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After Fifty Years, She Says It...

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@Hope4Now I just want to say that my mother is just like yours. I swear I was reading about mine. I have decided that it's hopeless. She is 85, and clings to her self serving passive aggressive lunacy. She is a rotten mother who doesn't care who she hurts by what she says. When my son was a toddler I accidentally ran into him coming around a corner. He fell of course and as I picked him up I said I am sorry to him. She stood there with her hands firmly on her hips and declared that I was to NEVER apologize to a child. At that moment I cut her out of my life.i certainly know she has held onto that belief. I have to see her sometimes but I don't converse with her. My siblings except one who agrees with me that she's a danger to our kids, are so competitive to be her favorite child. And we're in our 60's! WTF?
 
@Hope4Now similar experiences & words from sibling(s), though not mother. I have found it never changes, well they don't. They redirect the rage & such, but it doesn't ever end. Only when others have seemed to 'get' that, am I 'getting' it, too. But the wounds go deep, & I think some never heal when they involve family/ identity/ safety/ worth/ fear/ buse/ degredation etc. Well, no, the scar remains, but one doesn't have to re-open it or poke it because they want (or can't help) inflicting pain or abusive language, actions.

I am very sorry. :( I'm not a mom but if it was ok I would still :cry: & I would still give you the biggest :hug:.
 
I hope that maybe this one little comment stands as a sort of twisted validation of my experience, which I've needed to convince myself that I'm not the crazy lady being overly dramatic and making things up.
It absolutely does. And more. The "not knowing", I think, is always a big inhibitor to healing. As painful as this is, a locked door has been opened.

I can muster up compassion fairly regularly when I can put my own hurt aside, but the more I remember and the more I try to heal by connecting with my emotions, the harder it becomes.
Compassion is important -- but it doesn't ever excuse a person's bad behavior. If your husband's mother had said something like this to him, how would you feel for him? You deserve to feel all of the sadness, anger, betrayal, and whatever else there is, and not feel guilty or wrong for it -- because you're the one who's been wronged, now by this comment, and, obviously, for a long time.

I talked to the priest about what I should do. He told me I had to pray for them and follow the commandments and "Honor thy father and thy mother." That I could take strength from knowing how Jesus suffered on the cross.
One of the many reasons why I "religiously" avoid organized religion like the plague. :D Interestingly, though, "God" became one of my followers on Twitter. Go figure.

So, perhaps this means I'm ready to start into the next phase of my therapy and working to process this exquisitely painful past I've carried for so long.
Yes, that seems reasonable. I think that, as your process this, you will find greater identity and independence. You will be stronger. And your strong sense of compassion will help shield you from bitterness. I don't envy you the pain, but I am glad you finally know the truth.
 
maybe this one little comment stands as a sort of twisted validation of my experience, which I've needed to convince myself that I'm not the crazy lady being overly dramatic and making things up.

You nailed it, that's what I did for so long, later after I first spilled my truth to a therapist...I slowly came to realize how utterly bizarre my childhood was...NONE of it was my imagination, heck, half of it I still have yet to remember! Even if i watered it down, it is still horrible.

Another piece, my therapist came to suggest some possible diagnosis for my mother.....she was severely mentally ill, I see it now but I couldn't before. It meant a lot to know that for some reason.

I know this is hard, keep talking and take care of yourself as you integrate this piece of your story, its painful and important.

Best, Whirlwind
 
In many abusive homes there will be the abuser and the faciliator, each feeding off the other in some twisted way, trying to meet some need at the expense of their children.

It's a reflection on them and not you, although that is cold comfort when she choses to abandon you with such heartless statements, and yes it really hurts to wake up to the truth, and see the cold hard facts about someone we love.

It helped to me to accept that the abuse wasn't something I caused, and to see the truth about my parents, rather than the lies they fed me as a child. It enabled me to move to protect myself and stop the abuse from continuing, and gave me the strength to remove them from my life.

Seeing the truth was empowering, hurtful, and validating all at the same time.

It takes time to reframe the truth, and it really hurts when we are rejected and abandoned by someone who is meant to protect and care for us.
 
I want to throw my arms around all of you and say thank you a thousand times for your ongoing support. I cannot begin to tell you how much I need it...seemingly more all the time.

When I started therapy in the fall, I thought I'd be "done" by the new year. In January, I thought I'd be fine by Spring. As Spring progressed and the flashbacks and memories kept getting worse, I guess I started to realize that I actually have a big problem and need to keep practicing all these strategies I'm learning to try to cope with it. The hardest strategy of all is reaching out and trying to build a network of support for myself...people I can lean on pretty heavily until I can process all this chaos that has overtaken my inner life. This is so hard because I assume that nobody wants to hear about any of this stuff, and I don't want to be a burden to anyone. I'm trying to change that thinking, but it is very hard. I do wish that more and more stuff didn't keep exploding to the surface. Every time I think I'm getting a handle on things, I get thrown for another loop--either with another piece of memory, or something external like what my mother said to me.

I wish I understood better why her comment hit me so hard. Although it is the first time she has ever been so bluntly direct with me (not cloaking comments or behaviors with "it's for your own good," or "I'm only telling you this because I love you," or "You know I'm just kidding," etc. ), it's not as if the hurtfulness is particularly new. When she said it, my initial reaction was to excuse it and forget it, as I have so many things for so many years. Perhaps it is because of all the work I've been doing to be present in my body and try to feel my emotions, the poisonous truth of it penetrated me and I became fully conscious of it. It was like the slow-motion experience of after you realize you've hurt yourself badly, but the pain doesn't kick in simultaneously...there's a moment of denial and disbelief. I guess I've been stuck in the denial and disbelief moment for my whole life until now. Now it is all coming out...sometimes exploding, sometimes a slow seeping out. And I feel like all I have is a box of band-aids to cope with the devastation.

I slowly came to realize how utterly bizarre my childhood was...NONE of it was my imagination, heck, half of it I still have yet to remember!
I empathize totally. Every day seems to bring some new bizarre memory that I find hard to believe. I feel like I was brainwashed and it has taken 50 years to start to emerge from it. I think I've known since I was a teen that both my parents were mentally ill, but I couldn't have explained it. I'm only now beginning to understand how severely ill they were/are (father is dead now). It does help to recognize that.
 
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