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Childhood Anyone Need Motherly Love?

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I was also the one had out of wedlock so my grandma treated me like crap because of that. Lucky me. I never was close to anybody in my family once I was past the age of 12 except my grandpa. He was the only person in my life that loved me no matter what. I miss him.
 
@missy meier, your story resonates in me. I too will never have the mother I want or need, Although my grandma loved me.
My mom now lives 4 hours away and can't travel, so she doesn't see me unless I go there. :tup:I don't go there very often as she triggers me, but she can't figure out why I don't go there... :banghead: lol
 
Hi everyone
I've been having flashbacks and have been in a triggered state since Sunday, more feelings t...
I understand what you say about a motherly figure. I was looking for a protector, a "father" figure who would protect me and not try to hurt me. I dated a man who was over 10 years older than me. We also had no relations. He passed away suddenly many years ago. We had 7 years together. I still miss him.
 
My mom lives across the street from me. I still never see her. She never calls, id invite her to th...
This sounds like the relationship I have with my sister. She never calls, unless it has to do with the folks. We don't share our lives at all. I only see her or her family when we go over on the holidays. Even then, I'm an outsider.
The last -- and only -- time she was at my house was over 15 years ago. She came to see the place when I first got it. After I got married, we all left the reception to go back to my house to open gifts, my sister and her family went home. She has never been back.

And like you, Missy--I had a special set of grandparents that were always there for me. I miss them very much.

I see that a lot lately. The "2nd set of parents" being the grandparents and showing more love.
 
Baby that's my whole family. Lol are we related??
Could Be !! LOL
Do you have any other family? My other sister lives in Spain with her family ! Not to many visits. But, I'm trying to get closer to her, even if it by the emails and skype.
I have an older brother, but I don't see much of him either. At least since he married.

It took me lots of time to realize why my grandparents were so special to me as I grew up. I can remember telling grandma how "well I slept at their house". She just laughed and told me that it was "just a JC Penny mattress".

I look back now and can easily see that I slept so well, because I felt "safe". I have never slept like that since they are gone. Even at home now, as an adult.
 
I believe in reparenting.

I have an amazing imaginary Mom, also. :D Well, had her for a while.

Looking fo...
Yes I was an abandoned child. I spent my early adulthood consciously or unconsciously looking for this ideal mother figure and I just ended up in these very codependent situations with other ladies who had just as big a hole to try and fill as me.I recently ended one of these relationships with a lady I met in childhood . She was very religious. I don't think she intended to make me feel abused again but I did when I realised she was trying to change me by wanting me to become a born again Christian to. What I realised is by latching on to these mother figures I was not only full of the crap my real mother filled me up with but now I was being filled up with someone elses. I feel like I am growing up now I am letting go of this illusion that I can have any mother on this earth its gone and I am grieving for this.
 
I certainly do.

I am perplexed when people describe I suppose what are "typical" scenarios with mot...

I've always felt this way too. For me it was more when I observed people, usually in public, displaying "typical" parental behaviors. I'll never forget the very first time I started to realize that maybe it WASN'T that I was horrible and unlovable ... maybe it was that my mother did a really sh*tty job raising me. I was in my early 20s, waiting in line at a convenience store to buy cigarettes, and there was a woman ahead of me in line with two little kids. One was whining and sort of sniffling, typical "kid having a rough day" behaviors, saying he wanted to go home, and his mother said to him, very patiently, something like: I know you want to go home honey but we still have to do XYZ. Right now I need you to try to be patient OK? Remember when we talked about what being patient means? It means waiting without being grouchy. Can you try?

I was flabbergasted by this. Fifteen years later I still am. It had never occurred to me that a mother would help a child understand what patience meant and how to actually practice it. In similar situations my own mother had either chastised me for my "tone of voice" or -- more than once -- vehemently demanded that I "learn to be patient." I'd feel guilt and shame and bewilderment -- apparently being patient was something I was supposed to know how to do, and I didn't, and here I was being instructed to "learn" it but couldn't figure out how, which led to more shame, feeling like there must be something wrong with me due to my inability to successfully "learn" how to be patient on my own.

This moment at the convenience store was the first time I realized that if a five year old has not "learned to be patient," it's not because there's something wrong with them, and in fact the only way for a five year old to learn ANY type of behavior regulation is for their parent(s) to actively deliberately teach it to them. Or at least model it in a stable effective way. I realized that my whole life I'd been explicitly blamed and shamed by my mother for my failure to understand how to act appropriately in a wide range of situations, when it had been HER responsibility to teach me those things all along, and she didn't. (My father died when I was four, and she was the only adult in my life.)

The other thing that stuck out was a few years ago. I was at my best friend's parents' house with her picking up some baby furniture for her first baby's room I was helping her put together one Saturday. She was nearly eight months pregnant and sort of emotional, upset about something trivial, and her father -- who has plenty of issues himself -- clapped his arm around her shoulder and offered comforting words, and it helped her feel better. Again, I was astonished. People comfort their adult children, I realized. People comfort their children even when they're upset about something that truly doesn't matter. People care THAT their children are upset regardless of why, and as a result there are people out there who have never once felt like they or their troubles aren't "good enough" to receive someone else's attention and comfort and support. And here was this sort of well-meaning train wreck of a man who could manage it, when my own mother never could. I'm still a little heartbroken over it.
 
What I have come to realise that the mother energy needs to come from within and not from the outside. I have fallen into many codependent relationships with very idealised mother figures..no good ever comes of it..I am just in the process of disengaging from another one of these realtionships..Its not based around sex for me its based on care taking. My mother was a bit of a distressed lady so I make myself very over caring and over responsable for these kind of ladys with issues. But then when that care is not returned or they just take advantage of me I get hurt. I am determined this needs to come to an end. I only had one mother the one who gave birth to me.
 
Looking for mother figures in other people has been a clusterf*ck and not recommended.
How you stop doing this subconsciously though?:banghead:

I know everyone says it needs to come from within but after nearly 37 years of trying to self provide I am more convinced than ever that you need to experience being mothered at least to some extent to know how to provide it for yourself.

There is a scene near the end of the Pixar movie Inside Out where the little girl finally blurts out he emotions to her parents and her mother says in the angelic sounding voice "Oh, sweetie." I literally became obsessed with the scene because I craved being on the reviving end of that so badly and all I could think of was how do I get that?
 
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