Do I'm not sure tummy time was a thing! |
This, and yes, she's a narcissist. |
It’s this right here. And for some people, it gets worse with age. |
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Thanks for the feedback. I will do my best to be more empathic to my mom and re direct our conversations instead of listening to other people stories that I don’t even know.
Thanks for the people that understood me. Peace ✌️ |
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Takes one to know one. Your incessant posting about older women is just as boring - and pathological. |
Ugh my mom does this too and it drives me batty, especially since she has a favored set of grandkids so it always goes back to them. The counter stories are also so mundane too. Then there was the time I told her my best friend (age 40) had brain cancer and (at least after saying she was sorry) she promptly started talking about her high school friend’s husband who had just been diagnosed with skin cancer. |
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My mother also does this constantly, including today. I told her about having to go to a funeral today for a friend who took their own life this week. Instead of asking me how I was doing or how that family was doing she then started into a story about a friend of hers who had a friend who committed suicide 40 years ago and her friend never got over it.
I replied “I’ve got to go. I will call you later.” |
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My MIL does this and it drives her kids nuts.
I’ve decided it’s due to anxiety and/or possibly a generational way of communicating. Spouse calls out some of the more annoying behavior and she realizes she does some annoying things but she can’t quite get herself to stop or change. |
Sounds like your mom has anxiety. |
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My mom does this too and it drives me crazy. She didn't used to, she's educated and smart but now in her 70s and my best guess is she feels less relevant and is striving to connect with others. She truly thinks she's contributing to a conversation but all she does is bring the spotlight back to her and off of whoever was talking. She'd be mortified if she realized that's what she's doing. I have to say something soon, but she's also very sensitive and prone to get feelings hurt over very minor things. I've thought through how this convo could go and it never ends well:
The pre-social-event pep talk: "Mom, when other people talk or tell stories it's very natural to make connections to similar experiences you know about or had yourself. But when you proceed to tell the whole story about that experience, it can take attention away from the person who was talking. Instead, can you try to notice the connection, think about it, and NOT mention it aloud? It will help the focus stay on the person who was talking and make sure they feel heard." She will cry for sure. or the less-wordy, lighthearted approach: Hey mom, I love you but you have GOT to take Aaron Burr's advice- talk less, smile more. She'll get the reference, but it doesn't target the real problem. or the in-situ approach: Anyone: I just did xyz and it was amazing, we... Mom: Oh I used to know someone who did xyz and they blah blah blah... Me (interrupting gently): Mom, you interrupted their story. I'm sure you didn't mean to. (to the other person) Now please tell us more about xyz. Me: avoids her hurt eyes the rest of the night and brings her drinks until she forgets about it. Sigh... |
Your mother is neurodivergent and is trying to engage and relate to you and your child's life. It is very uncommon for women of your mothers age to be engineers and responding to a story with a similar story is a hallmark adhd/autism sign. Try to understand your mother and who she is. She is clearly trying to understand and relate to you. If you truly can't stand it tell her point blank what upsets and why- in the moment. I'm not saying she will be able to reflect in the moment and change and definitely not saying that she should. But if you are trying to drop hints, she is not going to pick up on them. |