Select a quiet time when no big emotional events are happening in the family’s life – don’t do it near an upcoming birth or wedding, or right after a funeral. “Don’t do it at a holiday dinner,” Imber-Black says. If you’re holding onto a secret you think you should tell, the experts have a few tips for how to do it without being shunned for life: 1. And when they come out in an unexpected way, without some reasonable control, then I think the potential for bombs dropping, explosions and wreckage and destruction is high,” Walfish says. “Eventually I think most family secrets come out. And getting to pick the way they’re disclosed is crucial. ![]() That’s the thing about secrets – chances are they won’t last forever. “I urged them to tell her the truth, and it really helped her.” She felt different and didn’t know why,” Walfish says. “This 5-year-old sensed something different in the nature of the way this father related much warmer to his birth child. Turns out she and her younger sister had two different fathers, but their mother had married the father of the second child and passed him off as the father of both children. Fran Walfish, Beverly Hills child and family psychotherapist and author of The Self-Aware Parent: Resolving Conflict and Building a Better Bond with your Child, recalls meeting with a 5-year-old girl whose parents sent her to therapy because she was so vaguely unhappy. Family members often believe they are keeping a secret to save someone else from the pain of knowing it.īut in most cases, the person being kept out of the loop knows something is amiss, and that can have a devastating effect on the person’s sense of self and security. “Once something becomes a secret, then the decision-making – How do we open it, do we open it, how to deal with the fallout of someone saying ‘Why didn’t you tell me?’ – pulls in the direction of greater secrecy,” she says. ![]() Imber-Black is not surprised it took O’Neill’s mother her whole life to come clean. Though he says he wasn’t surprised to hear confirmation of his assumptions about his father, O’Neill was sad to realize that his parents weren’t the happily married couple he thought they were when was born. “(My father) had asked her never to tell me about him,” says the grandfather of five. They were stories he had half-assumed but never asked about. “I guess she felt I needed to know everything about my life,” says O’Neill, 68, who listened at her bedside as his 97-year-old mother disclosed secrets about her former husband’s womanizing and drinking. That’s virtually all he knew of his dad – until his mother became chatty on her deathbed a few months ago. He grew up with a doting, protective mother, never knowing much about his father except that they had divorced when he was 4. It’s about them, or something that affects their well-being, or about their history.” “The second important distinction is that secrets usually go to the heart of someone else’s right to know the information. Private matters do not,” says Imber-Black, a marriage and family therapist and director of the Ackerman Institute for the Family in New York City. “ Secret matters have shame attached to them.
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