Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thank you all for the responses. It is a terrible thing for anyone to have to deal with and wish each of you weren't going through it.
12:40 Thank you. Sometimes it feels like you are alone and I think of the people of have wonderful, close relationships with their mothers. I know, logically, there are many who do not but sometimes its hard to remind myself of that.
14:23 Thank you. That is one of the larger factors for me - the negativity swirling around me and my family. I don't want my children to grow up and see me riding the roller coaster ride that my mother takes me on. And I am worried about the taking sides thing. She has already spent years telling lies about to me other family members so I can only imagine what she would do if I cut off contact. And a total fear of all of this is what if I don't find the peace after the fact? What if I spend the rest of my life with guilt from doing this?
16:03 yes, it is one of my greatest fears that my children will see a family dynamic that they will in turn model in our own family. I would hate that. I fear it. I know of one particular family where the DH was estranged from his family and as a result he, his wife and children are all extremely close. I think they viewed it as how lucky they are to have family and didn't repeat the problem themselves. I can only hope we can create a family environment that our children feel differently than I did in my family environment.
I think the hardest decision I am having with this is in relation to my children. I have a hard time accepting that they will not have a relationship with my mother (and possibly my father if 'taking sides' is inevitable) Will they wonder why their cousins all know Grandma and Grandpa and they don't? Will they blame me?
My mother cut off her parents when I was very young. I never met either of them before they died, and I still haven't met my uncle who is alive today.
A lot of the reasons you have are the same as my mother's reasons for ending the relationship with her parents. I don't have much to offer you other to let you know that, as the grandchild involved, I never felt like I missed out on anything. Neither did my brother. In fact, knowing all that I know about my mother's family, I'm grateful that she made the courageous decision to protect my brother and me. My upbringing would have been much more nutty with my mother on my grandparents' dysfunctional, manipulative and emotionally abusive roller coaster.
Peace to you.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thank you all for the responses. It is a terrible thing for anyone to have to deal with and wish each of you weren't going through it.
12:40 Thank you. Sometimes it feels like you are alone and I think of the people of have wonderful, close relationships with their mothers. I know, logically, there are many who do not but sometimes its hard to remind myself of that.
14:23 Thank you. That is one of the larger factors for me - the negativity swirling around me and my family. I don't want my children to grow up and see me riding the roller coaster ride that my mother takes me on. And I am worried about the taking sides thing. She has already spent years telling lies about to me other family members so I can only imagine what she would do if I cut off contact. And a total fear of all of this is what if I don't find the peace after the fact? What if I spend the rest of my life with guilt from doing this?
16:03 yes, it is one of my greatest fears that my children will see a family dynamic that they will in turn model in our own family. I would hate that. I fear it. I know of one particular family where the DH was estranged from his family and as a result he, his wife and children are all extremely close. I think they viewed it as how lucky they are to have family and didn't repeat the problem themselves. I can only hope we can create a family environment that our children feel differently than I did in my family environment.
I think the hardest decision I am having with this is in relation to my children. I have a hard time accepting that they will not have a relationship with my mother (and possibly my father if 'taking sides' is inevitable) Will they wonder why their cousins all know Grandma and Grandpa and they don't? Will they blame me?
Anonymous wrote:I cut myself off from my mother after a lifetime of emotional abuse when it became absurd to continue. It just made no sense anymore; it felt like it wasn't even a decision but a necessity.
She cut me off from everyone else in my family and from family friends, and went on a full-tilt mission to destroy me. It's been brutal.
Since you live across the country from your mother, I recommend keeping a cordial, long distance relationship with her.
Anonymous wrote:One more thing and I don't have this answer. What to tell the children when they are older? I am not a mean person by nature. I have kept with grandmom's not well and they buys this. Grandpop is taking care of grandmom (not!!) and they buy this but this won't be forever..at some point I feel I should talk to them about our family dynamic. I will probably ask a therapist to help at that time but that is one thing I worry about. I have also made extensive plans for the kids should something happen to us..can't imagine my side raising them.
Anonymous wrote:OP I cut my mom off at the ripe old age of 13 years old. I am in my 40's now. My parents divorced and I went to live with my dad. I had no contact with that side of the family again until I married. My mom's parents reached out to me right before my wedding. It is very sad to cut your mother off and most people will judge you and think something is wrong with you. Personally, I think it is one of the most cruel things about having a terrible mother -you not only have to deal with the abuse but everyone around you will think there is something wrong with YOU. I mean the fact that it was hard to get external validation even among my dad's family has made me feel horrible at times. It's very easy to come back to is there something wrong with me? In my opinion that's how abusers get away with it for so long. There are cultural expectations to love your parents. I know it was a big flag with my inlaws. Now that they've known me for almost 20 years and know what type of person that I am they don't mention it anymore.
Anonymous wrote:OP I cut my mom off at the ripe old age of 13 years old. I am in my 40's now. My parents divorced and I went to live with my dad. I had no contact with that side of the family again until I married. My mom's parents reached out to me right before my wedding. It is very sad to cut your mother off and most people will judge you and think something is wrong with you. Personally, I think it is one of the most cruel things about having a terrible mother -you not only have to deal with the abuse but everyone around you will think there is something wrong with YOU. I mean the fact that it was hard to get external validation even among my dad's family has made me feel horrible at times. It's very easy to come back to is there something wrong with me? In my opinion that's how abusers get away with it for so long. There are cultural expectations to love your parents. I know it was a big flag with my inlaws. Now that they've known me for almost 20 years and know what type of person that I am they don't mention it anymore.