Anonymous wrote:My mother sounds like you, OP. Never cared for by her parents and expected to be self-sufficient at a young age. She married my father for his stability and competence but he would probably have been diagnosed with Aspergers if there had been such a thing when he was growing up. It all came to a head in midlife and she clung onto us, her four children, to give her the love and caretaking she never got from the other adults in her life. It was unhealthy and you should look up family or mother enmeshment for information. More therapy and making connections with other adults your age are the best options since you don’t want to divorce your husband.
Anonymous wrote:OP have you ever had the opportunity to take care of someone else? It is rewarding and it helps a person shed the need to be the cared for person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to let it go. At fifty this is weird. Are you going to carry this with you into your 80s? Read the Bhagavad Gita and learn to accept and move on.
As$hole. No.
How old are your children? It is not unfitting for one or more of them to take this nurturing role toward you as they enter adulthood. It might be something to talk about with your husband and them at the appropriate age.
I've had extended family who doted on and cared for their very appreciative mothers and it is a beautiful thing to see.
NO! You do not dump your crap on your children. They deserve to live their lives and not carry your guilt around, as evidence just read some of the disasters that are adults on these boards. Most of them work very hard to shield their children from childhood memories that aren't pleasant and they CHOOSE to move forward in a positive light for their own mental health. Op is tuck in self pity mode and has clearly chosen to be this way for her entire adult life. Poor pitiful me, no one pays enough attention to me. I think it's great Op had therapy but if this is where you are at age 40 or 50, find a new therapist. Op's husband clearly walks on eggshells which is why he chooses not to be too emotional around OP but he did marry her so there's love in that marriage. Op needs to choose better with how she sees herself and stop asking others to fix her.
Anonymous wrote:OP have you ever had the opportunity to take care of someone else? It is rewarding and it helps a person shed the need to be the cared for person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^Just word vomit. Ignore her, OP. Loving families love their mothers back.
Loving your parent is one thing, repairing her childhood needs is quite another.
Anonymous wrote:^Just word vomit. Ignore her, OP. Loving families love their mothers back.
Anonymous wrote:You need to let it go. At fifty this is weird. Are you going to carry this with you into your 80s? Read the Bhagavad Gita and learn to accept and move on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have a close group of friends?
I have some close friends, yes. I can talk to them about serious things and they are there for me if I ask. But I think I self-selected for the people in my life to be kind of self-contained and not the sort to overtly care for friends. Again, because earlier in adulthood I found that behavior so foreign I didn't trust it. I assumed if someone was very caring towards me, it was a lie. I now understand it's not that. I do have one friend who was like that towards me early in our friendship but learned not to be that way because it made me edgy and she respected my boundaries (a great friend!).
But I'm in a different place now and wish I had this experience but it's like a prior version of me arranged my life to ensure no one else takes care of me. I don't know how to undo that.