I'd actually bet that it's more likely someone who deals with your mother all the time is going to get what she's really like.
One of my sisters also works for her. But she's the "golden child" and is never held accountable for anything...even her outright rebellion against rules (like leaving town in the middle of heavy deadlines) is blamed on me. So my mom and my sister reinforce the story for each other, that they're perfectly fine and all the problems are my fault. And then, when we talk to someone like the business coach, I'm out-voted.
I THINK he's got my best interest at heart and, if he thinks this is helpful, I guess I'll play along for now.
Or maybe he's got a blind spot there? I don't think Ts are generally as pristinely focused on our well-being as I used to believe. One of my Ts habitually referred to me in the 3rd person when first starting a session..."So how's Jane doing today?" (not my real name, just an example). Then about 2 years into it with him, he one day mentioned that another client had complained that he did that at the beginning of that day's session, and he told me he had no idea why he had said it, but the client was right, and so he apologized. I told him, sure, he'd done that with me often. It didn't bother me, so I hadn't said anything, but it was a common intro to our sessions. The T was completely shocked. He had no idea he did that regularly.
I'm curious about what they see as "your" problems.
They listed the problems during that meeting: 1) I have a hard time communicating verbally and prefer written communication. I was the one who said verbal communication was difficult for me. Then my mom started calling it a handicap. Then the business coach wrote it in big letters in the middle of the board and circled it. 2) The business coach explained that because I'm in my 40s, I'm going through a transitional time in my life of figuring out who I am and what's important to me, and I need space to do that. Basically, although she didn't call it this, I'm having a mid-life crisis. 3) According to the business coach, my mom and sister have successfully dealt with "our past" already, but because I was busy getting married and having kids after all the crap came to light when I left for college, I haven't had time to work through all that yet, and I need space for that.
She also said my mom needed to have a better understanding of the cash flow for the business, and that there were a couple of management-style adjustments she could make that might work better for me. And my sister needed to understand that even though verbal communication is very easy and natural for her, I'm different. In the end, if they could both realize what my weaknesses are, the question is whether they're willing to work around them. And that's where the meeting ended, with my sister saying she felt so much hope now that the problems have been clearly identified.
You don't have the same problems with EVERYONE.
Well, really I do. I can fake it well enough in specific, time-limited situations where I don't feel threatened, like at conferences for work. But extended family, neighbors, church...pretty much any unstructured social gathering feels overwhelming and threatening, especially now as I've gotten less able to maintain that "mask" in unstructured settings. I don't have the energy or confidence for it anymore like I used to.
He said he didn't want to change.
Did he ever see and admit to anywhere that he
should change, even though he didn't want to?
My mom thinks she truly has no areas where she
needs to change. Over and over, she asks me to explain to her what it is she's doing wrong. I try, but she always denies or rationalizes her way out of it. So then she gets back to her original position of complete innocence. She says she's willing to change if she could see what it is she's doing wrong, and so that's exactly what made her so endearing to the business coach. The lady thought my mom was so open-hearted and wanted so badly to do the right thing. They never got to the point where the coach could see how much denial and spin my mom puts on problems when they're presented to her.
The first rule of her version of reality is probably that SHE can never be wrong.
Yes, this. And also my sister can never be wrong.
Although my mom does insulate herself against accusations of never apologizing for anything by regularly apologizing for the way she allowed the abuse when I was a kid. However, that's always discussed in the context of 1) she was also a victim because of her own childhood abuse, and 2) how important it is that I forgive her for allowing these things in her own ignorance and innocence and victimization and dissociation. And if I have any anger or bitterness about it or lingering issues from the abuse, it's because I've not adequately forgiven her or the abusers.
She'll do the same things for her mistakes from 2, 3, 4 years ago. So long as the mistake is in the distant past, then she can apologize, and I'm supposed to forgive her and pretend it never happened, because obviously she's not like that anymore. And if I bring it up, it's because I'm holding a grudge.
it was a control thing on his part, more than anything else. It was hard. It also contributed to the end of the marriage, but not because it was happening. Because of the way he chose to not deal with it. If he'd acknowledged that I had a point of view that actually mattered, if would have made a huge difference.
I regularly acknowledge his suffering in this, and that I'm terribly sorry he has to experience this distance. I'm not using it to control him at all, and will quickly point out the problem is me, not him. I've also encouraged him to go to therapy regularly so he can get some of the support that he needs.
But I still feel so badly about the pain all of this causes him. Sure, on some level, he has a choice on whether to stay with me or not. But I don't want the decision to stay with me to cause such deep suffering for him.
do you know that "you can't fix it", or would it be more accurate to say you can't fix it yet?
We don't know yet. Asperger's complicates everything. The ways to treat trauma don't work for me because of Asperger's. The ways to treat AS don't work for me because of PTSD. Is the aversion to intimacy caused by sensory issues (which can't be "healed") or by trauma (which might be fixable, to some degree)? All of it is made even worse by severe depression. And what resources I might have used to address these issues (time, money, energy) are sucked up dealing with the crap from my mom.