Anonymous wrote:This thread is eye opening. My mother died of cancer when I was in my early teens and I've missed having a mother/daughter relationship ever since. Even now, with a daughter who is the same age I was when I lost my mom, I mourn not having her in my life every day. Reading people's responses, I see that I've definitely idealized what it would have been like if she'd lived into my adulthood. She might have been a close friend, but then again maybe not. I guess I'll always wonder though.
First, so sorry for your loss. My mother died of cancer when I was 25. We were very close. But I do also wonder if I idealize what it would have been like had she lived a full life. I do know she would be the BEST grandmother to my daughter, who was born 13 years after she died. Would she have been helpful during my marital problems? Oy- shew would have wanted to be, but they would have been out of her league.
Please do not let what you read here, however, taint your mourning in any way. You are mourning not an ideal but what never was. What you never had a chance to experience. I find that having my daughter, now seven, allows me to reconnect with my mother in a certain way. I have changed much since she died. Yet I continue to "relate" to her, partly from the heart, and partly from a kind of speculative "what if".
Your mother was definitely robbed of having you in HER life. And of everything she could have had. I remember my mother saying "You lose only me, but I lose everything." Its just such a shame it happned like it did. Im sorry you lost your mom in such a formative time in your life.
Enjoy your daughter and talk to her about your mom, what you can remember. I think it will center your mourning away from hypotheticals and to a place that is real for you.
You might also want to check out "Motherless Daughters". Its too much for me personally and I just fall apart when I read anything in it, but other people in your situation have described it as very useful in dealing with those unresolved issues. So many go through it.
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OP- sorry for the sidebar on your thread. I agree with posters who say that you can have the relationship you want with your daughter. My mother was not a big hugger, and frankly I never thought this was an issue, but towards the end of her life she started saying things like "I should have hugged you more when you were little". I was like "What are you talking about??? I never felt underhugged! ". But she was convinced of this for whatever reason. My daughter is a big hugger and we hug all the time. It was just how it always was. WE are close in a way that is different than I was with my mother. Its really an honor, to be able to get to know a person this way. Take a chance and just tell your daughter something sincere and lovey dovey- she might love it! She also might be like MOM!
My mother in turn had a terrible relationship with her mother. She told me that as a little girl she used to go pick her flowers in the fields and bring them home to her and her mom wouldnt appreciate it at all. Their whole relationship was one in which my mom brought sincere love and it was rejected whle other sisters were favored and fawned over. Its sad, really. i think she never got over it. She was close with her dad, who died tragically, and her oldest sister, who also died tragically.
Good Grief- sorry for the big downer! Back to the good stuff: You can co-create your relationship with your daughter. Use your fears to do exactly the things you fear you wont do. You do only get this once chance, so make it what you want, to the best of your abilities.