Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys
This is not the win you think it is. None of you sound healthy. Healthy relationships don't involve guilt trips, caving, withholding attention, knowingly looking for someone to please you, catering to whims, indulgence, nastiness, etc.
I love all the pseudo scientists lol! WHo are you to say who is healthy or unhealthy? That's the type of mumbo jumbo that keeps people who think there is some sort of magic answer to interpersonal relationships running to therapists and second guessing themselves. People are people and all of us have our own quirks, are own positives , and our own negatives. Every once in a great while, you may encounter a person who everyone univerally feels sucks- take a Ted Bundy for example- but even he sat right next to one of the greatest true crime writers in America at a suicide prevention center and counseled people not to kill themselves. The irong was not lost on the writer, Ann Rule, who later wrote about it in The Stranger Beside Me, for all of the evil he did, he just may have talked someone off the ledge. The trick is to deal with others in a positive manner despite your own quirks and hangups and despite theirs. I know several people who call themselves "Life COaches"- a name you can call yourself with minimal or no training at all. All of the "Life COaches" I know who want to tell others how to live are an absolute mess. There is no protocol for healthy
Anonymous wrote:Women are, traditionally and culturally, raised to be "pleasers". They are socialized that they are responsible for relationship building/maintenance, so they work hard at it.
Men are raised with fewer of those expectations (culturally they get other burdens to carry about breadwinning, stoicism, etc...). So they don't step in to quite the same roles as naturally.
All people can make personal changes in any of these dynamics once aware of them.
Anonymous wrote:My experience with my two brothers and my adult son is that they do pretty much what you said, but I think the reason is they can't actually handle close relationships with two women at once, meaning mom and wife. So they rightly choose wife. Mom has to just deal with it.
I have also seen that when these guys are not attached they are much closer to their moms, calling more often, visiting more often, chatting more often. That reinforces my theory.
Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys
Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many women keep closer ties with their families of origin than women do. Some mothers try to resist their sons pulling away but the same dynamic doesn’t exist with the daughters because the daughters are always there. The old saying rings true: a daughter is a daughter for life; a son is a son until he takes a wife.
Except it's completely different in Asian or eastern cultures. Women were raised to leave their families and join a new family under the direction of their MIL. Men were sons for life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sexism plays a huge role in this. I adore my mother, we have a great relationship and in general she's pretty easy to get along with. But occasionally she's so casually sexist it drives me nut. She just really believes women are the social glue that hold everything together, and that men just need to show up.
I agree. I'm in my 30s and often find myself feeling that way too. Like I feel like if I go to all this work to plan a holiday or extended family vacation (something most men don't initiate), men better show up and shut up. Within my marriage dh is an equal partner and I know he likes the activities I plan.
It works against me though with my inlaws. They just expect dh and by extension his whole family and me to just show up. MIL and his sisters plan it all. Sometimes the dates/activities don't work for us, but there's not much we can do about it.
Anonymous wrote:My experience with my two brothers and my adult son is that they do pretty much what you said, but I think the reason is they can't actually handle close relationships with two women at once, meaning mom and wife. So they rightly choose wife. Mom has to just deal with it.
I have also seen that when these guys are not attached they are much closer to their moms, calling more often, visiting more often, chatting more often. That reinforces my theory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys
This is not the win you think it is. None of you sound healthy. Healthy relationships don't involve guilt trips, caving, withholding attention, knowingly looking for someone to please you, catering to whims, indulgence, nastiness, etc.
I love all the pseudo scientists lol! WHo are you to say who is healthy or unhealthy? That's the type of mumbo jumbo that keeps people who think there is some sort of magic answer to interpersonal relationships running to therapists and second guessing themselves. People are people and all of us have our own quirks, are own positives , and our own negatives. Every once in a great while, you may encounter a person who everyone univerally feels sucks- take a Ted Bundy for example- but even he sat right next to one of the greatest true crime writers in America at a suicide prevention center and counseled people not to kill themselves. The irong was not lost on the writer, Ann Rule, who later wrote about it in The Stranger Beside Me, for all of the evil he did, he just may have talked someone off the ledge. The trick is to deal with others in a positive manner despite your own quirks and hangups and despite theirs. I know several people who call themselves "Life COaches"- a name you can call yourself with minimal or no training at all. All of the "Life COaches" I know who want to tell others how to live are an absolute mess. There is no protocol for healthy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys
This is not the win you think it is. None of you sound healthy. Healthy relationships don't involve guilt trips, caving, withholding attention, knowingly looking for someone to please you, catering to whims, indulgence, nastiness, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Women are, traditionally and culturally, raised to be "pleasers". They are socialized that they are responsible for relationship building/maintenance, so they work hard at it.
Men are raised with fewer of those expectations (culturally they get other burdens to carry about breadwinning, stoicism, etc...). So they don't step in to quite the same roles as naturally.
All people can make personal changes in any of these dynamics once aware of them.
Anonymous wrote:There are so, so many stories about the strife between mothers and what I assume are daughters here.
As a man, I have always been perplexed by the push and pull that seems to exist between daughters and moms. It's like they both thrive on making each other happy, and yet also thrive on making each other miserable.
I have two brothers, a sister, and a brother in law, and we have something in common: while we don't ignore our mothers and we love them, we give them attention on our terms not theirs.
You know what the result is? For the men, our moms want to please us. They want more attention then we are willing to give, but they have come to accept that we aren't going to call every day. We aren't going to return texts with lightning speed. We aren't going to cave when our mothers try to guilt trip us.
My wife and sister, on the other hand, go out of their way to please our their respective mothers. They shower them with affection, they cater to their whims, they indulge them even when they are nasty, and they wind up wondering why our moms seem to crave the male's affection more than theirs.
I wonder if anyone else sees this dynamic and, even moreso, if moms with both sons and daughters feel the same way about their boys