D
doglover
My mother's behavior can get me very confused. If I'm not careful I will accept her perspective when I don't really need to. I can't tell which way is up sometimes with her. I feel like this interaction is full of assumptions and manipulations - but I have a lot of confusion here, about whether her comments about my behavior ring true.
I apologize for the length of this post. I trimmed it where I can without leaving out things that might be needed in getting your feedback.
I'm asking all of you to help me figure out whether my mother's comments are accurate or whether she is manipulating things.
Context: She treated family to a meal, but then put a stipulation that you had to eat everything - and then she checked the plates of the children at the end to be sure they really did finish their meals. I asked her if she was doing that. She said yes, then came to me and whispered "You spend two hundred dollars on a family dinner and then you get to decide how you handle it." Prior to that, I was using my phone at the table and she chastised me (I'm in my late 20s). When that happened I said yes I am using my phone, I think I'm allowed to decide to do that. She replied with something to the effect of "I have a lot of trouble getting the kids to not text at meals. I'd think you'd want to set a good example." This angered me. So both of those things happened.
Here's a message she sent a couple days after that.
"I'm sorry about Sat. It seemed like everything I did aggravated you. I should have thought about the cost when [XXX] said where she wanted to go. I suddenly thought about it with everybody sitting there & not knowing what they were going to order. Everybody except the 2 little girls ordered reasonably & it was $175. I don't know what to do; I want to keep taking y'all out, but between that & a big Amex bill, I'm having a hard time. Sometimes it's worse because it seems that y'all think I should just spend whatever y'all want & not say anything."
My reply -
"I wasn't aggravated the whole time. Just when you corrected me like a child and assumed I wanted to enforce your rules without asking me. I also wish you wouldn't offer to treat us to something if you're going to hold it over us like this. If the money is such an anxiety for you maybe you could make it easier on yourself by not sharing it.
Busy day. Talk when I have time."
Then I get the following email - 11 days later (I have spoken to her a couple of times in between these messages):
"I was very hurt & upset by your email. Remember that it was primarily an appology. There had been some unpleasant interactions, I wanted to appologize for my part. I can't think of a good word to express this, but I felt I had been edgy or testy or sensitive. You're my daughter & I was attempting to explain to you why I thought I had acted that way. I felt badly about it & was looking for an explanation.
After I gave you a sincere appology, you were mean to me. I was not holding anything over anybody. I should not have to choose between unlimited ordering of food by 8-9 people & never taking y'all out to eat. I take all of y'all out to eat often & I always pay for it. I think the others enjoy & appreciate that. Most families have some guidlines about what you can order when they go out to eat. We need to work on that. I have been very generous financially with all of you. Instead of appreciating it, I get accused of holding it over you (at least from you).
I'm not going to be able to do this much longer. I proably need to cut back & try to pay for what y'all have already spent. However, taking everybody out to eat is the way we celebrate birthdays. I really don't want to stop that because I can't do it much longer anyhow. I'm probably going t have to retire soon anyhow. I'd like to enjoy it while I can.
I think you are probably calling so I can't say you didn't check on me when I was sick. I'm going to leave that up to you. The most difficult or unpeasant part is the pregnant silences. When neither of us is saying anything, you might as well go'"
So now I'm totally confused. I don't think my message to her was particularly mean. Just direct and honest. I'm tired of the strings she attaches to money. I thought I was being assertive in my reply, not aggressive. But now she seems to be trying to hand me a bunch of guilt and trying to justify her behavior.
If I'm not careful I will lose perspective here, so I thought I'd ask the community - do you think my response to her was mean? Hurtful? Seems to me her so-called apology isn't one at all really. It's just words followed by justifying why she was right to do what she did.
I apologize for the length of this post. I trimmed it where I can without leaving out things that might be needed in getting your feedback.
I'm asking all of you to help me figure out whether my mother's comments are accurate or whether she is manipulating things.
Context: She treated family to a meal, but then put a stipulation that you had to eat everything - and then she checked the plates of the children at the end to be sure they really did finish their meals. I asked her if she was doing that. She said yes, then came to me and whispered "You spend two hundred dollars on a family dinner and then you get to decide how you handle it." Prior to that, I was using my phone at the table and she chastised me (I'm in my late 20s). When that happened I said yes I am using my phone, I think I'm allowed to decide to do that. She replied with something to the effect of "I have a lot of trouble getting the kids to not text at meals. I'd think you'd want to set a good example." This angered me. So both of those things happened.
Here's a message she sent a couple days after that.
"I'm sorry about Sat. It seemed like everything I did aggravated you. I should have thought about the cost when [XXX] said where she wanted to go. I suddenly thought about it with everybody sitting there & not knowing what they were going to order. Everybody except the 2 little girls ordered reasonably & it was $175. I don't know what to do; I want to keep taking y'all out, but between that & a big Amex bill, I'm having a hard time. Sometimes it's worse because it seems that y'all think I should just spend whatever y'all want & not say anything."
My reply -
"I wasn't aggravated the whole time. Just when you corrected me like a child and assumed I wanted to enforce your rules without asking me. I also wish you wouldn't offer to treat us to something if you're going to hold it over us like this. If the money is such an anxiety for you maybe you could make it easier on yourself by not sharing it.
Busy day. Talk when I have time."
Then I get the following email - 11 days later (I have spoken to her a couple of times in between these messages):
"I was very hurt & upset by your email. Remember that it was primarily an appology. There had been some unpleasant interactions, I wanted to appologize for my part. I can't think of a good word to express this, but I felt I had been edgy or testy or sensitive. You're my daughter & I was attempting to explain to you why I thought I had acted that way. I felt badly about it & was looking for an explanation.
After I gave you a sincere appology, you were mean to me. I was not holding anything over anybody. I should not have to choose between unlimited ordering of food by 8-9 people & never taking y'all out to eat. I take all of y'all out to eat often & I always pay for it. I think the others enjoy & appreciate that. Most families have some guidlines about what you can order when they go out to eat. We need to work on that. I have been very generous financially with all of you. Instead of appreciating it, I get accused of holding it over you (at least from you).
I'm not going to be able to do this much longer. I proably need to cut back & try to pay for what y'all have already spent. However, taking everybody out to eat is the way we celebrate birthdays. I really don't want to stop that because I can't do it much longer anyhow. I'm probably going t have to retire soon anyhow. I'd like to enjoy it while I can.
I think you are probably calling so I can't say you didn't check on me when I was sick. I'm going to leave that up to you. The most difficult or unpeasant part is the pregnant silences. When neither of us is saying anything, you might as well go'"
So now I'm totally confused. I don't think my message to her was particularly mean. Just direct and honest. I'm tired of the strings she attaches to money. I thought I was being assertive in my reply, not aggressive. But now she seems to be trying to hand me a bunch of guilt and trying to justify her behavior.
If I'm not careful I will lose perspective here, so I thought I'd ask the community - do you think my response to her was mean? Hurtful? Seems to me her so-called apology isn't one at all really. It's just words followed by justifying why she was right to do what she did.