“From the outside, it feels like she’s choosing being “right” (or being the victim)” ERGO she’s making the wrong choice. IDK why this needs to be explained. You and OP needing a lot of validation. |
I am not a narc but yes, your mother *said* something hurtful. I suspect she’s mentally ill/a narc and it might be compounded by aging issues. Are you so fragile that you can’t see that and rise above her and feel sorry for her? IME the people who cut off family members often do not fix their lives by doing so, they only take the extreme hypersensitivity and aggression to other relationships - you’re doing it right here in these posts with a stranger… not everyone, but many. |
Cool! Well, either way, OP is free of this woman, and the woman is free of her (and her son and only grandchildren.) It’s a win all around! Have a good one! |
LOL. |
Depends on how old your kids are…. |
I had a mother like this and was in the same scenario as OP. My mom did something foul towards my DW that caused me to go no-contact. After a little over year of that, she was diagnosed with cancer and passed away less than 2 years afterwards. We had a bit better of a relationship during that time (primarily because I "catered" more towards her given her terminal illness) but it was never great. I love my mom, I miss the good parts of our relationship, but I do not regret taking a break from her. It was necessary for me, my marriage, and my kids. |
Whatever! She doesn’t love me, she doesn’t have to see me; no skin, right? But that also means you don’t get to influence my minor children, either. You can do or think whatever you want, it doesn’t affect me and mine. |
Maybe she’s just stuck, doesn’t know how to do what she needs to do, and possibly has thoughts that reinforce this. (“If he loved me, if he were a good son, he’d stop behaving like this.”). The longer you stay stuck the harder it is to break out of it. Not everyone has the social skills or the courage to get beyond where they are. I had a similar issue once. I realized that my parent had made an effort to parent me better than they had been parented. There was stuff that they didn’t know how to do — and weren’t likely to learn at that point in their life. So it was on me to decide how I wanted to handle that. |
Yes, exactly. The one who covered for her sister was cut off. The sister wasn't cut off, but Grandma was horrible to her also. That sister (our aunt) told us once that she told her mom she wished she would offer her praise from time to time. Grandma said, "I would, if you ever did anything worth praising." That aunt, by the way, raised three kids by herself while suffering from MS, working full time, and winning community awards. When DH says his grandma was mentally ill, I believe it. |
This. She truly doesn't think she's wrong. This was my FIL before he died. My MIL isn't a narcissist but she refused to go against him. Her loss. |
Because she doesn't think she's wrong. She also doesn't care as much as you think she should. |
| In my mother's case, she prioritizes her selfish rage over a relationship with her only child. In my father's case, he prioritizes making my mother happy (which isn't actually possible) over having a relationship with his only child. |
Sure, and that's a normal reaction. Your mother-in-law doesn't agree. Don't spend any more time trying to understand her. Honestly, you're starting to sound a little smug. |
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It's narcissism. I was in the same boat as your DH 15 years ago. My mom disrespected my wife, and it was the last straw. She returned the kids' birth announcements and Christmas cards. She called once when my dad (they divorced and remarried other people) passed away, for about 2 minutes.
Recently she told my grandma (her mother) that she's willing to make up IF I call her first. I am at peace with my decision of no contact. Support your DH and let he deals with it. |
As I suspected, the ‘protection of children’ is more about you. That’s fine, do what you want, but just eyes wide open that you are carrying forward generational trauma and rifts that may likely be carried onto generations of your family. So generations of family members - aunts, uncles, cousins, etc- may not get to know each other because of this. And if your mom died tomorrow and left $1 million dollars to a sibling instead of some to your children, you’d be okay with that? Would they? Would they as adults? |