Anonymous wrote:Your post has the classic hallmarks of a borderline personality disorder.
1. Your personality is perfect.
2. Others have told you repeatedly how perfect you are.
3. You literally project sunshine.
4. Your daughter is a downer, and you actively dislike her. Why? Because she is a downer!
5. You"just dont see the point in getting upset about too much when theres so many fun things to enjoy." Translation: when other people get mad at you, you don't understand why, and can't even recollect what you have done to offend them, and refuse to admit it, and get angry at them for even bringing it up.
6. You make mean and nasty jokes, and then laugh and get mad when people fail to appreciate your "humor."
7. When other people are happy and upbeat, you take delight in bringing them down. But you are a "Pollyanna."
Anonymous wrote:Hi op!!
I hope you are getting the reality check that you desperately need. You remind me so much of my own mother. Have a nice day!
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you want an authentic and real and loving relationship with your daughter -- not a perfect relationship, but a real and authentic relationship -- it's time to leave aside the roles you have assigned both her and yourself, Debbie Downer and Pollyanna. Neither one of you fits these roles. I suspect you never did.
You have described some genuinely troubling details of your relationship -- the fact that she reminds you of your mother in law physically and emotionally is sad. The fact that you feel that flat out dislike her is very troubling.
You need to meet people halfway. Own your own behavior. Stop hiding behind jokes, reputations, and stereotypes. Make today the first day and be a different, kinder person. What comes through here is your intense dislike, and no one responds with sunshine to a person who dislikes them. No one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me get this straight.
Your daughter texts you happy and bubbly and enthused about her new piano -- you immediately prick her bubble by informing her "jokingly" no one in the family has any musical talent. But you were of course kidding. Because you have a sunshiney bright disposition and she does not.
OP, we all have a certain way of looking at ourselves which is firmly established. We don't take the time to question it. But I ask you, who in the above scenario was bright and upbeat? You or your daughter? Couldn't you have just been happy for her? Why did you need to make a mean joke?
This.
Anonymous wrote:Let me get this straight.
Your daughter texts you happy and bubbly and enthused about her new piano -- you immediately prick her bubble by informing her "jokingly" no one in the family has any musical talent. But you were of course kidding. Because you have a sunshiney bright disposition and she does not.
OP, we all have a certain way of looking at ourselves which is firmly established. We don't take the time to question it. But I ask you, who in the above scenario was bright and upbeat? You or your daughter? Couldn't you have just been happy for her? Why did you need to make a mean joke?