The author of this post has started a new blog, Not Well Adjusted, and has given permission to re-post this entry here. Go read her blog to find out more about her childhood and why she decided to become free of her mother.
I cut ties with my mother when my son was 2 weeks old. I couldn't take her constant judging, harassing, and demands anymore.
The beginning of the end started when my son was born. The plan was that my mother, who lives 12 hours away, would drive down after he was born to see us and meet him. His due date was great for her, because she would be finished with her volunteer work. Instead, he came a few weeks early. She said we'd have to wait 2 weeks before she could come. This sort of worked out well for us. Everything is HER way or NO way and she will make your life hell if you don't comply. The two weeks would help us establish a routine and such.
Two weeks rolled around. We found out my husband would have to leave for a week long business trip. Then my mother called and said my dad was also going to be out of town so she couldn't come visit. I guess it's too much effort to board a dog and ask a friend to check up on other farm animals so she could come meet her FIRST grandson. Instead, she offered to send a friend in her place. UMMMM NO! I'm not playing hostess to a semi stranger two weeks postpartum.
The next day I took my son in for his two week check up. Two things were going on. He was forcefully vomiting after each nursing/bottle session. On top of that we were supplementing formula because I wasn't producing enough milk. 45 minutes of pumping produced 2-3 ounces collectively first thing in the morning. I knew my supply was slowly dwindling and asked to do a weighed feeding. Lactose Intolerance was also suggested
After the appointment, I called my mother and told her how it went. I hadn't told her about the two issues.
Cue Explosion!
"THERE IS NOTHING WRONG WITH YOUR CHILD. ALL BABIES SPIT UP A LITTLE. YOUR BOOBS ARE PERFECTLY FINE. STICK ONE IN HIS MOUTH AND FEED YOUR KID. YOU ARE MAKING HIM SICK MY GIVING HIM FORMULA. MIXING FORMULA WITH BREASTMILK IS THE WORST THING YOU COULD EVER DO FOR A BABY. HOW CAN YOU SAY YOU KNOW WHAT'S BEST FOR YOU KID? YOU'VE ONLY BE A PARENT FOR 20 MINUTES."
All of the above started flying at me through the phone. Remember, she's never even met him or seen the amount of vomit coming out of him. The last two weeks had already been filled with her judgments about everything from where he was sleeping and how many times we'd left the house. SHE was stressing me out and that isn't helping for milk supply either.
The straw that broke the camel's back?
"THAT BABY IS NOT A TOY! CLOSE YOUR MOUTH, GROW UP, AND TAKE CARE OF YOU KID!"
I hung up the phone and haven't exchanged a word with her since. That was over two years ago and you know what, I've never been happier. This was a long time coming and I'm so glad it finally happened.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Thursday, October 6, 2011
"She was my mother once..."
My earliest memories are of trying to placate my mother. By the time I
was four, I was able to predict her mood swings with great accuracy,
and to this day if I can't predict someone's actions within minutes of
meeting them I am deeply afraid of them. My parents divorced when I
was five. My mother almost didn't fight for custody, but her family
told her to, so for years she lied to and manipulated everyone she
could. She would make up very convincing stories and truly believe
they had happened. She even convinced the guardian ad litem that she
was the best parent. Finally my dad won custody when it turned out
she'd been lying to her lawyer about a lot of things. I am grateful
for that every day. It was still very, very unusual for the father to
get custody - it still is, which is shameful. If I'd been given to her
I doubt I would be alive now.
During the divorce she tried to convince me and my brother that our
dad was evil. She would tell us that there was a black hole in his
living room that would eat us up, or that monsters lived under the
beds in his apartment. I just wanted to make everyone happy so that no
one would be angry at me. I tried to hate my dad for her, but when I
couldn't, I finally went to her and apologized for still loving him. I
only realized how horrible that is very recently. It just seemed like
a normal and natural thing to do at the time. Her words worked on my
brother, and he learned to hate Dad.
She moved out of state after the divorce, and we would visit her every
summer. She would dress me up and use me to impress her friends with
how cute and polite I was. I was the golden child who could do no
wrong. When I was 11 she moved back and wanted to see us more. I was
miserable. She hadn't changed at all, she just wanted to use me for
social status and labor. I decided to stop visiting her when I was 12.
She never asked for me when she kept picking up my brother for his
visits.
I went to court when I was 16 to remove her parental rights. She
didn't fight it, but she did send me a bunch of baby pictures. She had
taken all of them in the divorce. I was grateful - she was trying to
manipulate me, but those pictures were a precious gift. The court
removed her parental rights when I was 17. I was terrified in that
court room, making my case to the judge alongside my dad and attorney.
I was terrified that I'd see her, that she'd show up and charm and lie
her way out of it. I could barely walk out I was shaking so hard.
This year, I'm 25. My mother just died of cancer. I've had to comfort
my brother as best I can. I still don't know how I feel about it - her
boyfriend kept sending messages urging me to reconcile with her, but I
think that I have. I don't hate her anymore. I'm not angry with her
for all the damage she did to me. I'm not glad she's dead. It's just a
thing that is true: she was my mother once, and she was a terrible
person, and now she's dead.
was four, I was able to predict her mood swings with great accuracy,
and to this day if I can't predict someone's actions within minutes of
meeting them I am deeply afraid of them. My parents divorced when I
was five. My mother almost didn't fight for custody, but her family
told her to, so for years she lied to and manipulated everyone she
could. She would make up very convincing stories and truly believe
they had happened. She even convinced the guardian ad litem that she
was the best parent. Finally my dad won custody when it turned out
she'd been lying to her lawyer about a lot of things. I am grateful
for that every day. It was still very, very unusual for the father to
get custody - it still is, which is shameful. If I'd been given to her
I doubt I would be alive now.
During the divorce she tried to convince me and my brother that our
dad was evil. She would tell us that there was a black hole in his
living room that would eat us up, or that monsters lived under the
beds in his apartment. I just wanted to make everyone happy so that no
one would be angry at me. I tried to hate my dad for her, but when I
couldn't, I finally went to her and apologized for still loving him. I
only realized how horrible that is very recently. It just seemed like
a normal and natural thing to do at the time. Her words worked on my
brother, and he learned to hate Dad.
She moved out of state after the divorce, and we would visit her every
summer. She would dress me up and use me to impress her friends with
how cute and polite I was. I was the golden child who could do no
wrong. When I was 11 she moved back and wanted to see us more. I was
miserable. She hadn't changed at all, she just wanted to use me for
social status and labor. I decided to stop visiting her when I was 12.
She never asked for me when she kept picking up my brother for his
visits.
I went to court when I was 16 to remove her parental rights. She
didn't fight it, but she did send me a bunch of baby pictures. She had
taken all of them in the divorce. I was grateful - she was trying to
manipulate me, but those pictures were a precious gift. The court
removed her parental rights when I was 17. I was terrified in that
court room, making my case to the judge alongside my dad and attorney.
I was terrified that I'd see her, that she'd show up and charm and lie
her way out of it. I could barely walk out I was shaking so hard.
This year, I'm 25. My mother just died of cancer. I've had to comfort
my brother as best I can. I still don't know how I feel about it - her
boyfriend kept sending messages urging me to reconcile with her, but I
think that I have. I don't hate her anymore. I'm not angry with her
for all the damage she did to me. I'm not glad she's dead. It's just a
thing that is true: she was my mother once, and she was a terrible
person, and now she's dead.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
"Children are supposed to be loved and protected..."
My father was a molester. My very earliest memory is of being raped. I
was probably only two years old. When I was 5 he put a gun to my head
and said that if I ever told anyone he would kill my grandparents and
make me watch. He knew that they were my favorite people in the whole
world, so that's why he said that. He knew it would keep my mouth shut.
When I was ten years old my periods started. I was terrified that I would wind up pregnant. I remember there being a news story about a 10 year old having a baby after being raped. It was really big news at the time, so I was scared out of my mind.
I had made a really good friend at school. We moved a lot, so I never really had friends before, but this girl was different. Sarah was so kind and warm and genuine. I was actually allowed to go to a sleepover at her house. I had never been allowed to do that before. Life in her house was so different than anything I had ever known. When they took me home her dad seemed agitated and nervous. I thought he didn't like me and couldn't wait to get rid of me. It turns out he had a bad feeling and didn't want to let me out of their car. He told Sarah that he felt like something bad was going to happen to me. Of course I didn't know that until this Spring, twenty years after the fact.
I finally worked up the courage to tell Sarah my big secret. She convinced me to tell our teacher. So we got excused from gym class to go talk to the teacher. She stood right there holding my hand for support. Then all Hell broke loose. They made me tell the story to the principal and a social worker and a police officer. THEN they sent me home on the school bus! They had called me mom to prepare her and called my dad at work to tell him to bring us to the police station.
My mom immediately started blaming me. It was all my fault. She told the cops and social worker that I asked for it. I pranced around in little nighties and panties. Well, she was the one who bought my clothes, I wore what she gave me. They whisked me away to a foster home that night. I was there for six months until he was in prison.
After that it took years to trust my mother again. I still don't completely trust her. She only talks to me when she wants something. She always babied my brother, but treated me like dirt. It used to hurt a lot, but I'm over it now.
My grandma, the one he threatened to kill, is his mother. We were always close, the only time I was safe was when I was at her house. She and my Pappy were wonderful. Pappy passed away when I was 15. Grandma is still alive and kicking though. Somehow she has convinced herself that it was all just a "misunderstanding." She keeps trying to get me to visit her when he's there. She's even lied about his being there. Now that I have a daughter she tries even harder. I sent her pictures of the baby and specifically told her not to give him any. She sent them all to him and then asked me for more. I was very upset about that. I'm sure it's because she doesn't want to believe that she raised a monster. But this is my child and he will NEVER see her.
I don't regret this choice at all. Children are supposed to be loved and protected, not abused.
When I was ten years old my periods started. I was terrified that I would wind up pregnant. I remember there being a news story about a 10 year old having a baby after being raped. It was really big news at the time, so I was scared out of my mind.
I had made a really good friend at school. We moved a lot, so I never really had friends before, but this girl was different. Sarah was so kind and warm and genuine. I was actually allowed to go to a sleepover at her house. I had never been allowed to do that before. Life in her house was so different than anything I had ever known. When they took me home her dad seemed agitated and nervous. I thought he didn't like me and couldn't wait to get rid of me. It turns out he had a bad feeling and didn't want to let me out of their car. He told Sarah that he felt like something bad was going to happen to me. Of course I didn't know that until this Spring, twenty years after the fact.
I finally worked up the courage to tell Sarah my big secret. She convinced me to tell our teacher. So we got excused from gym class to go talk to the teacher. She stood right there holding my hand for support. Then all Hell broke loose. They made me tell the story to the principal and a social worker and a police officer. THEN they sent me home on the school bus! They had called me mom to prepare her and called my dad at work to tell him to bring us to the police station.
My mom immediately started blaming me. It was all my fault. She told the cops and social worker that I asked for it. I pranced around in little nighties and panties. Well, she was the one who bought my clothes, I wore what she gave me. They whisked me away to a foster home that night. I was there for six months until he was in prison.
After that it took years to trust my mother again. I still don't completely trust her. She only talks to me when she wants something. She always babied my brother, but treated me like dirt. It used to hurt a lot, but I'm over it now.
My grandma, the one he threatened to kill, is his mother. We were always close, the only time I was safe was when I was at her house. She and my Pappy were wonderful. Pappy passed away when I was 15. Grandma is still alive and kicking though. Somehow she has convinced herself that it was all just a "misunderstanding." She keeps trying to get me to visit her when he's there. She's even lied about his being there. Now that I have a daughter she tries even harder. I sent her pictures of the baby and specifically told her not to give him any. She sent them all to him and then asked me for more. I was very upset about that. I'm sure it's because she doesn't want to believe that she raised a monster. But this is my child and he will NEVER see her.
I don't regret this choice at all. Children are supposed to be loved and protected, not abused.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
"It's never too late..."
My mother died suddenly and unexpectedly when I was 12. My dad's
mistress moved in within a month of my mother's death, and, while my dad
took me to one counseling session soon after my mother died, when I
refused to speak, I guess he gave up. After that, my dad and his new
wife never mentioned my mother again - in fact, they pretended as though
nothing had happened. I had no idea how to deal with my mom's death.
And my dad was too busy with my step-mother to pay attention to me or
parent me.
I think the important part
of my story is the realization that it is never too late to cut toxic
people from your life. It is never too late to try and make a better
life for yourself and your family. My daughter doesn't need people who
treated me poorly in her life. It isn't her job to help them win some
kind of grandparents of the year award. She's not part of their game. My
dad treats people he believes to be inferior to him with open disdain,
and is generally impatient and negative. That attitude rubbed off on me
growing up, and I work every day to fight it. I want my daughter to know
that everyone deserves to be treated with dignity and respect.
Over the next several years, my father and
his new wife more or less ignored me save to tell me how terrible I was
- and it's true, I didn't get along well with him or my step-mother. My
father told me on multiple occasions that it was my fault my mother had
died. I got into all sorts of trouble as a teen, although they rarely
noticed. I would stay out with older friends for days and I'm pretty
sure they were just glad I was out of their hair. My dad offered little
guidance or discipline - in short, he gave up parenting me. I really
resent that now.
After high school I moved
away, but distance made me miss my 'family' and we continued to have a
cordial albeit superficial relationship. My father continued to refuse
to speak about my mother, but if we kept the conversation geared toward
weather and work, we were fine. It continued that way for over a decade.
Then,
last year, I gave birth to my daughter. My step mother, who I had never
been close with, began emailing me with increasing frequency, which was
bizarre since neither of them cared at all about my pregnancy. She told
me that she and my father were planning on visiting, and when I told
them that it wasn't a good time, she became increasingly pushy. I
realized that they didn't care about me, my husband, or really even my
daughter and what we wanted and needed as a family - they just wanted to
visit to fulfill their need to appear like good grandparents. That's
how it's always been with them - they always try to appear like they're
such perfect people. It was the last straw for me. I wasn't going to
pretend that everything was okay; not when it involved my daughter.
I
look at my beautiful, sweet, trusting, and innocent daughter and cannot
imagine treating her - my child - the way that my father and step
mother treated me.
Reactions - My husband
initially thought that cutting them off at the birth of our daughter
after maintaining some semblance of a relationship with them for over a
decade as an adult was somewhat vindictive. I don’t really see it that
way - it’s just that having my daughter gave me cause to rethink my entire relationship with them.
And, my husband has still been supportive - he does understand why I
cut them off. As for my dad and step mother, I don't know what their
reaction was. And I don't really care. Sometimes I'm sad, but it's
because I still feel abandoned by my dad, not because I no longer talk
to him. In fact, cutting off my parents has finally allowed me to grieve
in ways I couldn't previously do. It's been hard. I feel so angry at my
parents sometimes.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
"Freedom did not come for me until I realized it was not my fault..."
The Back Story
All my life, I have lived with my dad's total disrespect for me, my brother, and my mom. He used very harsh discipline on us, that I am still emotionally healing from. When I was a child, he abused animals
in front of me, which was very traumatic for me to watch. I still
struggle with the images of what he did to innocent animals in front of
me. He's been in and out of my life over the past 5 years, ever since I
had my first son. He meddles, wants to control. One time
he even wanted to bite my son when my son was biting him! We tried going
for counseling with him. He sat there and told lies about me to the
counselor, acted like the poor victim. When I went for a counseling
session alone, the counselor told me for the sake of my children, it
might be the best thing to not have him in my life.
I made mistakes too. I used to lash out in anger when he
would disrespect me. After speaking to the counselor, I held on to the
hope that if I just apologized and stopped lashing out in anger the
relationship would get better. I changed, and for a long time, I just
let him make his disrespectful comments to me. When I bought him a
birthday or Father's day gift, instead of saying thank you, he would
make some sarcastic comment. When he came over he would insult the fact
that I have pets in my house. I kept hoping he would change. Freedom
did not come for me, until I realized this was not my fault (he is still blaming me for everything) and that I cannot change him.
Attending counseling sessions with him, asking my husband to talk to
him, ignoring him, standing up for myself in a nicer way---nothing
worked, I simply cannot change him. And as much as I hate where we are
at,
that my family is torn apart, I will not allow my boys to be treated in
the same way I, my mother, and my brother have been treated.
The Last Straw
He was often very good with my boys. He spent time with them,
played a lot of games with them, they adored their "papa" But I noticed
that as they got older, every once in awhile, he would start to treat
them the way he treated the rest of his family. He would wrestle and
become too rough, if they got out of line he would speak to them in the
same harsh tone that used to freak me out, as a child. It stressed me
out very much. I did not want to confront him and cause family drama
again. I did not want to be responsible for tearing my family apart and
his not seeing the boys anymore because I was afraid my boys would
somehow blame me..
Then, the straw that broke the camels back was last November. He
was wrestling with my son and again being too rough. I told him to stop
and he wouldn't listen. Things got out of hand, my son kept teasing him
by slapping him in the face (he was doing it as a joke because my dad
was hitting him roughly also!). My dad snapped, got mad and threatened
to slap my son across the face. I should have intervened, but I froze in
fear, I asked my mom for help and she did nothing and before I knew it
he hit my son on the shoulder. I told him not to hit my kids,
that he was teaching them to hit him back. He got madder and argued with
me, right in front of my kids!!!!
At Christmas, my mom made it sound like he wanted to patch
things up with us. I bought him a gift and sent it home with my mom. I
told her we wanted to patch things up too, and still come over for
Christmas. I told her all we wanted him to do was phone us, promise us
he will not hit our kids again. We waited all day on December 24th for
his phone call. Finally the phone rang at 6pm!! It was my mom. She said
he refuses to talk to us. How hurtful!! Thank goodness my boys were too
young to understand what was going on. We later found out, from my mom,
that he wanted us to drop our son off at his house -alone- so he could
talk to him about the hitting incident, and then we could all come over
for Christmas. We, of course, would never do that. Why did he insist on
being alone with him?
Breaking Away
Since then, almost a year ago, we have had nothing to do with him.
It's been a hard year, but a good one. He is no longer meddling with how
I raise my kids, making subtle hints that they should go to school,
treating them in the same poor way that he used to treat me. I'm glad to
be away from him. I feel free and I don't want him in my life anymore.
The pain he has caused me and my family, he refuses to apologize for or
even acknowledge. My boys are still too young to understand what has
gone on. They still ask about him sometimes, but they do not understand
the seriousness of it all. Again, they are too young and I've tried to
gently explain the basics to them, but shelter them from most of it.
Looking Ahead
The one thing I feel bad about is that my sons absolutely adored
him. They still ask about him from time to time even though they never
see him anymore. I'm very worried my sons are going to grow up and and
blame me for why they did not get to see their beloved papa when they
were growing up. Another huge fear, that they will want to have a
relationship with him when they are older and my dad will try to turn
them against me to get revenge.
I hope this blog can be a place to heal my heart because I feel so
alone. My husband is a huge help, but only someone who has gone through a
similar experience really understands what it is like. I also hope I
can help others who are a part of this blog heal. It's so
hard seeing grandparents who babysit and respect what their children
want. I live in a small town. I often have people asking me about my
parents. I just kind of brush it off and say "they are doing fine."
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
"I feel so relieved now, yet..."
This story was submitted by "Marie."
My mother and father separated when I was very young, only six years old. My connection with my father was always strong (I'd be allowed to go visit him every other weekend, stay with him for weeks at a time during longer Christmas and summer breaks), and it was basically the only thing that allowed to keep me my sanity from when I was a very young child until we finally moved to Florida, where I was unable to keep these meetings up.
My mother was always verbally and emotionally abusive rather than physically abusive. As a young child, my favorite thing to do was always to read, and I gathered books from everywhere I could - old, falling apart books libraries and neighbors were giving away, or books I got for presents or books I bought myself with money I earned. One of the worst things she ever did to me was during the summer the year I was nine; due to the fact I had a less than very good report card (she considered high B's and A's very good), she wrapped up three full trash bags full of my books. Two bags went into the garbage. The third got donated...
My mother and father separated when I was very young, only six years old. My connection with my father was always strong (I'd be allowed to go visit him every other weekend, stay with him for weeks at a time during longer Christmas and summer breaks), and it was basically the only thing that allowed to keep me my sanity from when I was a very young child until we finally moved to Florida, where I was unable to keep these meetings up.
My mother was always verbally and emotionally abusive rather than physically abusive. As a young child, my favorite thing to do was always to read, and I gathered books from everywhere I could - old, falling apart books libraries and neighbors were giving away, or books I got for presents or books I bought myself with money I earned. One of the worst things she ever did to me was during the summer the year I was nine; due to the fact I had a less than very good report card (she considered high B's and A's very good), she wrapped up three full trash bags full of my books. Two bags went into the garbage. The third got donated...
Monday, September 19, 2011
Fresh Wounds, Part 3: "I will be OK."
Read Fresh Wounds, Part 1: "I allowed her to control me too much..."
And Fresh Wounds, Part 2: "I was making choices for myself."
The Back-Lash
Not talking to my mom had a really negative effect on me. I did not even know it was happening at first. I was falling into a depression. I was grieving the loss of my mother, and my best friend. She was dead to me. We were not speaking at all for the first time in my life. I can not remember a time we went more then 24 hours without speaking. I was now pushing 2...3 months. It was really hard on me. There were little things everyday that reminded me of her. It was hard not to pick up the phone and call her and just talk like we used to. I did not want to do that though because I was talking to a lie. I missed talking to my mom that was my best friend but in reality that never existed. Every time I talked to my mom I realized she had a motive or a plan. But I was still grieving. A lot.
This lead to fights with my boyfriend. I would get angry over the dumbest things. He wouldn’t put his dish in the dish washer and I would end up crying. I should not have been crying as much as I was. It seemed like I was crying at least once a day. I thought my boyfriend and I were just having problems but it was me trying to deal with my loss. I wasn’t ready to address the reality that my mom was gone.
I started seeing a doctor and I started taking medicine and they seem to be working great. Apparently not. My boyfriend was not able to deal with the stress and unspoken pressure I was putting on him. He felt like he was all I had left, like I depended on him to keep me happy. He was having trouble dealing with all the tears and the little fights that were actually about my mom not him. I lost him. It is still very raw.
Looking Back
I have absolutely no regrets about what happened with my mom in the past 3 months. I am dealing with the anger and shock stages right now. I hate that I allowed my mom to control so much of my life. I hate that she put so much pressure on me about my weight, grades, friends, and social decisions. I hate that I live to please other because I spent my life making decisions that would please my mom. The only thing I regret right now is putting pressure on my boyfriend. I love him for supporting me and giving me the courage to move on from the controlling woman my mother was.
Moving Forward
I am very lucky to have the support system that I have. My friends are amazing.
Everyday I tell myself that I am strong. I am confident. I will be ok. I am beautiful. I am independent. I am amazing. I will be ok.
I am going to get settled in at my new job. I am going to take everything one day at a time instead of thinking way into the future. I am going to control the things that I can control. I am going to control my reactions. I am going to control my emotions. I will be ok!
As it stands now I am working on accepting that my mom is not and will not be a part of my life. So far it is going pretty well. I know she is still a human and still alive but the relationship I thought we had is dead. It is gone forever. Maybe someday she will wonder back into my life but I will have all the control. I will control when it happens and if it happens. I will control what I tell her. I will be in charge.
And Fresh Wounds, Part 2: "I was making choices for myself."
The Back-Lash
Not talking to my mom had a really negative effect on me. I did not even know it was happening at first. I was falling into a depression. I was grieving the loss of my mother, and my best friend. She was dead to me. We were not speaking at all for the first time in my life. I can not remember a time we went more then 24 hours without speaking. I was now pushing 2...3 months. It was really hard on me. There were little things everyday that reminded me of her. It was hard not to pick up the phone and call her and just talk like we used to. I did not want to do that though because I was talking to a lie. I missed talking to my mom that was my best friend but in reality that never existed. Every time I talked to my mom I realized she had a motive or a plan. But I was still grieving. A lot.
This lead to fights with my boyfriend. I would get angry over the dumbest things. He wouldn’t put his dish in the dish washer and I would end up crying. I should not have been crying as much as I was. It seemed like I was crying at least once a day. I thought my boyfriend and I were just having problems but it was me trying to deal with my loss. I wasn’t ready to address the reality that my mom was gone.
I started seeing a doctor and I started taking medicine and they seem to be working great. Apparently not. My boyfriend was not able to deal with the stress and unspoken pressure I was putting on him. He felt like he was all I had left, like I depended on him to keep me happy. He was having trouble dealing with all the tears and the little fights that were actually about my mom not him. I lost him. It is still very raw.
Looking Back
I have absolutely no regrets about what happened with my mom in the past 3 months. I am dealing with the anger and shock stages right now. I hate that I allowed my mom to control so much of my life. I hate that she put so much pressure on me about my weight, grades, friends, and social decisions. I hate that I live to please other because I spent my life making decisions that would please my mom. The only thing I regret right now is putting pressure on my boyfriend. I love him for supporting me and giving me the courage to move on from the controlling woman my mother was.
Moving Forward
I am very lucky to have the support system that I have. My friends are amazing.
Everyday I tell myself that I am strong. I am confident. I will be ok. I am beautiful. I am independent. I am amazing. I will be ok.
I am going to get settled in at my new job. I am going to take everything one day at a time instead of thinking way into the future. I am going to control the things that I can control. I am going to control my reactions. I am going to control my emotions. I will be ok!
As it stands now I am working on accepting that my mom is not and will not be a part of my life. So far it is going pretty well. I know she is still a human and still alive but the relationship I thought we had is dead. It is gone forever. Maybe someday she will wonder back into my life but I will have all the control. I will control when it happens and if it happens. I will control what I tell her. I will be in charge.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Fresh Wounds, Part 2: "I was making choices for myself..."
This is the second part of one woman's story of being controlled and manipulated. Read Part 1 for The Back Story.
The Breaking Point
I had been with my boyfriend for about seven months and I knew deep down inside that I
loved him. I was just afraid to verbalize it. He had I had been bickering here and there
and we 'broke up." We ended up working things out and getting back together quickly. This my mother did not support at all. That fight made me realize how much I loved him and how much I wanted him in my life. It sucks it took that to make me realize but I finally did. I loved this man with everything that I was and I loved who I could be when I was with him.
This is where my mother started to protest. She finally let it all out about how much she
hated him. She did a celebration (not in my face) when we broke up. In hind sight I
realize many of the problems in my relationship with my boyfriend went back to my mom.
I would get upset with him over something stupid, like I didnʼt like the shoes he was
wearing, and after talking about it with him, all would be fine. He would leave and I would
go talk to my mom about it and she would make it seem like it was the WORST thing
that anyone has ever done. How could he wear SNEAKERS! So then I would get
angry all over again. I thought, “mother knows best” and she would never lead me
astray. She knows I want to be with this man so she would never try to convince me to
end things with him. I was so wrong.
She was jumping on every opportunity like that to drive a wedge between us. I was
blindly listening to the person I thought was my best friend. I thought my mom (and my best
friend) was guiding me for what was best for me. No she was leading me in the
direction she wanted me to go. She did not want me with him and every day her
conversation was leading to that. I felt so stupid after I realized this.
Back to the “break up”... my mom used this chance to drive a further wedge between
us... she would make up lies about him on a daily basis to make me think he was this
horrible person. Lies like... he is a child molester, abusive, controlling.... Just so we are
100% clear, he is none of these things. He is gentle, caring, loving, and would do
anything to make the people he loves happy. If anything he puts his needs behind
others and sacrifices his health to do so.
It took me getting to this point with my mom to realize how controlling she was. My best
friends had seen this all along but I had not. They were able to tread lightly around the situation. They told me 5 years ago when I moved out that I might want to stop telling her as
much as I did. I should have listened to them.
My friends were trying to get me to see that moving out of my parents house and
leaving their job would the best thing for me. I, for months, thought this was not a good
idea. I lived for two months in misery with my mom walking all over me and trying to tell me what to do. The worst part was she was writing my pay checks and she knew what I need to live on my own and knew not to pay me that much.
My boyfriend and I decided we would move in together. I still worked for my parents for
another week or so until they decided to cut my pay by $5 an hour. Then and there I quit.
I was no longer going to deal with this woman. I was finished. I had a lot of people telling
me I need to make this decision and I was in denial that it was the right choice. When I
finally did it, I realized it was the best thing that ever happened to me.
Finally, I was cut off completely from my mom (and dad) and living on my own for once
in my life. For the first time I was making choices for myself, not for my mom and me. I
was living with my boyfriend, on my way to starting a new job (that I got on my own
merit), and we had two puppies. I was the happiest I had been in a really long time. Or so
I thought...
Read Part 3, the aftermath.
The Breaking Point
I had been with my boyfriend for about seven months and I knew deep down inside that I
loved him. I was just afraid to verbalize it. He had I had been bickering here and there
and we 'broke up." We ended up working things out and getting back together quickly. This my mother did not support at all. That fight made me realize how much I loved him and how much I wanted him in my life. It sucks it took that to make me realize but I finally did. I loved this man with everything that I was and I loved who I could be when I was with him.
This is where my mother started to protest. She finally let it all out about how much she
hated him. She did a celebration (not in my face) when we broke up. In hind sight I
realize many of the problems in my relationship with my boyfriend went back to my mom.
I would get upset with him over something stupid, like I didnʼt like the shoes he was
wearing, and after talking about it with him, all would be fine. He would leave and I would
go talk to my mom about it and she would make it seem like it was the WORST thing
that anyone has ever done. How could he wear SNEAKERS! So then I would get
angry all over again. I thought, “mother knows best” and she would never lead me
astray. She knows I want to be with this man so she would never try to convince me to
end things with him. I was so wrong.
She was jumping on every opportunity like that to drive a wedge between us. I was
blindly listening to the person I thought was my best friend. I thought my mom (and my best
friend) was guiding me for what was best for me. No she was leading me in the
direction she wanted me to go. She did not want me with him and every day her
conversation was leading to that. I felt so stupid after I realized this.
Back to the “break up”... my mom used this chance to drive a further wedge between
us... she would make up lies about him on a daily basis to make me think he was this
horrible person. Lies like... he is a child molester, abusive, controlling.... Just so we are
100% clear, he is none of these things. He is gentle, caring, loving, and would do
anything to make the people he loves happy. If anything he puts his needs behind
others and sacrifices his health to do so.
It took me getting to this point with my mom to realize how controlling she was. My best
friends had seen this all along but I had not. They were able to tread lightly around the situation. They told me 5 years ago when I moved out that I might want to stop telling her as
much as I did. I should have listened to them.
My friends were trying to get me to see that moving out of my parents house and
leaving their job would the best thing for me. I, for months, thought this was not a good
idea. I lived for two months in misery with my mom walking all over me and trying to tell me what to do. The worst part was she was writing my pay checks and she knew what I need to live on my own and knew not to pay me that much.
My boyfriend and I decided we would move in together. I still worked for my parents for
another week or so until they decided to cut my pay by $5 an hour. Then and there I quit.
I was no longer going to deal with this woman. I was finished. I had a lot of people telling
me I need to make this decision and I was in denial that it was the right choice. When I
finally did it, I realized it was the best thing that ever happened to me.
Finally, I was cut off completely from my mom (and dad) and living on my own for once
in my life. For the first time I was making choices for myself, not for my mom and me. I
was living with my boyfriend, on my way to starting a new job (that I got on my own
merit), and we had two puppies. I was the happiest I had been in a really long time. Or so
I thought...
Read Part 3, the aftermath.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Fresh Wounds, Part 1: "I allowed her to control me too much..."
This woman very recently
decided to become free from her parents. Her wounds are still fresh, and
she has a lot to share, so her story will be broken up into three
parts.
The Back Story
I always thought my mom was my best friend. I thought I could tell her ANYTHING and I usually did. It seemed so wonderful to have the love and support of a mother. It seemed amazing to go home at night and have your best friend always there. I always thought she was not passing judgement and was being supportive of my decisions. There were a few times in my life when I felt my mom was dictating too much to me what I could and could not do. I just assumed these were normal “mother knows best” situations.
She was critical of almost all the friends I've ever had. In hind sight, this was because I was spending more time with them then I was with her. The only two friends she didn't have problems with were the ones who didn't take up my time, and pull me away from her.
The Back Story
I always thought my mom was my best friend. I thought I could tell her ANYTHING and I usually did. It seemed so wonderful to have the love and support of a mother. It seemed amazing to go home at night and have your best friend always there. I always thought she was not passing judgement and was being supportive of my decisions. There were a few times in my life when I felt my mom was dictating too much to me what I could and could not do. I just assumed these were normal “mother knows best” situations.
She was critical of almost all the friends I've ever had. In hind sight, this was because I was spending more time with them then I was with her. The only two friends she didn't have problems with were the ones who didn't take up my time, and pull me away from her.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
"I have come to realize that you cannot make people care about you..."
This is Connie's story. Connie has a beautiful blog called Creative Bubbles, and she has given permission to use her name here.
The Back Story
I was put in foster care because my mother was neglectful. Even though I am 30 years old, it still stings, to know that having 5 children taken away was not enough for my mom to get clean, sober, and be able to care for us. It seems that she always had a drug problem and a drinking habit. I remember her locking my sisters and I out of the house so that she and her friends could get high without us interrupting them. I remember having to pull her out of a bar so she could make us dinner. And I remember her making us lie- a lot. Lie to her OB that she wasn't smoking while pregnant, lie to the social worker that we were taken care of, and lie to my family that we weren't starving all the time and never had clean clothes or a clean house.
My youngest brother, one very cold December night, somehow got out of the house and was picked up by the police wearing only a diaper... he was two years old. My mother was not home and did not tell me that she was going out, leaving him all alone on the first floor. I am the oldest of five children and I am the one who told my teachers about all the stuff going on at home. Things were so bad when we were removed that the social worker threw up after looking at the contents of our refrigerator... I told her that we had been eating cake frosting for the last week because there was nothing else to eat that hadn't gone bad. My mother had her parental rights taken away and we were all separated and put into foster care. My youngest brother and I went to live with aunt and her partner eventually, which turned out to be an even more abusive situation than what we left.
The Back Story
I was put in foster care because my mother was neglectful. Even though I am 30 years old, it still stings, to know that having 5 children taken away was not enough for my mom to get clean, sober, and be able to care for us. It seems that she always had a drug problem and a drinking habit. I remember her locking my sisters and I out of the house so that she and her friends could get high without us interrupting them. I remember having to pull her out of a bar so she could make us dinner. And I remember her making us lie- a lot. Lie to her OB that she wasn't smoking while pregnant, lie to the social worker that we were taken care of, and lie to my family that we weren't starving all the time and never had clean clothes or a clean house.
My youngest brother, one very cold December night, somehow got out of the house and was picked up by the police wearing only a diaper... he was two years old. My mother was not home and did not tell me that she was going out, leaving him all alone on the first floor. I am the oldest of five children and I am the one who told my teachers about all the stuff going on at home. Things were so bad when we were removed that the social worker threw up after looking at the contents of our refrigerator... I told her that we had been eating cake frosting for the last week because there was nothing else to eat that hadn't gone bad. My mother had her parental rights taken away and we were all separated and put into foster care. My youngest brother and I went to live with aunt and her partner eventually, which turned out to be an even more abusive situation than what we left.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
"There is no place for regret..."
This
piece was contributed by Aubrey, who has given permission to use her
name. She has recently started blogging about her experience at Embracing This Moment.
The
Back Story
My mother and father
were very young, 19, 20, and not married when they had me. My father
didn't tell his parents about me until my grandmother found me on the couch
while he was mowing the lawn. I can't imagine that scene. How did
he attempt to explain it? My dad's family laughs about it. I don't.
My parents tried to make it work as best they could, but that wasn't
much, their immaturity, their personalities, just didn't mix. When I was
two, my parents separated. I grew up with my mother, and although times
were hard, I am forever grateful to her for her sacrifices.
As a young girl, I felt
like an outcast in my father's life. He had numerous women, and I felt
like I always took a far distant third...job first...new fling second...me...oh
yeah, the girlfriend comes to get me for the weekend. He rarely called me
to check in. He barely saw me but two times out of the year--holidays, summer.
By the time my father married and had two more children, I was 11, and I
knew then it would be up to me to carry the relationship, so I did. I
called him with exciting news. I made the investment in us. I
wanted to believe I had a dad, so I told myself if I proved my worth to
him, he would want me, he would love me. When I started college,
near where he lived, the time we had to get together increased. I even
lived with him one summer in between the school year. We really got to
know each other, I got to know his new children and his wife. I felt
comfortable with our relationship, I loved my dad. I felt like he loved
me...
Friday, September 9, 2011
"It was for my sanity, my self-esteem, and my son."
The first of many anonymous stories to come...
The Back Story
They never physically abused me but I had enough of the emotional abuse, especially from my father. My dad was always very critical, demeaning, cold. He'd often make fun of me, my brothers did this too a lot, and my mom would laugh along with them, treating me like my thoughts and feelings were silly, stupid, ridiculous.
I was labeled as crazy because I was emotional, and got upset when I was treated like crap, instead of laughing it off or acting like a robot like the rest of my family. I wasn't emotionally tough enough.
The Back Story
They never physically abused me but I had enough of the emotional abuse, especially from my father. My dad was always very critical, demeaning, cold. He'd often make fun of me, my brothers did this too a lot, and my mom would laugh along with them, treating me like my thoughts and feelings were silly, stupid, ridiculous.
I was labeled as crazy because I was emotional, and got upset when I was treated like crap, instead of laughing it off or acting like a robot like the rest of my family. I wasn't emotionally tough enough.
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