I'm not even sure how to ask this question...Just like a lot of us, I grew up with a childhood I wouldn't want to re-do...any way fast forward 60 years ( ugh) I finally figured out I wasn't alone, there are tons of us out there dealing with horrid situations of a nasty, miserable to the core mother.
If you read a lot of the threads we are in our late 40's, most of us are 60! Seems like there is an entire generation of us who are dealing with the ramifications of angry hateful spiteful mothers. Was it in the water? WW2 issues, they all can't be born with dementia!? Were they born with mental illness? Was this a social environment learned behavior? How did this happen?
When/where or why did narcissism become a way of life back then? How was it ok?
That pretty much set the stage for the rest of it, don't even ask about teenager time. I couldn't go to college, I was gonna get knocked up and waste the money. Then I met and married the " drunk, the loser"- we are married 40 yrs. He has bad legs, thusly "the drunk" walk and the loser twist. I then had 2 kids- should have had only one-"SHE is just like her father", my son walks on water in her eyes. So ya, ok, by now you get where I am going...but where did this generation of parent come from? Why did the men stay?
My mom was sweet, generous and very loving; my dad was the spoiled, only child that was basically a musical prodigy. After my mom died, contact with him was minimal. He died 10 years and 2 women after my mom did.
My mil was an only child of immigrants from Germany. They had lost a couple babies in Germany and we're thrilled to have this little American-born child.
She had them wrapped around her finger. She learned to lie in order to get what she wanted. I don't know if they ever caught on to that.
What she wanted most was friends. She wasn't allowed to play in the streets or do things that other kids did. They kept her pretty close. She came of age during WWII so you can imagine that she was probably made fun of at school for her strange (different) ways and language.
She did go to college and her parents followed her wherever she went.
She pitted her two boys against each other (still does) and made no bones about the fact that the first born grandchild was her favorite until he did something she didn't approve of, then she'd pick another for awhile. She has said to me of course the first born is special. I have three sons and I don't want to play games like that. They are all different and loved equally.
I could go on about her dils but won't as that is a long story too!
Looking back we believe she has been bipolar her whole life but was able to hide it pretty well when she was busy. Now it's just crazy! She is bitter and nasty to all.
My mother got her uterus removed as soon as she could get a doctor who would do it. If she'd had more kids I think she would have committed murder, sooner or later. And people think they are "saving" babies by getting rid of planned parenthood. Incredible.
When we grow up in dysfunctional families, it's like we have to re-learn what "normal" and "healthy" are supposed to look like, because we have no frame of reference.
NEIGHBOR said "You need to listen to your daughter more. She's trying to help you."
Mom looked at us both and said "Hell no. I'll do what I damn well please."
I nearly left never to return. I mean, I realize that I haven't had ALLLLL the experiences SHE has, but I managed to get to 54 with a paid off house, and 20 yr marriage, and stable job. I pay MY bills. She's managed to get her phone shut off 4 times in the last year because she doesn't pay her bills!
I feel your pain. I honestly do.
As I read about these "difficult" moms, I see a connecting thread of narcissistic behaviors. If you were raised by a mom like this, you know the life-long pain and confusion it brings: a lack of self-confidence, feeling "invisible," feeling you aren't worthy of the air you breathe. And I recognize so many of my own mom's traits among the descriptions offered here: an inflated sense of self-importance (oddly coupled with low self-esteem); expecting preferential treatment; a need to control typically achieved by fear, obligation, and guilt; insistence upon always being "right" and everyone else "wrong"; refusal to validate others; and last but not least, a total absence of empathy. Zero. Zip. Nada.
Why so many "difficult" moms? I have no idea, though something has been suggested about childhood influences of under or over-valuation. I read somewhere that narcissists (who are always "right" and never "wrong") rarely, if ever seek help. Instead, it's the people obliged to coexist in their circles: children, spouses, co-workers, etc who seek therapy from narcissistic cruelty.
Psychotherapists say there is no known treatment for narcissistic behaviors. We can't change the narcissist. We can only change ourselves.
She wears a full face of makeup daily, even if she isn't leaving the house. As a kid I would sit for hours in a store while she tried on clothes or shopped for house furnishings. The house had to be a perfect showplace, despite never having people over. She'd justify the clothes and shoes by insisting she "had to look good". For whom? Strangers at the mall?
Deep down she has little confidence in herself (raised me the same way, but that's another story). She barely graduated high school. I think she has a learning disability. She could never help me with my homework. Even when I was a kid I knew I was smarter than her, and she knew it too. More ammo against me. She is gullible. Believes everything she sees on TV, parrots whatever Dad thinks.
She had no career goals. I think some of that was due to her thinking she couldn't make it in the workforce. Quit work (secretary) after having the first kid. Nothing wrong with staying home, but motherhood was her job, and she didn't like her job much. She'd do basic mom things, but when it came to interaction or affection with her kids, she couldn't be bothered. She didn't have kids because she wanted to; she had them because it was expected of her. She told me once, "don't ever have children". When I called her out on that years later, she denied it. "I never said that!". She follows the narc tactics of denial, or "I don't remember that".
She was thrilled to have a daughter (me), but looking back I see how I was just a living doll to dress up and show off. As I got older, she saw I wasn't going to be the exact copy of her. And that's where it went downhill. I wasn't fun for her anymore and she resented me for not liking the same things she did. I wasn't a tomboy but wasn't as into looks as she was. She kept trying to force me to be like her. The more I resisted, the more she pushed. It was so draining. Yet she never saw what the problem was. "I just want you to look nice!" (real meaning: I want you to look good because it makes ME look good). Twisting it as if I was an ungrateful brat and her only having the purest of intentions. The whole premise is messed up... "I wouldn't nag you if you'd just do what I want". It's like when a husband beats his wife and says "I wouldn't have to hit you if you'd just behave." Victim blaming. Since I was 8 I've been well aware that I am not the daughter she wanted. That's hard, when your own mother doesn't like who you are.
She's lucky she married my Dad, because her Good Girl complex would have been a perfect match for an abuser. In her efforts to keep everything looking fine, she excuses bad behavior with an "oh, they didn't mean it." Even if they DID mean it, she tells herself the opposite.
It's kind of sad. She won't get help because she doesn't see the problems. She thinks she was a great mom, when in reality she couldn't fully love her kids and we resent her. I think she WANTS to, but can't because she just shut that part of her brain/heart off.
Hm. Doesn't answer why so much, guess I had to vent, haha. :)
Actually, my mother was a great MOM but she had her issues just as we all do. The problems with aging is that all issues get intensified...all negative personality characteristics do too.
My mother had OCD, even as a child. While she was working and very busy, this trait helped her in her business. Once the work and busyness stops, mental energy turns inward.
The focus is on aches, pains, fears and illnesses. On top of this, the anxiety increases as they see their faculties diminish. The worries about what will happen to them, is off the chart.
Add to this, any infections like UTI's which affect cognitive skills. And so many elderly suffer depression which contributes a lot to horrible behavior.
It is the perfect storm creating lashing out and inappropriate behavior. When this happens with my mother, I need to back away until she is more in control of herself again.
She tells the doctor she does not know why this happens to her...why she uses abusive language to her aides and me. Her doctor thinks she has no control over it.
All I know for sure is that it is painful to bear the brunt of it, and scary too, for both of us. Talk with your mother's doctor about this negative behavior to see if he thinks there may be a medical reason for it. Try to empathize by imagining yourself in a similar position in the future. Sometimes empathy can help us to cope better with our aging parents. Good luck.
When your early lessons are “love = need” and you (the child) are tasked with being your parent’s emotional caretaker, you drag around a psychological burden that can be hard to identify. In good times and bad, everything feels a little bit “off.” And time spent with family intensifies it.
Then comes caregiving. It’s hard because it’s hard. For those of us who come from a warped cycle of early need, the difficulty is magnified. We do not always respond well to our parents’ late-life need. And they do not always respond well to us.
It’s draining. Take a good care of yourself first. There are several ways to get Mom what she needs. There’s no prize for doing everything “hands-on.” Especially at the expense of your mental well-being.
The "difficult mother" is such a broken record that I think it's more about the aging process and the fact that mothers often live longer than our fathers. My dad died at 76 so I didn't see how he would have behaved at 86.
Just last week, I decided to go no contact because of her verbal abuse through FB messenger and on the phone. I honestly don't care if it's the holidays...I won't accept this behavior from her or anyone else. It's a tough call....because my kids and I are the only ones who have seen this side of her.
Everyone else thinks she is so sweet because that how she portrays herself to them...She's definitely a narcissist with a major personality disorder. I am over it.
My Mom remarried, then one year later the dementia surfaced, and she was downright mean, luckily our stepdad is truly a loving person and was there for her until the end. The "mean" stage did pass and after that all she did was smile, barely spoke, but when she smiled she lit up the room and he just beamed.
If you can, focus on the good, there is/was so much. The declining health years are so few when you look at the whole package that is your Mom or Dad. I always try to remember what they put up with from all of us (there were 6), can you imagine the "group" meltdowns we must have had? And there was only the two of them to cope with all of us, I wouldn't wish that on anyone.
At the same time there's 6 of us and at the end only one of Mom and one of Dad - am very grateful for our time with them. Now that they are both gone when we get together we always talk about the good memories, rarely about the declining years, you will too.
Happy holidays all!
One thing I noticed at senior facilities and long-term-care, rarely did I see a senior citizen working as a caregiver there.... good reason for that, we just cannot handle the physical requirements like we did a decade prior.
My folks were in their mid-to-late 90's, and I was in my late 60's, early 70's. I crashed and burned twice from the sheer exhaustion and emotional stress, and here I wasn't even a hands-on caregiver... I was mainly logistical .... plus working full-time for a boss who was identical to the boss in "The Devil Wears Prada" :P
I told my father that I was sorry he hadn't been able to follow his dream of traveling and working in every state in the USA. His reply was that then I wouldn't have been born. My reply? You don't know that - I might have been born to different parents - and if not born, so what? You only get one chance to follow your dreams. And the way my mother loved to travel, it would have been her dream too.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, there are a lot of angry-sad old ladies out there that never found the fulfillment they craved. No Prince Charming rode in on a White Stallion to take them to Everlasting Happiness. Instead they slaved trying to raise children and keep house for a husband. And I'm sorry to have to say this, but not all children appreciated anything. The children of the 50's and later, expected immediate gratification. And many of them moved back in with Mom (and Dad) after failed marriages, and still expect immediate gratification and have squandered Mom & Dad's retirement funds.
Two sides to every coin.
I would be so HAPPY to be able to take care of your mom. Mine has been gone for 20yrs. My grown children and grandchildren wish i was dead.
PRAYING FOR YOU👋
#UNCONDITIONALLOVE
So - to answer the question- I believe in prayer and I also believe that the only person you can change is yourself.
So, to those of you going through these toxic relationships - I pray that GOD/Universe or whatever higher being you believe in would grant you much Favor, Mercy and Grace; and that each situation becomes more loving.
Please also pray for me, as I work through my own issues of forgiveness. Blessings to you all.
GOD LOVES YOU
AND SO DO I.....