Olivia Plath responds to critics, telling her “shut up” and “move on”
Olivia Has a message for trolls that criticize her decision to tell her childhood.
“I am so interesting to me that every time I talk about my childhood, and it is not extremely glowing and positively, these are the comments I get,” Platt said on Saturday, April 5, Instagram Video.
A Welcome to Platville The star shared the screenshots of the comments, which read: “Over the childhood, stop crying over it,” and “got (s) over yourself, you had a roof over your head and food. You act as you were abused because you couldn’t listen to a certain type of music.” The third user added: “I mean seriously, you don’t think at some point you just need to move on?!”
Platt wrote: “These comments from my stories yesterday say not to discover” secular “music until I was an adult with control.”
“The ironic thing is that these people probably started watching me because they saw me on a television show that emphasized a religious high -control family in this environment and what happens to children when they grow up? Are they leaving? said Plaths in the video.
She continued: “And if you even watched the show fragment, you would see that I was one of those children who did not work for me. I just wanted to head for my own drum. I wanted to be my own man. I didn’t want to match myself and became a clone in this highly resistant religious family or the environment.”
Platt noted that her childhood “informs” her adulthood directly.
“He reports that I know, but what I don’t know. What I am experiencing what I didn’t feel. What I don’t say. Things I am doing in my life now, things I don’t persecute,” she said. “My childhood directly reports all this from what it was. And it is also very brazen to tell me that there was never any abuse unless you grew up in the house in which I grew up.”
She continued: “Secondly, you want to tell me that there is no direct correlation with high control of religious conditions and abuse?
Platt added that she “confident” her trolls “tell her childhood” and claimed that the “only reason” they did not want her to discuss her own experience because it “disputes the story they have.”
“Children cannot be reinforced in what you want them. They are born with their own personality and they can become their own person,” she said. “And as a parent, your task is to guide them and bring them there. It’s not just putting the roof on your head, it’s not just feeding them with food. This is the minimum that you do when you have a baby. And if you are not ready to do it, you don’t need to have a baby.”
Platt noted that the more pushed back against her conversation about her experience, the more she feels forced to talk about it.
“This emphasizes the inconsistency of the information. This, frankly, emphasizes the ignorance that many cults have many people who grow, and I guess I just need to share much more history to help overcome this gap,” she said. “What a bummer”.
Post ordered the post: “Congle, I have a few more stories to share and unpacked 🫡 #exfundie #fundense #cult.”
Plaths that were brought up in a fundamentalist Christian household her eight siblingsIt was sincere in its growing experience. Platt has since left her childhood religion.
In March, Olivia stated that had suffered Violence in family and abuse being married to her ex -husband Ethon. US Weekly Turned to Itana and TLC for comments at the time.
If you or anyone is anyone you know, experience violence in the family, call National Hot Line of Violence in the Family in 1-800-799-7233 for confidential support.