Anonymous wrote:No. I used to talk to her about most topics but she abused that trust by giving bad advice, not keeping confidences, using information against me at random times, and using info to try to drive a wedge between me and my sister. She did the same to my sister, and now neither of us speak to her.
My teen daughter and I are pretty open with each other. The other day, she asked me to order food and if we could try a new restaurant. I told her to pick a restaurant on my way home from work and I’d pick it up, but not to order from door dash, order from the restaurant. She decided on pizza, and everything went well. We wound up having a discussion about the pros and cons of delivery/food ordering apps, who gets paid, who takes a cut, who gets the tips, etc. I thought it was cool that she was interested in workers rights and how the money we pay for food and services is distributed. It made me think about if I’d been in a similar situation with my own mother, if I asked for a pizza from a new restaurant, and she would’ve said something like, “Quit throwing away my money. Make your own damn pizza.” She wasn’t really into teachable moments.
This sounds like me PP. I love that my kids seem to talk to me about so many things, but lately as they have become young adults I get distracted as I'm talking to them wondering what I would have been like if I could speak to my mother about anything personal at all without being belittled or frightened.