- Post starter
- #121
Funny story my husband tells about his family...His Granny cooked a big Sunday dinner every week for husband, husband's sister, and the young grandkids. Every week, she would clean up while everyone sat and visited. As soon as she turned on the dishwasher (the last of the cleanup), her sister-in-law would come out to the kitchen and say, "Can I help clean up?" My husband remembers his granny grumbling about this all the time (of course, HE never offered to help, but that's a different issue). One day, my he says Granny stood out in the kitchen and banged the dishes around for about 30 minutes, then turned on the dishwasher. When her sister-in-law came out to the kitchen and offered to help...LOL! There were mounds of dishes and pots to scrub. While totally passive-aggressive on Granny's part, I love this payback story.I always thought that my friends should have ignored the mother, and let her get on with it, and bloody-well suffer through the mountain of dishes.
Yes, it is ALWAYS about them in the end, isn't it. There is just no escaping it. Even if there is no explicit, obvious blame, somehow it gets dumped on us anyway.I'm pretty sure, it will end up being about her either way, and I will be the bad one (as ever) for some reason yet to be conveyed to me. I know she'll never, ever change - her psychological need is so great - so all I can do is look after myself.
I do too. Not externally, but internally. It can be the smallest things, and I feel like a total victim, even if my mind is telling me otherwise. And when I actually AM responsible for someone being annoyed at me because I forgot to do something, or said something insensitive, I wildly overreact in fear and self-blame. That is very hard for me to handle...and I spend a huge amount of energy trying never to do anything wrong.And I over-react, I think, when I'm misunderstood (or my actions are) and I get blamed unjustly for things I didn't do or intend. I get far too hurt and terrified, which I am only now relating back to my mother's anger at all traumatic moments of my life (always hidden, it has to be said from everyone else - got to keep up the sweetie pie act...).
I know all about the "sweetie pie act" too. Exhausting. Self-denying. Very hard to break out of its extremes. Smile..."yes, I'm fine, how are you?" and "Oh, that's okay that you did (fill in the blank)--no problem."