Anonymous wrote:OP again. I think it sounds self-centered and juvenile. Like they are not aware that THEIR mom isn’t “Mom” to everyone they are talking to. My children probably referred to me as “Mom” when talking to other people when she was 2 because to her it was my whole identity. But by the time she was 3 she was aware that most people also have someone they call “Mom,” so she switched to “my mom” when referring to me. I think adults who have never made that switch have some peculiar perspective-taking flaw going on.
Anonymous wrote:Instead of saying “my mom” or “my dad” when they are talking to non-related other adults? I have two friends who do this, and I find it very peculiar. They are women in their 40s and 50s, and then they talk about their dads to me or in a group of friends, they just refer to him as “Dad.” Like, “Dad was late to pick up the kids from school so Steve had to scramble to go get them because I was in a meeting.” Or “Dad fell again and is in the hospital.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. I think it sounds self-centered and juvenile. Like they are not aware that THEIR mom isn’t “Mom” to everyone they are talking to. My children probably referred to me as “Mom” when talking to other people when she was 2 because to her it was my whole identity. But by the time she was 3 she was aware that most people also have someone they call “Mom,” so she switched to “my mom” when referring to me. I think adults who have never made that switch have some peculiar perspective-taking flaw going on.
People are giving you a hard time, OP, but I agree with you that this affectation is odd.
What if you had three or four unrelated people in a conversation all referring to “Mom” and “Dad” without any modifiers as to whose mom and dad are beg referred to? Couldn’t that get confusing?
And sure, it’s an observation of a small issue, but it’s perfectly okay to note it and comment on a board like this where people converse about all sorts of topics that other people consider “petty.”
Anonymous wrote:OP again. I think it sounds self-centered and juvenile. Like they are not aware that THEIR mom isn’t “Mom” to everyone they are talking to. My children probably referred to me as “Mom” when talking to other people when she was 2 because to her it was my whole identity. But by the time she was 3 she was aware that most people also have someone they call “Mom,” so she switched to “my mom” when referring to me. I think adults who have never made that switch have some peculiar perspective-taking flaw going on.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. I think it sounds self-centered and juvenile. Like they are not aware that THEIR mom isn’t “Mom” to everyone they are talking to. My children probably referred to me as “Mom” when talking to other people when she was 2 because to her it was my whole identity. But by the time she was 3 she was aware that most people also have someone they call “Mom,” so she switched to “my mom” when referring to me. I think adults who have never made that switch have some peculiar perspective-taking flaw going on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of the most petty posts I’ve seen on the family relationship forum in a long time, and that’s saying a lot.
I've been around dcum for awhile and this has been discussed here before. It was petty then, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is one of the most petty posts I’ve seen on the family relationship forum in a long time, and that’s saying a lot.
I've been around dcum for awhile and this has been discussed here before. It was petty then, too.
Anonymous wrote:With your siblings? Don't think anything at all.
Doing this with everyone else? Weird. Really weird. Like there's something stunted about them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m one of these people! I never would have noticed, but a friend pointed it out once. She said it was funny, but I wonder if I was getting on her nerves. It’s completely unconscious—like someone said, I think I sort of just treat Mom as a name.
Yes by funny she meant strange.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s weird too. Do these people also say “Husband got a promotion” Or “Daughter hit a home run in softball last night!” I’m guessing not.
Mom is not just a relationship, it's the name they use when they speak to her. Their mom is their mom, and they also call her mom. My husband is my husband but I call him by his name, not "Husband." My daughter is my daughter but I call her Larla not daughter, etc. Mom, dad, and whatever you call your grandparents are really the only "relationship terms" that serve as name substitutes.
I don't do this, but I think it's strange that so many people are having a strong reaction to hearing it. Do you feel like you're being put in the place of seeing the speaker's mom as your mom before you process the implied "my", and it makes you uncomfortable? I just don't get what is upsetting about it. The point gets across.
Best post on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. I think it sounds self-centered and juvenile. Like they are not aware that THEIR mom isn’t “Mom” to everyone they are talking to. My children probably referred to me as “Mom” when talking to other people when she was 2 because to her it was my whole identity. But by the time she was 3 she was aware that most people also have someone they call “Mom,” so she switched to “my mom” when referring to me. I think adults who have never made that switch have some peculiar perspective-taking flaw going on.