It is, of course being hit with a hairbrush is abusive, but that doesn’t mean your mum had any intention of being abusive - it’s one of those where the motive can be good but the action and outcome be quite harmful.
She may very well have meant that she loved you, and may have very calmly saw her role as a good mum was to discipline her child - which leaves you feeling you must have deserved it, which of course you didn’t because regardless of behaviour no one deserves abuse.
I bundle it up in a bracket of “they did their best with what they had, when knew better, they did better”. It’s used to be ok to beat women, send children up chimneys etc etc, when society knew better, things changed. Would your mum do it now, knowing how harmful it is? What does it give you to label her as an abuser as opposed to recognising her behaviour was (possibly inadvertently) abusive? I’m not saying you’re calling her an abuser btw just trying to help you think through the dichotomy of knowing someone who possibly loved you still caused you hurt.
None of which changes the impact on you, and the feelings you’re left with.
She may very well have meant that she loved you, and may have very calmly saw her role as a good mum was to discipline her child - which leaves you feeling you must have deserved it, which of course you didn’t because regardless of behaviour no one deserves abuse.
I bundle it up in a bracket of “they did their best with what they had, when knew better, they did better”. It’s used to be ok to beat women, send children up chimneys etc etc, when society knew better, things changed. Would your mum do it now, knowing how harmful it is? What does it give you to label her as an abuser as opposed to recognising her behaviour was (possibly inadvertently) abusive? I’m not saying you’re calling her an abuser btw just trying to help you think through the dichotomy of knowing someone who possibly loved you still caused you hurt.
None of which changes the impact on you, and the feelings you’re left with.