Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this seems like something to explore in therapy. Your mother was a child when she had you.
If you can find a way to view her as a flawed human who did the best she could, you might be able to find some compassion for her.
This.
Are you a mother yet? That should give you a different perspective. I hope you have a 16 year old daughter someday so you can see things from the other side.
If you could build a loving relationship with your in-laws, then surely you can have a relationship with your own mother.
Get therapy, and build a healthy new relationship with your mom. Forget the past, and focus on the present.
Only a person who has a nomal parental relationship can say this. Once I had my child, I had a lot of realizations about the abuse that I went through growing up and not even knowing it. I realized that I was an unhappy child, depressed and I remember at least at one point that I wanted to die. I only realized this when I had a child that I need to care for and raise and found out I did not want a lot of things that affected me psychologically to affect DC. Thank for your post OP, I’m having such a hard time accepting why I don’t love my mom and I think this is one of the big reasons why.
+1
After many years of trying to create safe distance and make believe, I cut off my mom when my DC turned 3 because I didn't want her in our life at all. Having a 3yo, and remembering how my mom treated a 3yo, well, that clenched it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother has those expectations as well. Once I read, "The hardest thing about having a narcissistic parent as a grown person is the expectation of a relationship that doesn't exist."
Wow! I relate to this strongly. I went through stages of trying to please and appease, then creating distance, then never giving her anything she could use against me, and then was butting up against the fact that there really was no relationship. I didn't exist as a real person to her, only like an appendage, and she tried to get me to play along, and I totally played along, flapping a phantom limb, until it got to be entirely ridiculous. I had no mother!
When it comes to accepting flawed people who did their best, I have that going on with my dad. We've had a road, but he is about the most lovely guy who ever made the mistake of having married and made kids with a crazy toxic person. He wasn't even close to perfect when I was growing up, but he is a source of comfort now.
Pp, how did you co.e to terms with your mom issue? I'm still figuring out mine.
I had a total stress breakdown after a visit with her, and started weekly therapy. Within a few months of therapy, I decided to stop communicating with her. It has been 2 years since then. I am content with the decision. I have made more personal progress these past two years than I thought possible. My decision made some waves through my family, but positive, it made things that were not acknowledged get acknowledged, people seem more like they want to deal in reality than they did before.
I have a close friend who dealt with a narcissistic abusive mom with firm boundaries and lots of strategies and distance, and it seems to work for her. Not saying estrangement is for everyone.
I recommend therapy. Prior to therapy, I read lots of good books. Books can't do what therapy does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother has those expectations as well. Once I read, "The hardest thing about having a narcissistic parent as a grown person is the expectation of a relationship that doesn't exist."
Wow! I relate to this strongly. I went through stages of trying to please and appease, then creating distance, then never giving her anything she could use against me, and then was butting up against the fact that there really was no relationship. I didn't exist as a real person to her, only like an appendage, and she tried to get me to play along, and I totally played along, flapping a phantom limb, until it got to be entirely ridiculous. I had no mother!
When it comes to accepting flawed people who did their best, I have that going on with my dad. We've had a road, but he is about the most lovely guy who ever made the mistake of having married and made kids with a crazy toxic person. He wasn't even close to perfect when I was growing up, but he is a source of comfort now.
Pp, how did you co.e to terms with your mom issue? I'm still figuring out mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother has those expectations as well. Once I read, "The hardest thing about having a narcissistic parent as a grown person is the expectation of a relationship that doesn't exist."
Wow! I relate to this strongly. I went through stages of trying to please and appease, then creating distance, then never giving her anything she could use against me, and then was butting up against the fact that there really was no relationship. I didn't exist as a real person to her, only like an appendage, and she tried to get me to play along, and I totally played along, flapping a phantom limb, until it got to be entirely ridiculous. I had no mother!
When it comes to accepting flawed people who did their best, I have that going on with my dad. We've had a road, but he is about the most lovely guy who ever made the mistake of having married and made kids with a crazy toxic person. He wasn't even close to perfect when I was growing up, but he is a source of comfort now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this seems like something to explore in therapy. Your mother was a child when she had you.
If you can find a way to view her as a flawed human who did the best she could, you might be able to find some compassion for her.
This.
Are you a mother yet? That should give you a different perspective. I hope you have a 16 year old daughter someday so you can see things from the other side.
If you could build a loving relationship with your in-laws, then surely you can have a relationship with your own mother.
Get therapy, and build a healthy new relationship with your mom. Forget the past, and focus on the present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this seems like something to explore in therapy. Your mother was a child when she had you.
If you can find a way to view her as a flawed human who did the best she could, you might be able to find some compassion for her.
This.
Are you a mother yet? That should give you a different perspective. I hope you have a 16 year old daughter someday so you can see things from the other side.
If you could build a loving relationship with your in-laws, then surely you can have a relationship with your own mother.
Get therapy, and build a healthy new relationship with your mom. Forget the past, and focus on the present.
Only a person who has a nomal parental relationship can say this. Once I had my child, I had a lot of realizations about the abuse that I went through growing up and not even knowing it. I realized that I was an unhappy child, depressed and I remember at least at one point that I wanted to die. I only realized this when I had a child that I need to care for and raise and found out I did not want a lot of things that affected me psychologically to affect DC. Thank for your post OP, I’m having such a hard time accepting why I don’t love my mom and I think this is one of the big reasons why.
Anonymous wrote:My mother has those expectations as well. Once I read, "The hardest thing about having a narcissistic parent as a grown person is the expectation of a relationship that doesn't exist."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this seems like something to explore in therapy. Your mother was a child when she had you.
If you can find a way to view her as a flawed human who did the best she could, you might be able to find some compassion for her.
This.
Are you a mother yet? That should give you a different perspective. I hope you have a 16 year old daughter someday so you can see things from the other side.
If you could build a loving relationship with your in-laws, then surely you can have a relationship with your own mother.
Get therapy, and build a healthy new relationship with your mom. Forget the past, and focus on the present.