Anonymous wrote:This article assumes a much better relationship with one's parents than I have with mine. Oh well, I guess I'm a freak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They most ring true for me. But #6, I don't know. I lost my mom over a year ago. Loved her dearly but it wasn't until just months before she passed that I came to the realization that she'd been verbally abusive most of my life. Of course there never was a chance of confrontation/resolution.
For me, grieving for her has been a very strange mix of missing her terribly and aching for her, and reliving some of her biting/critical comments, and feeling so disconcerted in the process.
Do you have flaws?
Anonymous wrote:I hope my parents die before me; having a child die before you is gut wrenching trauma
Anonymous wrote:This article assumes a much better relationship with one's parents than I have with mine. Oh well, I guess I'm a freak.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, OP. My mom died two weeks ago and I'm working on her memorial, and this happens to be the time when my DH is traveling. It's a little lonely.
I lost my dad in 2001, and I inherited his little house in another city and have it rented out. A couple of years ago my friend (who struggles a little financially) was talking to me about how nice it must be for me to get that extra rental money. She just kept going on about it; you could see she was envious (she gets that way with people) and finally I said, "I'd give the house away if I could have just ten minutes talking to my dad again" and that shut her up. Her dad lives a block away...she's had her dad all this time for 18 extra years and still going. I'm happy for her, not jealous. But other people often forget that when you inherit something, it's because someone died.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They most ring true for me. But #6, I don't know. I lost my mom over a year ago. Loved her dearly but it wasn't until just months before she passed that I came to the realization that she'd been verbally abusive most of my life. Of course there never was a chance of confrontation/resolution.
For me, grieving for her has been a very strange mix of missing her terribly and aching for her, and reliving some of her biting/critical comments, and feeling so disconcerted in the process.
Do you have flaws?
Realizing this type of thing when you have time to process it and accept your parent when they are alive is one thing. My mother died when I was in my early 20s and it took me years to realize how her parenting affected me. So now I’m stuck with this with no way to ask her why she did certain things, or what she was thinking. It’s lonely to work through it by myself and might be easier if she were still alive. I also think she would have been a much better grandparent than she was a parent, and I grieve for that loss. It’s all complicated and yes, we’re all flawed. That’s one reason it can be so difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They most ring true for me. But #6, I don't know. I lost my mom over a year ago. Loved her dearly but it wasn't until just months before she passed that I came to the realization that she'd been verbally abusive most of my life. Of course there never was a chance of confrontation/resolution.
For me, grieving for her has been a very strange mix of missing her terribly and aching for her, and reliving some of her biting/critical comments, and feeling so disconcerted in the process.
Do you have flaws?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They most ring true for me. But #6, I don't know. I lost my mom over a year ago. Loved her dearly but it wasn't until just months before she passed that I came to the realization that she'd been verbally abusive most of my life. Of course there never was a chance of confrontation/resolution.
For me, grieving for her has been a very strange mix of missing her terribly and aching for her, and reliving some of her biting/critical comments, and feeling so disconcerted in the process.
Do you have flaws?