Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading some of Henry Cloud's work on Boundaries may be helpful.
My mom is also quite negative and dramatic. I have had to learn to detach from her/her issues, only engage when i have the energy to not be sucked into that tidal wave, and accept who she is but not let it weigh me down.
There is a strategy I've heard recommended for use with teenagers being highly dramatic - the vast majority of your replies should be "Cool," "That sucks," or "Wow." Obviously that is oversimplified and you can't do that with serious conversations, but the day-to-day whining and complaining? Low engagement with set replies that don't require mental energy from you.
I've tried it with my mother when she is in one of her tizzies (which can last an hour or can last months and really be a phase) and it works BEAUTIFULLY. Especially over text. Even in person or on the phone, I would have thought it would seem uncaring but all she is doing is running her mouth to hear herself talk. I preserve my own energy, she kind of wears herself out, and it didn't become a bigger issue
This works. She won't stop complaining, necessarily, but the complaints won't bother you as much. "Uh, huh. Uh, huh. Oh, mom!"
Yes, they will!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading some of Henry Cloud's work on Boundaries may be helpful.
My mom is also quite negative and dramatic. I have had to learn to detach from her/her issues, only engage when i have the energy to not be sucked into that tidal wave, and accept who she is but not let it weigh me down.
There is a strategy I've heard recommended for use with teenagers being highly dramatic - the vast majority of your replies should be "Cool," "That sucks," or "Wow." Obviously that is oversimplified and you can't do that with serious conversations, but the day-to-day whining and complaining? Low engagement with set replies that don't require mental energy from you.
I've tried it with my mother when she is in one of her tizzies (which can last an hour or can last months and really be a phase) and it works BEAUTIFULLY. Especially over text. Even in person or on the phone, I would have thought it would seem uncaring but all she is doing is running her mouth to hear herself talk. I preserve my own energy, she kind of wears herself out, and it didn't become a bigger issue
This works. She won't stop complaining, necessarily, but the complaints won't bother you as much. "Uh, huh. Uh, huh. Oh, mom!"
Anonymous wrote:Reading some of Henry Cloud's work on Boundaries may be helpful.
My mom is also quite negative and dramatic. I have had to learn to detach from her/her issues, only engage when i have the energy to not be sucked into that tidal wave, and accept who she is but not let it weigh me down.
There is a strategy I've heard recommended for use with teenagers being highly dramatic - the vast majority of your replies should be "Cool," "That sucks," or "Wow." Obviously that is oversimplified and you can't do that with serious conversations, but the day-to-day whining and complaining? Low engagement with set replies that don't require mental energy from you.
I've tried it with my mother when she is in one of her tizzies (which can last an hour or can last months and really be a phase) and it works BEAUTIFULLY. Especially over text. Even in person or on the phone, I would have thought it would seem uncaring but all she is doing is running her mouth to hear herself talk. I preserve my own energy, she kind of wears herself out, and it didn't become a bigger issue
Anonymous wrote:She might be depressed, or is just a negative, miserable person.
Redirect, as you would with a toddler.
Her: life is so unfair. your dad is living this wonderful life but he's the one who ruined mine.
You: that was a long time ago. Have you seen any good movies lately? Twister is on Prime and you'd like it.
Her: my friends never call me.
You: I bet they'd love to hear from you. Hey I picked up some really fresh blue berries the other day and plan to make ice cream tonight.
Anonymous wrote:Have you told her to stop?