Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once my mom died I just didn't like it any longer. I can't stand going out and seeing women my age with their moms. It is like a stab in the heart.
My mom is dead, too, and I feel the same way. Even though my in-laws are lovely people, I hate going out with them on Mother's Day because it just highlights what I'm missing and makes me want to cry. And then I feel guilty about not wanting to go. My children are too young to celebrate yet, so we'll see how I feel in a few years. I wish I could just ignore the day or hjust do something low-key and fun with my husband and children.
Anonymous wrote:Once my mom died I just didn't like it any longer. I can't stand going out and seeing women my age with their moms. It is like a stab in the heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I survived my mother, too.
Stop complaining OP.
Celebrate Mother's Day however YOU want.
Who cares what other people do and post on FB?
This the ultimate lesson in life: you are an adult and are responsible for your own happiness.
Well pin a rose on your nose.
My mother figure died this year. You got up this morning and decided you needed to put me in my place for posting a reflection on a board.
Sounds like you still have some work to do overcoming the presumption that people can treat others like crap.
Anonymous wrote:I have a great mom. Great kids. Still not my favorite holiday. I'm uncomfortable with being the presumed center of attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I survived my mother, too.
Stop complaining OP.
Celebrate Mother's Day however YOU want.
Who cares what other people do and post on FB?
This the ultimate lesson in life: you are an adult and are responsible for your own happiness.
Well pin a rose on your nose.
My mother figure died this year. You got up this morning and decided you needed to put me in my place for posting a reflection on a board.
Sounds like you still have some work to do overcoming the presumption that people can treat others like crap.
Anonymous wrote:
I survived my mother, too.
Stop complaining OP.
Celebrate Mother's Day however YOU want.
Who cares what other people do and post on FB?
This the ultimate lesson in life: you are an adult and are responsible for your own happiness.
Anonymous wrote:I also had a crappy mother but emotionally I grew up and stopped letting a made up holiday bring this much angst into my life. Part of that growing up was recognizing that my mother was neither all bad or all good--like all human beings and that she in large part, simply a product of her environment and untreated mental illness. Dwelling only on the negative holds you victim to the past and recognizing that although I am a much, much better mother than my mom, I also know that I am not perfect either and my kids will judge me just as I judge her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a made-up holiday designed to get people to buy stuff.
There are plenty of opportunities throughout the year to show your mother you love her. This notion that we have to have a holiday for it is absurd. It's all part of our consumer-centric culture.
I think the biggest issue I have with Mother's Day is it brings out all of the FB posts that insinuate a woman is not fully a woman unless she is a mother.
If our society really cared about mothers, then we would do more to give them support (affordable child care, paid family leave). If our society really valued parents, we wouldn't keep pushing this notion that if you only work 40 hours, you aren't dedicated or a hard enough working. We'd be more committed to work-life balance.
But we don't do that. Instead, we make a day where people feel pressured to buy $4 cards and flower arrangements and go out for an overpriced meal, and then we all pat ourselves on the backs and talk about how sacred motherhood is.
+1