T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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145.1 | Analyze the situation | ULTRA::ZURKO | Security is not pretty | Mon Dec 22 1986 15:32 | 26 |
| Are you looking at advice directed to you, or your wife? Sounds
like this has little effect on you, and that you're looking for
advice for your wife. In which case, I'd want to know more about
what your wife was looking to get out of this.
>actually its my wife['s] problem
Offhand, it sounds like there's some sort of problem that isn't getting
talked about, and it's a darn long term one. One possibility is that
your mother in law is somehow threatened by your wife. This is pure
speculation/projection(one of my problems with my mom). The way
I would (am) work(ing) that one out is to figure out just what is
threatening (your wife's intelligence, beauty, social position,
incredible marriage :-)), and go from there. Discuss it, help your
mom in law to get comfortable with it. DO NOT start any sort
of discussion with anything like "Mom, I think you're attacking
my stencilling because you're threatened by my intelligence." That's
a sure show stopper :-}.
Another possibility is that your mother in law is pyschologically
unfit. I have a friend who's mother is seriously qualifiably nuts, and
she does nothing but insult her daughter. The solution is this case is
obviously quite different. Your wife would need the help of a trained
pyschologist.
I bet there are millions (well, maybe tens) of more possibilities.
Mez
|
145.2 | But Mom, I'd rather do it myself | ADVAX::ENO | Bright Eyes | Mon Dec 22 1986 15:40 | 16 |
| Very often when there are problems between parents and children
it is because the parent and/or child has not learned to "let go"
of the relationship. They never learned to relate to each other
as two *adults* rather than as an adult and a child (which is how
they started out). This is a difficult transition, and many women
I know (including myself) still spend time trying to be "good girls"
for our mothers, and many mothers (including my own sometimes) still
try to dominate/influence unduly their adult children.
I don't know your wife's "style", but it may help her state of mind
about the situation to just say to her mother "I'm sorry you are
not satisified with my efforts/apple pie/decorating, but I didn't
do it to please you. I did it to please myself and *I'm* satisfied
with it, which is the important thing."
Gloria
|
145.3 | it's not your wife's fault! | ARGUS::CORWIN | Jill Corwin | Mon Dec 22 1986 15:43 | 20 |
| Offhand, I can't think of a solution to your problem. It sounds to me like your
mother-in-law is the one with the *real* problem, and your wife is suffering
from the consequences. She seems to have acknowledged this from what you've
said. Be grateful that you live far enough away to avoid having to get together
frequently. I'm glad your wife had the "courage" to tell her mother what she
thought, although the results weren't very encouraging. Perhaps bringing up the
subject on a different track; for example, have your wife explaining (to her
mother) how she enjoys seeing her, but that her criticism detracts from that
enjoyment. (ie, make it a more positive statement than an accusation). It
sounds like her mother has some sort of "inferiority complex", and needs to
build herself up whenever she can, at the expense of others. Perhaps helping
her build herself up without charging the others could be beneficial.
Sometimes I think I'm lucky that I moved up here to MA and left my family in NJ.
My sister has been telling me how her relationship with our mother is causing
her grief, and I think I've been spared because I'm "far away" and only see her
a few times a year. But then again, I miss her in between times and wish we
were closer.
Jill
|
145.4 | Change the old patterns. | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Mon Dec 22 1986 16:03 | 7 |
| Your wife can't change her mother's behavior, but she can change
her own. I imagine that constant insults from her mother are hurtful,
and yet her mother probably knows that. One thing your wife can
do is learn not to care so much (and not to get so hurt). She'd
probably be surprised by the results.
liz
|
145.5 | Another perspective on mother | SUPER::MATTHEWS | Don't panic | Mon Dec 22 1986 17:44 | 9 |
| I've always had this problem with my mother. It's hard for me to
see the situation objectively, but my husband believes she intends
her comments to be genuinely helpful, and doesn't realize how hurtful
they can be.
I agree that learning not to be hurt may be the best solution.
Avoidance helps, too.
Val
|
145.6 | Your wife holds ALL the cards here! | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Tue Dec 23 1986 13:17 | 69 |
| Carol Eno said it best. Your wife should just meet her mother head
on instead of cowering under the weight of her criticism!
"I'm sorry you don't like my <blank> but I think it's just fine"
is perfect! What's wrong with that?
It takes two people to play mind games and your wife is a willing
participant every time she hangs her head and slinks away from her
mother. When your mother-in-law critices her whatever, your wife
cannot react because she is thinking, "She's right - I'm no good".
Your wife is making more of these insults than she should, and is
willingly accepting the guilt for even BEING insulted!
If someone at work said to you, "This report doesn't make much sense
to me", would you take it back silently and be hurt? Crushed?
Why not?
Because you have separated the report from your sense of self worth.
This is what your wife has not done. When your mother-in-law
criticizes your wife's apple pie, why doesn't your wife react the same way
as you would in the example above? Because your wife has not separated
her sense of self worth.
I'd make that woman elaborate and point out exactly what she meant.
Openly discussing the actual criticism itself would eventually flush
out your mother-in-law's motives. And forget wondering why your
mother-in-law says what she says, that's HER problem for HER to
deal with. You let her off WAY too easy!
"Why don't you like my apple pie?"
"Well, dear, it's just that you use a bit too much cinnamon" (pitiful
smile)
"I use the amount of cinnamon that we like. Don't you use the amount
of cinnamon that YOU like?"
I'd LOVE to hear her answer to that one!
Your wife is not listening to the words but is hearing only "You
are inadequate" AND she is agreeing with it.
So talk about the stenciling and NOT your wife's competence! Discuss
the apple pie and NOT self worth!
Oh, one other thing - Yes, your mother-in-law is going to act
"victimized". She likes the game she plays with her daughter and
she is going to resent the fact that your wife refuses to play any more.
That doesn't mean you have to tip toe around her or try and placate
her any way you can. You are rejecting the GAME and not the woman
and you must make that very clear by your words and actions. Stay
friendly, stay happy and stay calm but call her on EVERY little snide
remark and deal with the REMARK and not the person!
And this is your wife's problem only. There's nothing really you
can do until she is ready to abandon the game. Your wife is getting
something out of continuing to play and you can help her find out what
it is using "what ifs".
"What would happen if you told your mother you liked the stenciling
and you were sorry that she couldn't enjoy it also?"
"What would happen if your mother DID leave in a huff?"
You get the picture but expect a little tension from your wife as
these questions begin unveiling HER hidden agenda and payoff in the game!
She's GOT to be willing to end it for it to end.
|
145.7 | Grandmothers do it, too! | RSTS32::TABER | If you can't bite, don't bark! | Tue Dec 23 1986 13:42 | 47 |
| Boy howdy! This is an age old problem....
My grandmother used to do the SAME thing to my mother, but direct the
criticisms in such a fashion that they weren't direct attacks but left
my mother confused and hurt....
UNTIL such a time when my Aunt, who was living with my grandmother with
her small daughter (a manless household -- I was green with envy!!:*)),
shed some light.
My mother had KILLED herself setting up a room in the house for Gram to
stay when she got out of Mass General hospital. I had given up my room
and had bunked in with my brothers, Dad had repapered in Grammy's favorite
colors, we had sanded the floors, repainted the windows and woodwork,
and Mom bought new matching curtains and a comforter for the bed.
As Grammy was wheeled into the room, she glanced at the room (which she
had been very familiar with through me), and said "Harumph... well,
at least it's clean..."
Mom was crushed. Moaning about boiled chicken that was boiled wrong
was one thing, but this????!!!
Aunt Marion laughed out loud, tucked Grammy into the bed, and said,
"Mother, you'll do ANYTHING to keep from feeling guilty, won't you??!!!
You DESERVE this treatment, you DESERVE all of Barbara's hard work, and
SHE deserves your gratitude....!"
And with that, Mom suddenly understood that the moaning and complaining
had a DEEPER psychological significance than it represented. Grammy
felt GUILTY about all of my mother's devotions and hard work, and
felt that SHE was letting my mother down by NEEDING it... and she
turned that guilt inward, it made her feel awful, and she in turn attacked
my mother because Mom (ipso facto) was making her feel awful! What a bad
daughter to make her mother feel that lousy!!!
*sigh* It helps me in dealing with my mother sometimes... and Mom never
did quite get the hang of Grammy's problems, but we've been helping her
sort it all out...
I guess the moral is to never take criticism at face value -- it usually
is a mask for something else.
Easy to hear, hard to do. Best wishes to your wife... she's gonna be
facing ALOT when she decides to deal with this....
Karen
|
145.8 | | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Tue Dec 23 1986 15:56 | 31 |
|
One thing to remember is "If you don't stand up, you don't stand
a chance." It's important not to let others' negative comments keep
you from growing. BUT it's not so easy to shake it off when those
negatives are coming from MOM. After all, your mom is the one person
in the world you can always count on no matter what, right? Everyone
will tell you that. Especially when you're a child. Books tell you
that. TV tells you that. All the greeting cards tell you that. What
normal child doesn't desperately WANT to believe that? You have to
accept that YOUR mom is not like that, that she may very well never
change, and there may not be anything you can do about it. Also, as
child you are in a double bind, because GOOD children are expected
to be nice to their mothers, even if mom isn't nice to them. It's
normal to want to be loved by your mom, and to believe if you wait
long enough maybe mom will change and start liking you. It took
someone else to tell me, "Hey, your mom really is an idiot, you don't
HAVE to like her just because she's your mom." And you are not a
bad kid because you don't like what she does to you.
It's important to try all ways of getting through to her. But be
prepared for the fact that it might not work. Everytime I told my
mother I had feelings she would call other members of my family and
scream at them about how awful I was until they, in desperation,
would call me and beg me to APOLOGIZE to her for being such a
rotten kid. Obviously, I had no support in the family. It takes a
LOT of distance to break out; for me it took being a whole continent
away. Sometimes you have to lookto other women to learn from, to
emulate, even though it never quite fills the empty spot where mom
is supposed to be.
|
145.9 | kill her with jokes | DONJON::EYRING | | Tue Dec 23 1986 16:10 | 9 |
| I liked the answer in .7. Treat the little digs as jokes and laugh
at Mom for them. Part of her "reward" for these comments is that
you take them seriously. If you don't take them seriously, they
can't be serious!
Ah yes, easier said than done!
Sally
|
145.10 | Mea culpa! | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Tue Dec 23 1986 16:39 | 44 |
| As oppossed to a previous note which stated "Don't take criticism
at face value", I am advocating exactly the opposite.
If you TAKE the criticism at face value you are separating the criticism
from the deeper, hidden meanings. This HAS to be done because in
this particular mind game, the mother is seemingly offering "just"
a criticism but the daughter is obediently reacting to the deeper,
hidden meaning. This type of dance didn't develop overnight but
they both developed it together and it's up to the daughter to separate
the mothers motives from their manifestations.
I say the daughter should IGNORE the deeper, hidden meaning and discuss
the actual criticism itself. To the mother, the actual criticism
itself is not the point. The deeper, hidden meaning is the point
and the daughter can easily get her mother to admit it by acting
oblivious to the deeper, hidden meaning. The mother's criticisms
will be completely defused when she realizes her daughter is discussing
simply cinnamon instead of playing the game and dutifully acting like
a worthless little girl.
The mother is going to be perplexed at first and then think it's
a fluke and start again with something else, for instance, her
stenciling. When she sees her smiling daughter innocently discussing
the merits of stenciling the mother is going to get a bit frustrated
to say the least. I'd say the mother blows up after the third arrow
misses it's mark and she finally comes right out with what she REALLY
wants to say in one red-faced rage! Then, bingo. You've got her.
Oh yes, she's going to be pissed! The mother has accomplished her
belittlement for years with nary a twinge of guilt - daughter
willingly took it all for her - so don't expect she's going to start
accepting responsibility for her feelings easily! But making her
responsible is what the daughter HAS to do. If mother has something
to say, make her SAY it and make her RESPONSIBLE for it! Don't let her
get away with "I'll throw you an innocuous zinger and you'll know
and accept that I mean much more by it".
And if the daughter is afraid that mother won't "like" her if she
exposes the game, then chances are the mother is guilty of emotional
blackmail. In any case the daughter really is voluntarily wearing a
hair shirt for her and she has the power to simply take it off.
|
145.11 | | HBO::HENDRICKS | Holly | Tue Dec 23 1986 17:18 | 24 |
| I hear:
control issues
need for approval
a vicious circle
in this one.
It sounds like your mother in law is terrified of NOT being in control
of her daughter...is she usually a controlling person? Does she
have any idea what it would be like not to be in control?
All of us want to be loved, yet too often are forced to settle for
desperately trying to get the *approval* of our parents. If this
doesn't get resolved it can spill over into later life relationships.
It's hard to know whether this is really going on without knowing
your wife, but it might be worth thinking about. The fact that
your wife goes along with it at some cost to herself (=tension)
would make it worth looking at.
And control/need for approval usually constitute a vicious circle.
Eric Berne describes various "games" along these lines in his book
"Games People Play".
Good luck with this one...
|
145.13 | {RE .10} | VAXUUM::DYER | Spot the Difference | Mon Jan 19 1987 03:04 | 17 |
| {RE .10} - I agree with you that taking the stuff at face value and thereby
forcing the issue away from that stuff is usually a good approach. It seems
to me, though, that Bugsy's Aunt Marion knew what the underlying problem was,
so she didn't need to get to it using the stuff at face value.
Either approach may work. Dealing with the stuff at face value is probably
safer, since you're less likely to guess wrong; but be prepared to have to
wade through a lot of irrelevant subject matter!
Using the "Aunt Marion" approach would probably only work if you know somebody
pretty well. A problem with this, though, is if you hit the nail on the head,
the other person might be startled that you've "guessed" something they're
trying to divert attention from, and deny it.
Either way will get a dialogue going, though; so either way is better than
silence.
<_Jym_>
|
145.14 | The Mother needs to be able to talk too!!! | SAVAGE::CISZEK | | Thu Jan 22 1987 14:52 | 49 |
| After reading through the replies in this file, I have not seen
one item that suggests that the Mother of the person involved in
this really wants to discuss the problem and be honest about it.
My wife, and her mother, have had a stormy relationship for as long
as I have known them (16+ years). By the way, we've been married
for 13 of those years. Anyway, my wife has tried everything mentioned
here in an attempt to solve the problem between them and some that
have not been mentioned as well.
She has tried confronting her directly, trying to use a more suttle
approach, she's tried ignoring the things said and done, she's written
letters trying to explain her feelings and on and on. Nothing has
seemed to work. It seems that each time my wife "hits the nail on
the head" her mother changes topics and then refuses to talk about
it anymore. She has told my wife that everything is in her head
and that she is taking everything the wrong way but, she refuses
to clarify her own statements. This usually develops into a screaming
match between the 2 of them and nothing gets settled, in fact, things
keep getting worse.
Finally, after years of frustration, my wife sent her mother a letter
and told her that unless she was ready and willing to listen to
her and talk about things, she didn't want anything more to do with
her. We both expected some sort of reply, (you're full of sh*t,
you're wrong, go to hell, etc.) but instead we've heard nothing....for
over 2 years!!!!! The content of the letter was VERY deep and personal
and went back to when my wife was a child. without going into a
lot of detail, all she asked for was an explanation as to why her
mother said and did the things to her when she knows that it hurts
her so much.
At first, the fact that there was no reply, not even a phone call,
bothered my wife so much that she was willing to call her mother
and apologize. But, she really thought about it and figured the
"ball was in her mothers court" and it was her move to make. Which
leads me to the point I was trying to make... My mother-in-law is
a very stubborn person!!! I know that my wife hit the nail to many
times and possibly to hard for her mother to bear, but they say
the truth hurts. My mother-in-law is not willing to discuss ANY
problem that she thinks she is not part of. In this case she thinks
the problems are all my wifes and, knowing her as I do, she will
probably go to her grave before she admits that she MIGHT have done
something to hurt her daughter. She has, and will continue to, refuse
to talk about it. Until she does, I fully expect my wife to stick
to her guns and wait...and see what happens.
Only time will tell,
Frank
|
145.15 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Fri Jan 23 1987 12:26 | 8 |
| Frank,
Thanks for typing all of that in. It sounds like you're giving your
wife a lot of support. Thanks for a different (and scary) perspective
on this situation. It makes me wonder how far I want to push this
sort of issue.
Liz
|
145.16 | It's HER choice... | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Fri Jan 23 1987 16:04 | 20 |
|
re: .14
I could have told the same exact story!!! I, too, wrote a letter
and got no reply. I expected to get what I usually got which was
"You're lying! You do everything just to hurt me!". This time I
told her not to talk to me EVER unless she was willing to grow
up and talk sensibly and take responsiblity for her actions.
I haven't heard a word since. Some people LIKE being miserable
so much they are willing to give up their children. Apparently
that's what she wants.
k.
(Also, .14, I did suggest in an earlier reply that it might not be
a good idea to expect change, because she might not, and you are
setting yourself up for heartbreak if you do.)
|
145.17 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Fri Jan 23 1987 17:05 | 25 |
| re 16:
I'm not sure about the approach you're taking. Maybe your mother
*is* pretty immature. I've had good luck with my mother by making
certain topics "off-limits" because as I tell her, "We'll just end up
fighting", she agrees, and we go on to other surface, superficial
topics, which is about all I've ever been able to talk with Mom about
without fighting. But she's pretty cool about letting go when it
gets too heavy.
It seems pretty heavy-handed to write a nasty note and leave your
mother with a load like that. I think if I were in the position
of getting such a letter, I'd be pretty burnt and may respond (or
not respond in this case) just as she did! In general, I think
nasty notes are written by cowards who are afraid to face a person
face-to-face with a problem. Although, it sounds like the woman
in .14 tried just about everything she could. And maybe you did
too. But think about how *you* would feel if your mother had written
you a similar note. Would you be angry? I know I would be.
I don't know. I've had pretty good luck walking out the door for
a while if necessary, changing the topic, ignoring Mom for a while,
etc. I've never had to resort to nasty notes.
-Ellen
|
145.18 | Did it end well? | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | It is a time to remember | Fri Jan 23 1987 20:01 | 34 |
| I can relate to this subject all to well. I don't have any
answers just a little scenerio.
I stopped communicating with my Mother after a difficult phone call.
I did not tell her I would not call again, I just did not call her
and she did not call me. She was injured and in the hospital for
a few days. Her sister lived in the same house and she was not
alone. My brother decided to visit and establish a relationship
at this time. He had ignored Mom after Dad's death. Mom and brother
became great friends and a plan was put into place for Mom to move
in with the brother (her sister was retiring and moving to Maine).
I visited Mom occasionally during the four years she lived with
my brother. About a year ago she sent me a letter and told me she
was moving to congregate housing. She had barely acknowledged me
for four years. She also told me her money was all gone.
Mom didn't have much, enough to last four years I guess.
This was one of the easiest and yet the most difficult situation
I have had to deal with. I don't know how I changed so fast but
my Mother thinks I am a saint. Because I turned the other cheek
and have provided her the emotional support she needs at this
time.
I have to admit that there is some pleasure in reminding my Mom
of past hurts. I don't do it often but there are times that I
do to her as she did to me.
I have two beautiful grown daughters and I think my Mom understands
more what she missed by observing what I have. Two great friends!!!
Joyce
|
145.19 | the right to be happy | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Mon Jan 26 1987 09:30 | 13 |
| .17
My mother is a very hostile and paranoid woman. I tried for years
to convince her to get help, but she still maintains that there
is nothing wrong. I was tired of being attacked for the crime of
simply existing. I have the right to be happy and the right NOT
to suffer verbal abuse from this woman. I think you cannot
even conceive of what its like to have a mother who resents every
word that comes out of your mouth. Yes, I'm angry sometimes because
I would love to have a mother that loves me. But I've found other
women to fill that void, providing friendship and a healthy instead
of paranoid outlook on life.
k.
|
145.20 | Just talk to me... | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Mon Jan 26 1987 13:52 | 48 |
|
Response to .17
>I've had good luck with my mother by making certain topics
"off-limits" because as I tell her, "We'll just end up fighting",
she agrees,
You are assuming, as .14 said, that she WANTS to be reasonable.
My mother makes a point of starting fights. If she can't get to me
she calls someone else and gets them upset. She deliberately tries
to destroy the relationship between me and my grandmother (who is
her own mother!). My grandmother and I have a totally separate
relationship now because my mother has hurt us so much by using me
to hurt her and vice versa. My grandmother doesn't understand her
either.
>It seems pretty heavy-handed to write a nasty note and leave your
mother with a load like that.
You are assuming what the contents of my letter were. It was not
a nasty note. Mine was just as in .14. I explained that I was
hurt and why. I told her I expected a responsible reply. Not
the usual crap. If you want nasty, imagine having your mother
call you on every birthday and saying "This is the woman you caused
so much pain to [nn] years ago today." Take that load and live
with it.
>I think if I were in the position of getting such a letter, I'd
be pretty burnt. But think about how *you* would feel if your
mother had written you a similar note. Would you be angry?
I hope she's mad as hell! I hope it wakes her up. I hope it WORKS!
Last summer she sent me the address of the executor of her estate.
Go ahead mom! Talk to me! When I went to apply for a passport I
didn't even know how old she is.
>nasty notes are written by cowards who are afraid to face a person
face-to-face with a problem.
I lived in HER ("This is MY house, NOT yours!") house for 14
years. I faced it. Without going into details, I forced her
to look at herself one day. She packed her bags and left the
house for 3 days.
>I've never had to resort to nasty notes.
Consider yourself BLESSED!
|
145.21 | In defense.... | RSTS32::TABER | If you can't bite, don't bark! | Mon Jan 26 1987 14:47 | 35 |
| Re: .17
I think you're dealing from a perspective that doesn't allow you to
face the reality that not all mothers are GOOD mothers. Your relationship
with your mother (or other mothers) is such that you can't understand
THRILL::FRIBERG's motivations. To you, it just seems like an
arbitrary attack by a vicious daughter.
Believe me, it's not. I know Kristen. I haven't MET her mother, but
I've heard more than just what Kris has to say... and it blew me
away as well because my mother adores each one of her children and I
could turn into an axe-murderer and she'd still love me and still show it.
And I've seen Kris struggle to try to turn off all of her mother's
negative forces on her.... Do you think it doesn't hurt her MORE than it
hurts her mother???? If it DOES hurt her mother, which I would, at
this point, doubt. I think her alienations of Kristen are a victory to
her....
We're all entitled to be love and respected AT LEAST by our parents.
And when you don't get that by the simple virtue that you were BORN,
then it's not YOU that's initiating it.
This woman shouldn't have had children.... but, if she hadn't, Kristen
wouldn't be here and I, for one, would feel that loss.
And it takes incredible strength and understanding for Kris to finally
be able to say "It's not ME in this relationship that's the problem,
it's HER! And her title of "mother" doesn't not absolve her of the
responsibility to treat me like a human being!".
I'm lucky that I don't need to do that, but I pray that should my time come,
I have the strength to do so.
Karen
|
145.22 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Mon Jan 26 1987 18:18 | 26 |
| re -1
You jumped to conclusions. I was *not* passing judgement on a
single relationship. I was voicing an opinion on how to deal with
a relationship from personal experience (just my own, limited
experience, which is as valid as yours is). It's quite easy to say
to myself in my situation that the problem is not mine, but is my
mother's and have my sisters and I agree to each other, yes, yes,
poor Mom's got this problem and feel absolved of all my wrong.
I don't know what 16's situation was, but I'm cautioning against
jumping to a conclusion that *you* are right and your *mother* is
wrong. It's almost never that simple. My God, she's just a *person*!
And people make mistakes and sometimes they're stubborn too! She
probably did the best she could in her own limited, hopeless way.
And do not misunderstand. I certainly do not advocate seeing or
talking to your mother if it causes you pain. I am the last in
the world who would ever be a martyr or ever endorse it. I just
think that a person should come to peace in his or her heart with the
people that their parents are, whether they are good or bad, and
not let it hinder them in their futures. I do not advocate meanness
of spirit to parents for having done a lousy job. That's the part
I was voicing against in my last reply.
-Ellen
|
145.23 | | RSTS32::TABER | If you can't bite, don't bark! | Tue Jan 27 1987 13:07 | 46 |
| Yeah, but, Ellen... you're saying that Kristen's (or anyone's) feelings
about their mother constitute "meanness of spirit" and that's not really
fair... She's angry, yes, but she's entitled to be angry and if you tell
her "Don't be angry at your mother" she'll only submerge that anger and
it'll come out in another form. There's anger and maybe there is even
hate, but at least there isn't indifference....
There is a bond that exists between parent and child that prohibits
violent expressions of feelings.... normally. When a parent and child
don't bond, that prohibition doesn't exist. And all the anger and hurt
and feelings of betrayal and abandonment come shrieking out....
I certainly don't advocate writing nasty letters to anyone, although
writing heartfelt letters of desperation can somehow be misconstrued
to be like that.... but this one act of communication is a way
the child can help deal with some of the feelings....
Yes, it takes two to tango.... but at what point would you stop
lapping at the heels of a parent who doesn't want you? At what point
would you STOP praying for a solution and start saying "The Hell with
it.... I need to survive...". How do you stop feeling frustrated at
the fact that the reason the relationship is not working is because
YOU exist?
It's like a marriage gone sour, I guess, but with one partner so
completely baffled because the problem started when they were barely
comprehending breathing on their own. How much responsibility can
the one partner assume?? And if that partner was shown nothing but
contempt and abuse, what can they have learned in dealing with this
parent but contempt and abuse?
We're lucky, you and I. We both have mothers with whom we can fight
and accomplish things, who will listen to what we say, and I am
particularly blessed because my mother often tells me that I am
the daughter she always wished for... and more.
I don't know what I would do if my mother were indifferent to me, uncaring
or abusive. I would probably be very angry... but I sure would hurt
inside knowing I didn't have the kind of mother I have now... and
that might make me pull away, knowing I didn't HAVE to take it anymore.
If having a relationship with your mother is threatening your existence,
then you do what you have to do to survive... and try not to let the
guilt of others affect you for they simply have no capacity to understand.
Karen
|
145.24 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Tue Jan 27 1987 13:25 | 33 |
| re -1:
>Yeah, but, Ellen... you're saying that Kristen's (or anyone's) feelings
>about their mother constitute "meanness of spirit" and that's not really
>fair...
Karen, would you *stop* jumping to conclusions. I did not say anything
about Kristen's relationship! I don't know her or her mother.
I did not say anything unfair in my last reply. I was cautioning against
something that *could* happen to people. Not anyone in particular.
>Yes, it takes two to tango.... but at what point would you stop
>lapping at the heels of a parent who doesn't want you? At what point
>would you STOP praying for a solution and start saying "The Hell with
>it.... I need to survive...". How do you stop feeling frustrated at
>the fact that the reason the relationship is not working is because
>YOU exist?
I said in my reply that if a relationship caused unhappiness I
would not see or talk to the person in the relationship causing pain.
I *said* that! Furthermore, all I said originally is that notes
written where the person cannot respond is not the *best* way to deal
with folks.
Imagine if your husband decided he wanted a divorce and wrote you
a letter about it! I'd want an in-person explanation, not a letter
in my lap. I don't know how this applies and maybe it doesn't to
the relationship you're talking about. Most of all, I certainly
*never* said that people should actively pursue hurtful relationships.
For this reason, I don't see my aunt anymore and I see one of my
sisters not very often and only for very short periods of time, if
possible.
-Ellen
|
145.25 | Please be supportive or constructive | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Tue Jan 27 1987 15:11 | 67 |
|
Reply to .22
>I do not advocate meanness of spirit to parents for having
>done a lousy job. That's the part I was voicing against in
>my last reply.
"I told her not to talk to me EVER unless she was willing to grow
up and talk sensibly and take responsiblity for her actions."
This is what you call meanness of spirit?
I am asking her to be an adult and treat me like an adult.
She has destructive behaviors and refuses to acknowlege what
she is doing. If she were a drug addict and I told her to quit
many times, she refuses, then I say 'ok, either you quit or
you lose me' is that using 'meanness of spirit'?
>I just think that a person should come to peace in his or her
>heart with the people that their parents are, whether they are
>good or bad, and not let it hinder them in their futures.
If she continues her behavior she will continue to hinder my
future because she is destroying the rest of my family along
with herself. I would say (and have already said) the same
things to anyone else who has destructive behavior.
>notes written where the person cannot respond is not the *best*
way to deal with folks.
I wrote a letter because if I had tried to say it in person
she would have walked away from me, screaming. I've tried it
many times before. And honestly, no I don't want to be called
a lying, selfish, rotten child again for the 399999th time.
If she wants to respond honestly she knows where I am.
People who have not had to deal with destructive parents on a daily
basis probably don't understand this. I think what you see as meanness
is the hard edge of reality that I am faced with. No it's not pretty.
Next time you talk to your mom thank her for liking herself enough to
like you.
* * *
Reply to .24
This puzzles me...
>You jumped to conclusions. I was *not* passing judgement on a
>single relationship.
>I did not say anything about Kristen's relationship!
The following is from your original reply to me(.17). It sounds
like judgement passing to me :
>> I'm not sure about the approach you're taking.
>> It seems pretty heavy-handed to write a nasty note and leave your
mother with a load like that.
>> I think nasty notes are written by cowards who are afraid to face
a person face-to-face with a problem.
Why did you assume the contents of my letter to be nasty when you
haven't seen it?
If you want to give advice in general on the care and feeding of
mothers, please use language to imply that.
|
145.26 | To set the record straight | SAVAGE::CISZEK | | Tue Jan 27 1987 17:45 | 21 |
| This is just to set the record straight. The letter my wife wrote
was FAR FROM NASTY. She truly dug down into her heart and asked
and pleaded for her mother to explain WHY. All she wanted was answers
to the many questions. She wasn't the least bit nasty in the wording
or content. That letter was the most sincere letter I have ever
seen. My wife wrote about things that I didn't even know, and we've
been married for over 13 years. It was a shock to me too.
The writting of the letter was her absolute last resort. She had
tried everything humanly possible to get through to her mother and
nothing worked. She tried eveything that has been mentioned here
and many things that haven't been mentioned. The whole ordeal has
been going on fromthe day she was born, and that is very hard for
the majority of people to even comprehend. It took it's toll on
her both physically and mentally. How she hung on as long as she
did is a testament to her own internal spirit. After seeing and
hearing what went on between the two of them, I still have a hard
time believeing it, and I was there for the last 13 years!!!!
E'NUF SAID,
Frank
|
145.27 | The relationship that is irreplacable | THRILL::FRIBERG | | Wed Jan 28 1987 09:35 | 24 |
|
Dear Ellen,
I think you are lucky to have lived a life where you didn't have
to deal with abusive parents. I know you can't understand what
I've been through any more than I understand what would be like to
share hugs and secrets with a mom.
One of the last straws for me was when my 90 year old grandmother
called me in tears, sobbing "Your mother has given me the tongue
lashing of my life because I talked to you!". Although I feel that
my grandmother has the obligation to stand up for her rights, she
didn't. The only thing I can do is not allow my mother to use me to
hurt other people, thus the letter. I don't know if it was right. I
only know that I don't like being used and abused. I know that my
methods of curbing this abuse seem strange to you. My mother is
having a rough time but she is the only one who can stop it. It's
not easy for anyone to face rejection day after day from the people
who brought you into the world. Count your blessings that you may
never know what it's like.
Let's work together.
Kristen
|
145.28 | | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Wed Jan 28 1987 10:01 | 17 |
| The original reply was written to offer a different perspective on
options to dealing with parents. I didn't qualify it then, but it was
really meant as a thought for others who may be having problems
with a parent. It may have sounded to you like I was "passing
judgement", but I feel as bad that you are accusing me of being
"judgmental" as you do about what I wrote! (which was not meant
to hurt anyone). And it was *not* meant to be judgmental of *you*!
I didn'tsee when I wrote it that it would be taken as hurtful or
judgmental of a particular relationship.
In all of this, I was try to offer the perspective of "parents
as people" - not all good, not all bad, just people. It's something
I've had to learn in my life. It seemed like this whole note (not
just your reply, Kristen) was going down a hole with "parents as
problems" and I wanted to balance it out.
-Ellen
|
145.30 | | HBO::HENDRICKS | Holly | Wed Jan 28 1987 13:26 | 17 |
|
As I was reading the last few notes I noticed that a number of people
were feeling misunderstood or attacked or judged.
One of the limitations of a conference like this is that we must
piece together a story about someone's life from a very small bit
of data. I think it would be nearly impossible to read a short
note without reading in meaning or events or subtleties from our
own lives, not those of the writer!
It brought to mind one of the old tenets from consciousness raising
group days: each woman is an expert on herself, her life and her
experiences.
Holly
|
145.31 | Mom | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | It is a time to remember | Wed Jan 28 1987 18:04 | 32 |
| I can relate to Kristen's experience and this note has given me
a lot to be thankful for. The problem between my mother and I has
been resolved and for the most part all is well.
How did it happen? I changed and she changed. When my children
became adults our family structure changed. My adult children and
I are close friends and we share a lot of good things and some
problems. My mother was not that important to me. So I just ignored
her.
Some good things are happening with the elderly also. Mom was forced
to go to a medical day care in NH. It had always been difficult
for her to discuss her feelings but she has started to explore her
attitudes and how they developed.
Then she needed a support system. I was the only one that wold
do it and I could not justify ignoring her when I was just becoming
involved with homeless women. (How could I ignore Mom and yet be
kind to someone I didn't know?)
The time was right and we have a good relationship now. I get a
lot of praise for my accomplishments, and Mom has the support system
she needs.
But the pain is hard to forget...and I still think of how I needed
her support in the troubled years I had.
Kristen, I keep saying I am a good person because I spited my Mom,
maybe I wouldn't have grown as much as I have if she had been the
kind of Mom that I was looking for!
Joyce
|
145.32 | I won't take it...don't care who they are. | ARGUS::COOK | Mental Graffiti | Fri Jan 30 1987 05:34 | 6 |
|
not related but, my mother is rather abrasive sometimes but when
I move out of the house things will change. Then when she pulls
the same antics on a visit she is in for a real rude awakening!
prc
|
145.33 | since we can't pick our relatives... | LOGIC::MEEHAN | | Fri Jan 30 1987 21:03 | 37 |
|
> Where direct dialog with the parent doesn't work, I wonder if
> anyone has had any success with an "intervention" where an
> independent professional (psychologist, clergy, social worker,
> etc.) trained in the method is in attendance?
A few years ago I was having a terrible time with both of my parents --
so much so that I went to see a psychiatrist because I needed an
objective party to help me sort things out. Before I talked to him
I thought that confronting my parents with someone like him in attendance
was just what I needed.
After talking to him just two or three times, I realized that this was the
very last thing that I wanted. The impasse that I had reached with my
parents came about because I had already confronted them with things that
they do not want to face -- their own hurts and scars from family
relationships and tragic childhoods.
Around the same time that I was talking to the psychiatrist, I read a book
called something like "Making Peace with Your Parents" or "How to Make Peace
with Your Parents" by a Dr. Green<something-or-other>. (I suppose I could
dig up the real citation if anyone is interested.)
The book was a real eye-opener and well worth the day that I took off from
work to read it. Basically, it says your life is your own -- you should
take responsibility for it and not let your parents push you around, if you
think that they are doing that. And, in pursuing this remember that your
parents are not your lump of silly putty to play with. The book even
includes some "desensitizing" exercises for people to use before visiting
that difficult parent, as well as some exercises that help you maintain a
healthy perspective.
I now get along with my parents much better. It is more of a surface
relationship than I want, but it gets better with time and we have more
respect for each other.
Margaret
|
145.34 | Re: .0 - how can an SO/spouse help? | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Fri Jul 24 1987 15:03 | 62 |
| I realise this topic is old, but I'll put this in anyway. It might
help someone else.
Whether a damaged parent/child relationship can be salvaged is,
as it seems from all the previous replies, dependent upon the people
directly involved. The question is: can/might/should an SO/spouse
do anything to help?
This tactic, while many may condemn it as sexist, worked in my family.
My mother has (still) a very hostile relationship with her own mother.
She also lived with my parents for their initial married years.
My mother was so beaten down that she had no idea of how to even
begin to stand up to her own mother--and she wasn't trying to build
the most wonderful relationship around, just stop the sniping, the
abuse, the contempt, the guilt traps my grandmother laid so expertly.
When I asked her why I never remembered any of this behavior in
my own girlhood, she told me that one day, about six months after
my grandmother had moved in with them, my father took my grandmother
aside for a private talk. He told her that he would not tolerate
anymore the abuse to someone who he loved more than anyone else,
and that it would have to stop or she would have to leave their
home. When she pulled the "I don't know what you're talking about"
line on him, he gave her a complete list of specific instances that
illustrated what he _was_ talking about. He was gentle, brutally
truthful, and never once raised his voice to her. He made it clear
she didn't have to pretend to have loving feelings she didn't have.
Just that she would not be allowed to continue to abuse my mother
anymore, or she'd have to leave. She shaped up and thus began the
first stirrings of civility between the two women.
Admittedly, that was pretty high-handed of him; those were also
the days when it was more customary for a man to put his foot down
about the behavior of those who lived with him. But it worked.
And it just might work with someone of an older generation, if only
to first get her attention.
If you wanted to try something like a private talk with your mother
in law along the lines of "you are abusing someone I love dearly,
and I will not tolerate it", it'd be a good idea to find out if your
wife would welcome this type of support. It'd be a good idea to talk
anyway and find out what sort of support she'd like, if any. If
she doesn't want any support, or figures that she just has to live
with this situation, maybe your concern can help her begin to ask
why.
Marcia
PS. As a footnote: In the middle of a minor family feud I used
the same line with my sister, who has hated our mother for a long
time. I took a deep breath and told her "that's your opinion,
and it may be valid but it has no bearing on this situation, so
I'd appreciate it if you'd stop beating it to death--I love our
mother and it makes me sick to hear you always talk like this.
Let's work on resolving the actual situation. If you hate her that
much, don't participate in plans for any solution." My sister admitted
that she was trying to influence the rest of us to feel the same way
she did in order to spoil the plans my brother and I were in process
of setting up. I felt proud to have stuck up for someone I cared
for, the situation resolved itself, and now my mother and sister
are slowly beginning to mend their relationship. So it can work
in other situations as well as with in-laws.
|