Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here I should add that she gets all hurt if I don't have something thoughtful.
OMG OP do you hear yourself? Snap out of it!
The game your mom is playing is "You haven't figured out the right gift for me; if you loved me enough you would have got it right. Bad daughter; you owe me!"
It's not true; it's about power. You could get her the perfect thing but she won't tell you that, because the GAME is to say it's not right. That keeps her with the power over you. And you are buying into it, and the more you try, the more you reinforce your mom to play that game.
So the point the other PPs are making is, since nothing will be good enough, to stop playing the game and just get her something without doing a whole mental dance to figure out what she might like.
Free yourself from the game. Get her the white orchid and the card, and expect that she will complain about it. It will be the hardest the first year. Next year, give her the pink orchid and a card. Receive her complaint. Third year, give her the yellow orchid with the card. Receive her complaint. This is still an annoying cycle, but certainly not as stressful as the one you are in. Remember, you can't change your mom, not with the perfect gift, and not with any color orchid. You will always give the gift, and she will always give the complaint.
Anonymous wrote:Have you tried asking, what she likes, if orchids dont work.? Its one day a year of being thoughtful for a woman who has birthed, raised you. It wouldn't hurt to put your ego aside and do something she appreciates. May be she likes time with you & the grand kids. Maybe a mom daughter spa thing or lunch together. Ask her.
Anonymous wrote:Its one day a year of being thoughtful for a woman who has birthed, raised you.
Anonymous wrote:Fitbit
Theater tickets, or opera, symphony, ballet, etc.
Spa treatment
Newly released hard back book
Magazine subscription
DVD of her favorite old tv show
Anonymous wrote:OP here I should add that she gets all hurt if I don't have something thoughtful.
Anonymous wrote:No good ideas, but....
To all the people who are saying "just a card" or "tell her how mean she is" -- I'm glad (seriously) that some of you you appear not to have had negative, downright mean mothers who truly can't appreciate anything (including much of life) and take out their negativity through criticizing their children. I wonder if the OP feels like I do -- that saying any of those things or just giving a card would result in all kinds of hell for herself and her family (including any children she might have).
I've reached a point with my (also mentally ill) mother at which I'd like to say some of what you've said, or give just a card, etc., etc., But it's so much easier said than done, and it also means risking not seeing her or my father again and I'm not sure I'm ready for that, either.
Mother's Day is the hardest holiday for me because I have a mother who truly hates her life (and sadly, that includes truly not liking me, as well). I try to get through it for DC's sake and for my dad's and for the part of me that realizes how much my mother must hurt inside but it is very, very hard to try and celebrate a person with so much anger, negativity, and hurt inside.