Please help. My 85 year old mum who I love is healthy and sweet. We were getting along well until a few years ago when my father died and she moved in with my husband and me. With my cruel father at her side she was the perfect victim and I was the perfect rescuer.
Seeing her without him now my struggle with anger over the terrible things she let my dad get away with is a constant unwelcome guest in my heart. Neither of us is perfect but try as I might I have trouble not reacting when first my mother apologizes for past awful event then later insists that I overthink and am too sensitive that I had no call for been an angry child.
Irrational as I know it is just about anything she does feels manipulative. Despite my best efforts my distrust of her intentions poisons everything about the little time I have left with her.
My saintly husband grits his teeth while my mother and I often bicker. Grief for her and my husband, and self loathing wake me at night.
I talk to friends while staying conscious to not wear them out and pray and eat well and do yoga and walk my dogs and journal. I tried AlAnon for several months as well as counseling. Both helped only a little. Their answers to stay in the present to remember that my dear mother is toward the end of her life, make perfect sense. Unfortunately they do not help enough.
Living separately apart from her is not an option nor is it something I want.
If you have had anything near this same problem please let me know that I am not alone. If you have conquered these feelings I would also be grateful to read what worked for you.
Give AlAnon more time.
It sounds like how you've related to Mother is as her rescuer. And now she is no longer a victim and doesn't need a rescuer. Hmm. Where does that leave you? Can you forge a relationship of equal adults? You have very different views of past reality, so I doubt such a relationship could be based on your shared past. Can it be based on your shared present?
Your Mother did the best she could. The only way I have found to deal with all of this and find peace is first, admit and face the hurt, pain, disrespect, abuse and total injustice of the whole situation. Your mother was wrong or too weak or whatever to stand up to him, and he was the way he was and no one could change him. Somehow when my father died, I was able to forgive more completely and found peace.
TO FIND PEACE YOU MUST FORGIVE TOTALLY. This takes time and effort and the decision to forgive over and over again. It is a choice, not a feeling. Some damage may remain, but forgiveness brings peace and true healing and allows you to move on. I still work on this, but the deep hurts of my father's behavior have healed. You must forgive your mother for being so weak and letting your father get away with all that he did, and you must forgive him for being so mean. When I forgave my mother, I stopped feeling manipulated. When you let someone make you angry it feels like they are manipulating you. Before I forgave, I felt horribly controlled and manipulated.
Alcoholics Anonymous says forgiveness is something you do for yourself, and if you do not, the resentment and bitterness will destroy you. You do not condone or excuse the behavior. With the help of your Higher Power, you forgive by an act of your will so that you can heal and move on.
You are not alone. But if you continue to relive the hurts and allow the resentment to fester, you will FEEL very much alone. I hope this helps. It is a sad truth that many of us on this planet were injured by others in many ways. That is life. Love and protect yourself be forgiving and letting it go. You owe it to yourself and those you love to move one. You can do this.
FORGIVING DOES NOT MEAN FORGETTING either. That just doesn't happen. But forgiveness allowed me to replace bad memories with good ones i thought I'd forgotten.
Forgiveness also doesnt mean we have to go back to things the way we were but to set boundaries where needed.
The most important thing is just to say the words of forgiveness to yourself. You dont have to share them with your mother until you are ready.
Good luck, God bless and I'll pray for you.
The only bit I can add is: you can't fight a negative thought. The more you fight it, the more you feed it, and the stronger it becomes. All you can do is replace it.
When you find yourself thinking something negative, train your mind to break away and think of something positive. That, I believe, is the meaning of "resist not evil" (from the Sermon on the Mount). In the material world, we must resist evil. But in the world of the mind, we can't resist evil. We must replace evil.
You might use something that can cue you to think of something positive, for example, a bracelet or picture. And you might predetermine what your positive thought oasis is, be it a mental picture, a peaceful scene, music, etc.
In looking back I see that she came from a totally dysfunctional family and was probably mentally ill life long. Back in the day mental illness wasn't even considered. It's like PTSD ... you never get over it but you learn to come to terms with it to whatever degree you can.
After she passed a lifetime of anger, resentment and hurtful memories that had been locked away inside came flooding back and I spent the winter quietly at home with my beloved dogs and country peace and quiet. .I still get the odd flashback but I'm feeling more at peace now. Spring is certainly helping, with an acre to care for, working outside planting veggies and now 25 baby chickens to care for.
So many here have been damaged by lifetime experiences, along with a lot of others in the population, and I don't think it ever goes away. All you can do is learn to come to terms with it. It just takes time. You are not alone.
Women of our parents' ages just didn't have choices that we do. They didn't have the mass media, probably didn't have support groups or even knowledge by tv doctors and tv therapists advising what "should" be a normal relationship.
Even if they did go to college, their options were limited.
So they learned to compromise and adapt to situations that many of us would not tolerate.
Segue your feelings toward your mother toward sympathy; imagine how trapped she must have felt and be more kind to her in her old age; she's probably had a rough life. You have no idea how she really felt, or what she might have done to protect her children from your father.
When the subjects get thorny, change them to something more pleasant. And remember that your mother's in her last years; you don't want to be plagued with regret and recrimination after she's gone because you couldn't get past the issues that are troubling for you now.
Forgive? I try but the only thing that works is to think the most pleasant thoughts I can come up with or to stay busy with things I enjoy
It is entirely rational and fair for the writer of this post to feel angry with her mother for the mother's putting her own security before her children's emotional and perhaps even spiritual welfare. Yes, there may have been mitigating circumstances, but we're talking about the daughter her -- she is right to be angry. Telling her to "forgive" or to think happy thoughts will not really help; her mother is not asking for forgiveness, and replacement thoughts seem a lot like avoidance behavior.
And yet, and yet. 97yroldmom and Ferris1 seem to me to be right. Mom's attitudes worked for her, got her through, and she's not ever going to change them. For her to face the truth now would benefit no one: the daughter can't have the happier childhood denied her, and the mother's time left on earth would not be improved by grieving the issues of the past.
Sometimes it is a comfort to believe that in heaven, all of us will understand the consequences of our behaviors and be sorry -- and understand the ramifications of our choices for other people. Understanding = compassion. She may not be the mother you wish for in this life, but she will be in the next -- and in the next life you will be the daughter she wishes for, too. It will all be made right, and we will all, finally, rejoice together in love. I believe this with all my heart. If I didn't, I might not make it through the day.
My mom passed away 1 1/2 years ago from lung cancer at 86. My sister had not spoken to her in 20 years, mom had few friends so it was my "duty" to see her through to the end. I somehow managed to care for her with kindness even as she was hurling nastiness my way every minute of everyday. One day while we were at a doctors appt I just asked her "why is it that through 60 years of bickering you never ONCE picked up the phone or come over to try to resolve any discord between us?" Her answer was "I don't know how". I still don't know what that meant. Probably meant she always thought she was the one wronged. She died. I rejoiced. No future torment could touch me. At least I knew that I had done my best at the end of her life. There was no conversation of past events. No I love you exchanges.
Just when I thought I was free I cleaned out her house and discovered that she had destroyed all photographs of me. No record of my life at any age while there were hundreds of photos of my sister who hadn't spoken to her in 20 years. She was still reaching beyond her grave to get one last dig in.
I know I have to forgive her at some point but I'm not there yet. I pray that day will come. She had obviously erased my existence from her life so I did the same in return. I have thrown away any photograph of her. I do not stay in touch with anyone that would remind me of her. I retained none of the items in her hell hole that was once my childhood home. No keepsakes. No reminders. I will never go to the cemetery where her body is and where my dad is who never stood up for his children while they were being abused by his wife. I have made some headway in not replaying those tapes in my head of the nasty and life changing things she put me through for 60 years.
The previous post I read was talking about how things will be when we are all in heaven. I pray everyday that when I get to heaven she will not be part of my after life. She claimed to be a Christian yet her actions were never Christian like. I often wonder if she made it to heaven. If she did she must have been in purgatory for quite sometime. There is no way she didn't have to face all the pain she caused those she was supposed to loved unconditionally. Good riddance to the mother with the empty eyes and empty soul. You are not missed on this Mother's Day. Good riddance.
You know that you were abused and mistreated as no one deserves to be. I wonder if your next step needs to be accepting, over and over again, that your mother doesn't love you, maybe never did love you and will never love you. You have every right in the world to be angry, given the way you were treated. I'm suggesting accepting that the past has happened, and it's over. It can never be changed. It's as if you had lost a leg. It will always be an impediment in some way.
But it doesn't have to control your life. You DESERVE to be free of anger as often as you can manage it. Don't resist your anger, but don't invite it to stay. Think the thoughts, and say, "That's true, but I don't have to think about it now. Hey! I could go clean a toilet! That would be more fun than being angry like this!"
You deserve to have serenity. Your anger doesn't hurt her. It only hurts you. Be good to yourself. Pat yourself on the back every day for not punching her. Love yourself and come back and feel our love and understanding.
Make a list of all the ways you were hurt by your father.
Take a drive alone in your car to a remote place and read the list.
Let your feelings come to the surface then, with the windows closed, SCREAM at your father for all the rotten things that he's done. Pour your heart out IN your anger and feel it leave you. You most likely will also start to cry, for the injustice you felt. Let him have it.
Drive home after you've calmed down and feel drained.
You and your mother have been wronged and you never will forget that. But, now that you've gotten your anger OUT at your father, and set the record straight with him, you will be on the road to forgiveness. It has to be in this order because you can't forgive when you're angry.
I had to do this with my alcoholic father (while he was still alive but as an old sick man) to be able to take care of him. I pretended he was a patient of mine instead of the man that screwed up my childhood. It made being with him more tolerable.
Anger is a "cancer" that eats YOU. Be free from it, then find ways to forgive your dad. If you have faith in God, pray for Him to help you with forgiving your dad, as He has forgiven us for our wrongdoings.
By the way, do you know how YOUR dad was raised? Maybe he was a victim of the same aggression by a jackass father too. History repeats itself.
I wish you well on your journey and will be praying for you.
I sure hope you are right!!!! For now I am going to adopt your theory. I keep hoping a woman who became my "adoptive" mother until she died will be the mother I see in heaven. You've given me hope and made me chuckle. Thanks for the levity.
Holding on to anger/resentment is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.
Angel