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For my mental and physical health I left after two years of helping my 91 year old mother. None of my three siblings (the older two are her darlings) would help (younger one smartly estranged himself from family decades ago).


The two years were years I lost income since I was her free 24/7 slave - her house was a hoarding disaster, I got it in shape with much hard physical labor & had it sold, spent ages taking her to every senior living place within 80 miles, etc.


She's always been emotionally abusive to me and was horrible to me when I was there (accusing me of theft, wanting to kill her - things that were beyond painful to me as I've been the only one there for her for my whole life, including being her human shield against my father's (long deceased) blows meant for her.


My question to you is: how do I deal with the devastation I feel from her throwing me away since I left? She ignores my birthdays, holidays, or even any contact though I send her cards and occasional emails that she ignores. Meanwhile, I see from the USPS (I get email alerts because my mail went to her old address - that will end soon as she says she's moving but she won't tell me where - though I'm her POA, executor etc) that she is showering her rich grandchildren and loved children and their spouses with gifts, while she knows I have nothing and no one.


It's not about the stuff, I've been poor all my life and I don't care about material things - it's the pain of being not valued by her - hopefully some of you will know what I'm talking about: wanting her to love me as she does them. She's erased me from her life because I left. I tried to explain that I needed to get my life on track (I'm long time involuntarily unemployed, divorced, moved around a lot in childhood and adulthood and was in abusive marriage so have no friends or state I consider home). I just feel so hurt from giving her a lifetime of myself which wasn't enough. Now she couldn't care whether I'm alive or dead. I went to two shrinks - they didn't understand mothers who don't love their children so I stopped going as having to prove all she did/does to me got tiring.


I post this as I often see the (good) advice telling caregivers to leave to save their health and sanity. Leaving surely did save mine (I was close to suicidal when I left), but now how do I deal with her completely throwing me away? The only time she responds in emails is to tell me how horrible I am. I know I can't have a relationship with her or her love, but how do I feel I have any value when she's thrown me away? Thanks.

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MaryMary and Midkid, I am so sorry to hear of how toxic your mothers seem to be. I agree with Midkid - walk away, as you have nothing to lose and everything to gain.

Whether they have a full blown personality disorder or are just plain nasty to be with, you don’t have to put up with any of this treatment, and will only suffer more pain if you do.

There is no point in agonising over why they are like this, or how you can make things better between you. You can’t. Nor can you worry about what they have said about you to others, as you can’t change this behaviour either.

It’s very hard to do and requires constant practise, but it’s best to try and cultivate an emotionally neutral response and outlook on these toxic relationships.

MaryMary, can you block her e mails? You don’t have to read such abusive messages and they are best just being blocked so they can’t hurt you.

Midkid, my mother forgot to ask me how my skin cancer scare worked out - it was just not important to her, so I completely relate to your experience. She also forgot my birthday even though it is less than 2 weeks after hers. I am just not important to her or even on her radar. I’ve learned to accept this whilst recognising it is not due to any deficiency on my part.

Be kind to yourselves and treat yourselves to small kindnesses: a bunch of flowers, a nice cake, a book you’ve always fancied reading, binge watching a TV box set, and ditch the poison.
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Mary--

Your mother's loss.

That's how I have had to internalize the great pain that comes with having a mother who chooses somedays to be nice to you and others to be absolutely horrible.

It's OK to walk away. It's actually imperative to put distance between you.

I don't think I REALLY got how little my mother values me until last year when I was dxed with a rapid growing cancer. I went to tell her (I don't know why, but I did). Her response? "Well, your father will be glad to see you" (daddy died 15 years earlier. WHO says that kind of thing to someone facing a very possible death sentence. She was absolutely dry eyed and no emotion shown.

I went home and dealt with 8 months of chemo--baldness, nausea, all the side effects. She never called nor sent a card that entire time.

After I was 'cured' and began to get a little hair, I went to see her. (Again, why, I don't know) She came out to the common living room and sat down and looked at me and said "Well, you didn't die, but you look awful. And you used to be my prettiest child." Still, total dry eyed and no emotions.

That was 9 months ago. I did not see her at Christmas, her 90th birthday was in June and I told my sibs I would NOT plan it. I showed up for 10 minutes with a generic card and dumped it in the pile. Didn't even talk to her.

She's unable to be kind to me for more than a few minutes--and I am so tired of trying to be whatever the heck she 'wants' from me.

With therapy, I am learning to disengage. Sure, parents can have kids they enjoy more than others, but the LOVE they have for them should be equal and unconditional. My mother has lost all filters and common courtesy, but really? She has always been this way and it's painful and it stinks.

Step away as POA. Don't expect ANYTHING from her as an inheritance. In fact, use her as a cautionary tale.

You are worth loving and if she can't see that--it's her problem.

((HUGS))
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Here's an email I got this morning. All she says in it is completely untrue:

 "You were given the house that you readied and sold. [It was put in a trust for all the children. I was never "given" it.] You did not want to see , hear or anything me.   You left here never telling me we would not meet again two years ago and cut me out of your life .  You repeatedly said you did not want to hear see or even know me. much less be near me. " (The brackets part is mine, not my mother's.)

I never said any of that, but I'm sure she's told that to the few cousins I had who now think I'm horrible thanks to my mother's slander and to my siblings and their spouses manipulating money out of my mother.

I've told her multiple times in emails since I left that I wanted and needed a mother and hoped to see her again. Her email today is what I constantly get from her - lies about me saying I'd never see her again. All this because I left, not staying to give up my life to be her free caretaker, slave - all the while being emotionally abused.

I'm just posting this as a warning to those who are going to leave caretaking and have a mother like this. Be ready for this possibly.

I'm trying to choose a better emotional response than thinking hopeless thoughts, but it's a constant exhausting struggle. That's why I haven't answered some of you posting supportive, kind and helpful advice. I'm just trying to not self harm at this point.... but thanks all.
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Hello Mary,
I am glad you decided to leave your abusive mother. I would stop sending the emails. Realize you did the best you could for your mother and she does not appreciate it one bit. It saddens me about your abusive life, but it time to move on with your life without your mother. You seem like a sweet caring woman and you have many more years to live a fulfilling life. It is too bad the two psychiatrists did not help you, but there are some good councilors out there. You might have to go through a few to get the one you feel most comfortable with. Just because you are single does not mean you can't make some good friends. When I moved away from home for one year to explore another part of the country, I met quite a few friends through a church organization. Most were married with children. I was invited to dinners, parties, beach days and felt quite comfortable with these new friends. If you are a religious person I would pray about it, ask God to help you. I had many prayers answered through prayer to the Lord. Private message me anytime and I would be happy to converse with you. I wish you all the best life has to offer. My prayers go with you. Hope you find peace and love of friendship as you go through a new chapter in your life. Hugs, Mary!
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"I'm in my 60s and have no children, no spouse, no friends...
I've tried to make friends, but most people at this age have families and friends they've shared a lifetime with. Nice as they are, they have no need for me - especially those with children/grandchildren/spouses. I think the best I can do is just not hurt myself anymore and resign myself to just surviving the time I have left."

Ah, Mary, this makes me sad for you. Just the other day I read of a woman who was 60 and wanted to know how to make friends. You can probably guess the suggestions (take a class in something you've always been interested in, volunteer, etc.). Have you considered any of these? How about a book club at a library? It's certainly more difficult now in the Time of Corona. Sigh...
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Reading the various responses and advice to your situation here reminded me of some insight I received through counselling to deal with my own mother. Although I like meeting people and socialising, I have always felt a social anxiety before any kind of event, and in some cases have just not bothered to go out for fear of being criticised, belittled or of suffering some other imagined bad situation - it’s almost like a paranoia. My therapist helped me to realise that this was a response to years of emotional abuse, where subconsciously you believe you are worthless, that no one would want to spend any time with you, and that you are somehow deficient in being able to form friendships. I am sharing this with you, in case you feel the same way about striking out on your own to form a new life away from the abuse you are suffering. Be brave, start to look outwards to form new friendship groups and you will find far more kindness and support than you have ever had from your mother. I hope you can see that this forum is just one such example of positive things that can happen to you if you begin to reach out.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you, Chriscat83. This forum is great and has saved my sanity many times. I am grateful to those on it and to those responding here in the hopes of helping.

In the two years since I left my mother's I have not found that kindness and support offline - though I have tried. This only reinforces the feelings of worthlessness, so I've given up. Maybe my mother was right and I am unloveable. (Though I was very popular in the only place I lived long - 5 years - in my tween/early teen years. Please don't suggest reconnecting with them. I did - even went to one reunion, but they have all been friends for life, going to each other's weddings, children, grandchildren. They never respond to any holiday greetings etc.) There's only so much putting yourself out there a person who's completely alone can take before it's just too much to bear.

Yes, to those who want to tell me I'm not trying hard enough and it's my fault. I know and I've paid for my stupidity and mistakes for a lifetime.

Wishing you all the best.
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Hi MaryMary, you have my sympathy for all the rotten things that have happened to you in the past. I hope that the comments from people who have gone through this, will help you to look after yourself now.

Yes cut the ties finally, inform your mother that you will not accept the POA or the Executorship. You don’t have to dance that dance to order. Quick legal advice might set your mind at rest about how to do it, and giving some notice to the golden siblings would be useful to them and you. Just doing that is an important step in getting control over your own life and your own responsibilities.

I am glad that I have never had troubles like yours, but I have had other troubles that made me need to change my life. It’s very hard to do when your mind seems full up with the troubles. I have found that the most practical way, for me at least, is to change the scenery in my head by literally changing the scenery I am looking at. Something like a singles group tour, going to new places with new people looking at new things every day, has helped me more quickly than seems possible. Could you manage something like that? Could you find out what is available?

Another way to change your life might be to move. You say that you really don’t have a home. Where have you lived that you enjoyed, and could return to? Where somewhere new would you like to live? Researching that might change your focus and fill your mind with new positive things. Your computer can even do it from home in lockdown!

Cut the ties with your dysfunctional family members, put them out of your head, and plan a better life for yourself! Best wishes, Margaret
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I'm so sorry for the torturous pain you're experiencing. I don't think there's anything that we (or anyone) can say to make this situation better for you, you know? I think you should immediately resign your position as POA for your mother and then change your phone number. In other words, remove yourself from her life entirely so you CAN move on with your life. Consider her deceased, grieve for the loss of your mother......and this IS a death of sorts, after all, and when you reach the acceptance phase, that's when things may improve for you, emotionally.

I was adopted at 3 months old; I found my birth family in 2000 and the story of what my birth mother had done to my other 6 half-siblings was nothing short of a horror movie. She threw my sister Dawn out when she was 8 years old......onto the street b/c her new boyfriend (who was sexually abusing the girls) didn't like her! And that's just ONE tiny thing in a very long list of offenses from a very sick woman. That's how I choose to look at it: that she was a very, very sick woman who was abusive to her children as a result. Dawn wound up moving in with a foster family who treated her well; she is a mother herself now and has a great job and a good life. Thankfully, she was able to move past the grief our mother caused her and realize her own self worth, which I'm so happy about.

Know that there is nothing wrong with YOU; it's your mother who has issues. Not every woman who gives birth is cut out to be a mother and many, many such people should never have children to begin with. It's a terribly bitter pill to swallow to be in such a situation, and my heart goes out to you. I sincerely hope you are able, somehow, to remove this person from your mind so that you can begin thriving as a woman YOURSELF. You deserve to live a full, rich life and to be loved as the wonderful and lovable human being you ARE, and not to view yourself as anything less than that. Just because your mother is incapable of showing you the love, affection and respect you deserve does not mean you are not worthy of it. It is SHE who is not worthy of YOU.

Wishing you the best of luck moving forward
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marymary- what a horrible person your mother is. So glad that you got away from her.

I read your reply to shad. I understand what you mean about how difficult it is making new friends. Believe me there are many single people in your shoes and they, too, are hoping and looking for new friends. Before the pandemic, you could easily sign up for classes at the local senior center, or join a Meet Up group online to go on trips that interest you. There are hundreds of groups of every interest you can think of. Now, you can still join classes and meet other people online and make connections that way and wait until the pandemic is over then you can meet people in person.

Think of this as a brand new chapter in your life story, how will you write it?
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marymary2 Aug 2020
What a lovely and helpful answer. Thanks, Polarbear.
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I am so sorry to hear that your mother has treated you like this for a lifetime. I can definitely relate as I have been treated this same way until I read the book by Karyl McBride titles Will I Ever Be Good Enough? The information in this book opened my eyes to the pain and exploitation that I have experienced for decades. Through counseling and attending Coda group sessions and confiding in a good friend from childhood, I’m finally in a place where I can pull myself up and realize it’s not my fault nor is it yours. My mother recently passed away and I am RELIEVED. Since emotional/verbal abuse runs rampant in my family, I’ve had to firm up boundaries many many times. Walk away from the relationship and do not look back. All I can suggest is to focus on yourself, pray, get into counseling, and read that book it was a life changer for me. I wish you the best.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you for sharing your story, Earlyabuse. How horrible that you had to experience all you did. I'm looking up the book and Coda now. Wishing you all the best too.
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If you're religious pray for her and don't wish any ill will to her then get on with your life.

It's obvious that she has forgot you and/or does not want to deal with you anymore. It is interesting, you are the Executor, POA, etc. Try to get off of that if you want nothing to do with her, because these "appointments" are to spare the family she does care about the grim and sometimes gritty duties of her health and death.

Follow the steps of your younger brother. Good luck to you.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you for your advice and good wishes. You got it right on sparing the others having to do anything - that's the story of my life with her.

It's too late for me to do what my brother did in his 20s. I'm in my 60s and have no children, no spouse, no friends. I'm not from anywhere and moved around the country a lot in both childhood and adulthood (for work) so don't even have a home - I put my stuff in storage across the country when I went to help my mother in Ohio.

I've tried to make friends, but most people at this age have families and friends they've shared a lifetime with. Nice as they are, they have no need for me - especially those with children/grandchildren/spouses. I think the best I can do is just not hurt myself anymore and resign myself to just surviving the time I have left.

Wishing you the best.
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Your abusive mother chooses to devalue YOU and chooses to bestow kind gestures onto others. She knows what she is doing, and might be the personality type that enjoys abusing you.
Your mother controls you through her condition-based "love." When you're compliant, she bestows scripted "kindness."
Her actions, etc = manipulative. Designed to hurt you. She knows that you're being hurt by her devaluations.
That personality type enjoys hurting their victims, and will hide and deny their abusiveness.
The fact that they hide their abuse and behave normally + kindly in front of others = they are in control of their manipulations of others.

Unfortunately, based on your mother's manipulative personality type she very likely deliberately provoked your father into some of his rages, specifically behind closed doors to ruin holidays or to scare kids into compliance (do you see what daddy will do to mommy if you don't obey?) (were his rages on your birthdays? or during milestone events?) which is sick and twisted but part of that personality's modus operandi.

A few years ago a counseling client disclosed that she deliberately would provoke her husband into what she termed "rage-mode," which she said would coincidentally ruin Thanksgiving and other "family only" holidays + kids birthdays she said it helped control the children by instilling fear of their father into them. Social services did zero to help that family.

It's done to ruin relationships between children and the other parent + it's done to control their spouse, by provoking a spouse into a rage or emotional break-down.

Manipulations of emotions is your mother's expertise.There's a fine line that personality type controls. Provocation of rage is planned, the amount of rage is planned, and they will usually upset a spouse into raging against children; which is easier and more rewarding to accomplish in their sick and twisted minds. Because they enjoy inflicting pain.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Wow, Screennamed. You describe it all perfectly. I realized when I was helping her recently that she probably did push him to be violent. She uses my Achilles heels on me often ("No wonder no one loves you" - I'm single now - to "Why don't you get a job" - when I've been trying but even younger people are having a hard time now with the pandemic - then her endless gaslighting which is definitely crazy-making.

As you explain so well, my mother did succeed in alienating me and my younger brother from my father. He died when I was in my early 20s. He (understandably now) had an affair. My mother would threaten my younger brother and I that we would have to go live with the other woman if we even looked in the direction of my father. She also alienated me (and younger brother) from her darlings, the two older siblings - who do nothing for her.

You're so right on the enjoyment of pain infliction. She (and my older siblings) always did get extremely gleeful when I was hurt - physically or otherwise. They literally laughed and their moods would be so happy whenever I was hurt or sick - even when I had serious illnesses. It helps to read what you wrote as I thought that's what I deserved and didn't even realize it was craziness on their part.

Anyway, it would become common knowledge for all to see what you and the others here understood. Maybe then some of the children experiencing it now could be spared what some of us have endured. Thanks again for teaching me.
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It sounds to me like you did better by your mother then she deserves from you and may God bless you for it. Forget her because you will never receive the love, respect, and validation you've wanted from her all these years. Maybe it would help if you thought of her as already dead to you.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you, BurntCaregiver (and hoping that doesn't mean burnt out but if it does, I hope you get a break). I try to think of her as dead, but whenever I get a call from her area code (where I lived while helping her), I'm convinced she's dead and that I have to do all the duties - plus grieve that I'll never get her love. It's surprising to me each time that I still feel sad.

I feel guilty posting all this on this site, but did so in the hope that if there is anyone else with a similar situation, the advice could help them too. For me though, just venting and getting words of wisdom means so much to me....
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I think it's about being taken for granted, and this occurs because we have primarily allowed it to happen to us - due to insufficient love for ourselves, excessive altruism, etc..I hope your mother will reflect in time to deservedly include you in the will.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
thanks
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Hi, Mary, I've just read your past posts. This part of one particularly struck me: "but she did write me out of her will when I left to try to get my health back."

So she wrote you out of her will, yet you are still her executrix and POA? WHY? Why not resign those positions? Why on earth would you be the executrix of a will which leaves you nothing? Or be POA?

You also mentioned a trust. Has your mother left you nothing?

Let one of the darling sibs take care of it all.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thanks. From these comments I can see that resigning is the best idea.
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The betrayal of a mother is the deepest wound. What you have to know in your heart is that your value is not determined by other people. Your value, your divinity, is innate. You have all you need right now inside of you.
Shift your thinking about your mother from she “doesn’t“ to she is “unable.“ She just can’t. She doesn’t have it in her. She never could. Do you see? Her inability, or disability, to love isn’t about you. It’s about her. And how sad for her to miss out on you and all of your kindness and giving.
I give this advice easily but it isn’t easy work. I have to remind myself every day to love myself and to love my mother for her disability. (And I love her from across the country. I make sure she is cared for, I pay her bills, I check in with her once a week by phone.). There are many abused daughters here. Keep reading. It has helped me a lot.
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CantDance Aug 2020
Well said. How very, very true!
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Thanks very much, JoAnn29. I'm going to read that article now. You're spot on with the narcissist part. I found an Irish woman who runs a site, Daughters of Narcissist Mothers, where my mother matches up with the worse type - right down to saying the exact phrases on the site! And you're right on point with the punishing. She wanted me to stay and continue to do all for her while having no life and since I didn't, she's punishing me. I'll check on the POA etc stuff too. Thanks again and wishing you happy trails.
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Mary Mary, firstly, well done for walking away. You have to put your own health and wellbeing above others, especially if they are abusive towards you. You need feel no guilt about this. Perhaps for the first time in your life you have stood up to your mother's abuse, and boy, is she now making you pay for it with her ongoing behaviour towards you. You mention you've been keeping in touch with her, only to receive further abusive emails which are distressing you further. This is like picking a scab, so I suggest you don't get in touch for a while to protect yourself from further abuse. I can also understand why you are hurt when you see her treat your siblings and her grandchildren better than she treats you. Bluntly, you are the scapegoat in this family scenario, and understandably hurt and confused as to why she doesn't love you. You have quite rightly assumed that others on this forum have mothers who don't love their children. Let me be honest with you: my mother doesn't love me and I have been the scapegoat all my life. My stepmother wishes I had never even existed. How does this not destroy me? I keep my mother at arms length and do not get drawn into any kind of combative situation with her. I go Grey Rock so she cannot hurt me any more. As for my stepmother, I have cut her out of my life rather than tolerate any more abuse. Please please be kind to yourself, put your own needs and wants first and recognise you are a good person who deserves love and kindness - from others and from yourself. It is not easy to tell yourself this after a lifetime of abuse, but make a start now, and let others in your family deal with your mother's health needs. Find and do activities that give you pleasure and cut out the poison from your life.
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mary,

It is painful to be devalued by one who raised us; to be thought of as nothing. Because deep down inside, if Mom doesn't love us, who will? So we trudge through life convinced we're worthless and undeserving, sometimes to the point we refuse to believe friends, husbands, wives, who say they do love us!

The light came on for me when a family member referred to Mom as "mentally ill." I began to examine her toxic behaviors. The evidence was undeniable. All my life, my self image was nothing more than a distortion reflected through the eyes of a deeply troubled mother. Why was I allowing a sick person (or anyone else) define who I was?

Mary, through what you've shared, the woman who gave birth to you is paranoid and emotionally abusive; a hoarder to boot, all signs of some form(s) of mental instability. Why are you letting her define you? And for how long?

You say your mother has "thrown you away." Have you ever thought of this as a good thing? Get out of your mother's life and start making your own. Liberate yourself from her toxicity. Throw HER out of YOUR life! (Sorry for shouting). Leave her to the 2 siblings you described as "her darlings" and place your focus on your own health and future. You deserve it!
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you, Can'tDance. Your answer brought me to tears and I'm not a cryer. So true about not believing others who say they love you.... I'm trying to do what you advise as I know you are right. The rest of my small family and her many friends thinks she's a sweet old lady, because that's what she is to them. Only my ex husband saw her abuse. It was through him I learned how bad it was as he never took my side in anything else. Anyway, I'll try. It's a daily struggle to feel worthy... Wishing you the best.
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You left to save your life. You saved your life. You should be very very proud. It takes tremendous courage to do this. Another sibling did the same. Now you should not spend the life you saved looking backward over your shoulder. You left her. She wanted you to stay so that she could continue to abuse you. But you left. Why WOULD she have anything to do with you now? You made her unhappy. You took away all her fun, what she lives for, so why in the world would she want anything at all to do with you?
You always knew what she was.
You finally had the courage to leave.
Are you going to stop on your path away from her now, turn around, and stand there staring at the past like some dark wooded forest?
Or are you going to continue moving forward.
If you need to look back on this, or explore it with professional help, good. You can learn from that. But don't lose the forward momentum. You have two choices at a good life. One the family you are born into and the other the family you MAKE. Now make a good family. Choose quality friends to shower your giving on. You can do this. Will it take time? Yup. But you can do this because you have already proved that you can do one of the hardest things ever. When one is trained in abuse from childhood it is very hard to escape. And you DID IT. Congratulations.
Stop emailing her. Look on that as yourself asking someone to abuse you because you temporarily miss being abused. Send a card once a month. Your Mom is very flawed. It is too late for her to change. I am so dreadfully sorry she is the card you drew for Mom this life. But she is, and until you accept her horrible inadequacy you cannot forgive her, and you cannot give up pleading with her to change.
This is all a very simplistic answer, and I recognize nothing is that easy, but do give yourself a little love today, OK? Hugs.
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marymary2 Aug 2020
Thank you, AlvaDeer. I need to print out your answer (and the others) to read every few minutes! It's not simplistic at all and probably is so on point because you may have suffered through a similar fate. If so, I'm sorry - and I hope you've escaped too - it sounds like it. Cheers to you.
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I didn’t have a mother anything like yours, and I’m truly sorry for your experience. I may not be qualified by experience to answer you, I can give empathy and thoughts. One is I don’t think you’ve left “enough” You’re still reaching out to your mom, and that’s setting yourself up for more hurt and disappointment. And you’re making yourself aware of what’s happening for other family members. No matter how much you’ve made peace with how mom is, it still stings when you’re rejected and you see evidence of others being loved. I’d encourage you to stop both of these, don’t contact her and don’t know what occurs for others. If you want or need contact, send friendly cards, they don’t get an immediate response or any response at all. Don’t feel any need to explain yourself, you’re a fully formed adult, you don’t owe an explanation for your choices and actions. And most importantly, time to place positive, encouraging people in your life. Find these people through a community of faith or other means. Boundaries are a fence with a gate, they let in the good and keep out the bad. Time to keep out the bad that’s bringing you harm and find some good to fill your life. I wish you the best
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marymary2 Aug 2020
What a wonderful reply, Daughterof1930. Thank you so much. I'm going to put your suggestions into action, regardless of how I feel. Wishing you much happiness.
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I am really surprised she assigned u POA and Executor. You may want to check that out, these can be changed.

I would say that Mom is a Narcissist and does not know really how to love or show empathy. And never never will. Because I was a child who wanted to please (thank God I outgrew that) I can see where ur coming from. You cared for Mom because you wanted her to acknowledge that she loved you. You r looking for something she is not able to provide. She has a personality disorder. But love doesn't breed love. Because you are looking for it, your an easy target. At this point she is trying to punish you. Don't play into it. Only u can break the cycle.

Maybe u need a Psychologist instead of a Psychiatrist. From what I read your Mom would need the Psychiatrist because she has the disorder. But a Psychologist works with the family. Here's the article.

https://www.healthecareers.com/article/career/psychology-psychiatry-whats-the-difference?gclid=Cj0KCQjwhIP6BRCMARIsALu9LflKYoPLpCmDutw-VDEdwfdJuDOCdxeCVyk2azn9h4mlzoNkR8B0BvwaAmyQEALw_wcB
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