Anonymous wrote:My mom is a hoarder, she did some terribe things when my brother and I were kids (made us lie about no one being home to our teachers, kept us up way past bedtime as she had to clear up our beds, etc).
What is worse, my father is a total doormat and never ever tried to shield us from the sick spouse. In fact he regularly stays up late against his will as she sorts her filthy stuff on his bed.
I have tried to rebuild my relationship with parents when I had a child of my own, but they are just crazy.
They would come 'to play with baby' and stay for the day, showering at my place, using my washing machine, etc.
I am happy we live across the country now.
Anonymous wrote:I love my parents, they are great...especially my mother.
My biggest issue would be religious and political disagreements, but we just don't talk about religious or politics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A vent and a question.
What one issue strains your adult relationship with your mom?
For me it is that I cannot maintain her level of clutter free, perfect looking housekeeping. I definitely know that my tolerance for some clutter stems from a childhood of super strict no clutter anywhere vigilance by my mom. We spend time at her beach house in the summer with extended family with lots of people around. I do a lot of the cooking, grocery shopping, bringing chairs, snacks/supplies to the beach, all of the hard core cleaning on the main floor I work to maintain no clutter (bathroom cleaning, mopping floors), beach towel laundry, etc. Upstairs, my 3 children share a room and occasionally, the room can looked "lived in". We make the beds and I do laundry just about every day but sometimes life takes over and we get some clutter. If it doesn't look like a hotel room, my mom freaks and makes me feel like a failure-in spite of everything else that I do in the house. We go back and forth on this and I know the answer is to just maintain her standards in her house. I get it-on my way to fully hotel-ize the upstairs and I will apologize and thank her again for use of the beach house.
Just wondering, does anyone else have these revolving door issues that never go away?
This issue seems silly, and I guess we are lucky that this is the issue. We have healthy kids, productive careers, good marriages and do spend a lot of happy time together as an extended family. But she really got me this time.
Thanks for the vent, no advice needed, I know that clutter can be my Achille's heel and I know what to do to fix it.
Ask her if she'd like to come to your own house and demonstrate perfect housekeeping. Hand her a mop, bucket, dustrags, bathroom cleaner, etc. Say you are very dense and really need her to show you even it takes a few hours out of your day, but you absolutely MUST learn from an exemplary housekeeper such as herself and you are so afraid you will never be as good as she is. If she takes you up on the offer, let her at it and thank her for the free cleaning service.
Anonymous wrote:A vent and a question.
What one issue strains your adult relationship with your mom?
For me it is that I cannot maintain her level of clutter free, perfect looking housekeeping. I definitely know that my tolerance for some clutter stems from a childhood of super strict no clutter anywhere vigilance by my mom. We spend time at her beach house in the summer with extended family with lots of people around. I do a lot of the cooking, grocery shopping, bringing chairs, snacks/supplies to the beach, all of the hard core cleaning on the main floor I work to maintain no clutter (bathroom cleaning, mopping floors), beach towel laundry, etc. Upstairs, my 3 children share a room and occasionally, the room can looked "lived in". We make the beds and I do laundry just about every day but sometimes life takes over and we get some clutter. If it doesn't look like a hotel room, my mom freaks and makes me feel like a failure-in spite of everything else that I do in the house. We go back and forth on this and I know the answer is to just maintain her standards in her house. I get it-on my way to fully hotel-ize the upstairs and I will apologize and thank her again for use of the beach house.
Just wondering, does anyone else have these revolving door issues that never go away?
This issue seems silly, and I guess we are lucky that this is the issue. We have healthy kids, productive careers, good marriages and do spend a lot of happy time together as an extended family. But she really got me this time.
Thanks for the vent, no advice needed, I know that clutter can be my Achille's heel and I know what to do to fix it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm with OP on level of cleanliness. My mom cleans my (perfectly clean, done just before she arrived) house every time she visits. No matter what I do, it's not good enough.
And PP at 12:39 on the ILs ASSuming every single bit of PTO we get should be spent with them on family vacations and/or to take off for the whole week when they decide to visit. Somehow the concept of PTO being finite eludes them, as does the fact that according to my H, they took exactly 2 trips his entire youth with his grandparents...we've been on 3 in the last 5 years.