Anonymous wrote:What stunted here is that you know your mother and who she is, yet you continue to hope for a different response.
“It still disappoints me.”
Instead of focusing on your mother’s emotional inadequacies, why not focus on why you keep expecting something from someone who is incapable of giving it to you. What are you working on with YOUR therapist? Why do you need to rehash this here?
Until you take that head on, you’ll be stuck in a loop like your mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope all of you with emotionally stunted parents grow up into fabulous understanding parents and great spouses. You must break this cycle and give your children lots of love and validation so they grow into functional and loving adults.
Do not perpetuate this kind of crap on the next generation. You all are adults so get over whatever was done wrong to you and learn through therapy what you should do to parent correctly and move forward in your life.
NP here: Thank you! This thread helped me - almost all posts sincere and helpful. I struggle with so much that many of you talk about - just accepting mothers as they are. Not going back to a dry well. Longing for a loving and caring mother (especially after becoming a mother myself) but trying to stave off disappointment and exhaustion from that, turning to therapy, and determined efforts with my husband and I to provide very open, loving, connecting, stable and secure childhoods for our children.
My children are biracial (I'm white, husband's black), and the pain from my parents not accepting them as who they are has been the most painful experience in my life. I have had to accept that my parents are who they are; no more pretending they are different than the words they say, no longer expecting them to really care about us. It's not easy realizing your parents can't really be there, and then just accepting that and moving on. I think once I get to the point where I stop thinking there's a solution somehow is the time I'll be free from the hurt of my own emotionally stunted mother.
Anonymous wrote:I hope all of you with emotionally stunted parents grow up into fabulous understanding parents and great spouses. You must break this cycle and give your children lots of love and validation so they grow into functional and loving adults.
Do not perpetuate this kind of crap on the next generation. You all are adults so get over whatever was done wrong to you and learn through therapy what you should do to parent correctly and move forward in your life.
Anonymous wrote:I told my mom about a serious (but not life threatening) medical diagnosis I received. I never would have talked to her about it but I needed to find out more details regarding her medical history.
Not once did she say, "sorry," or "that sounds hard," or anything comforting. All she said was, "well, I don't think I can help you" - meaning, her medical history doesn't help me. Then, total silence. Just silence. No follow up questions. Nothing.
This is predictable behavior for her, and yet it still disappoints me.
What is going on in people's minds when they act that way? She's so stoic and cold. Like, is she thinking or feeling at all, and just can't express it? Or is she just totally empty inside?
As a bit of background, she grew up with an alcoholic father and a manic depressive mother who was in and out of the psychiatric ward in the 1950s (something she didn't share with me until I was in my 30s), and she's never once seen a therapist, so god knows she has her own issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What stunted here is that you know your mother and who she is, yet you continue to hope for a different response.
“It still disappoints me.”
Instead of focusing on your mother’s emotional inadequacies, why not focus on why you keep expecting something from someone who is incapable of giving it to you. What are you working on with YOUR therapist? Why do you need to rehash this here?
Until you take that head on, you’ll be stuck in a loop like your mother.
This is so right. I’ve kept repeating this to myself my adult years with my parents. Accept them for who they are and where they are.
It did bring me peace. Until the next time and I repeat it again….
Anonymous wrote:What stunted here is that you know your mother and who she is, yet you continue to hope for a different response.
“It still disappoints me.”
Instead of focusing on your mother’s emotional inadequacies, why not focus on why you keep expecting something from someone who is incapable of giving it to you. What are you working on with YOUR therapist? Why do you need to rehash this here?
Until you take that head on, you’ll be stuck in a loop like your mother.
Anonymous wrote:When I was diagnosed with brain tumors I called my mother to say "They found two and there might be more"
her response
"Two? There are two?"
that was literally it. Useless.