Home→Forums→Relationships→Do I have the right to feel the way I do? Am I being unfair?
- This topic has 3 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 9 months ago by Anonymous.
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February 13, 2019 at 11:54 pm #280119AnonymousInactive
Hi. So this is about my mom.
My mom is always annoyed with me. She’s pretty critical of me, or at least that’s how I feel about it. If you asked me if I liked her or hate her and made me choose one I’d probably say I hate her.
I always question if its me. I don’t know, I think I’m pretty fair. I try to be the best I can be. But I just feel like she’s lonely and I am a place filler for her.
I bought her a really nice Valentine’s Day gift because I understand how she feels and wanted to do something nice for her, but I just question why am I doing this for someone like this?
Maybe my kindness will help her?
Can anyone give me guidance?
February 14, 2019 at 4:59 am #280125ValoraParticipantCan you give us some examples of instances where you felt she was critical of you? How did she react to the Valentine’s Day gift?
February 14, 2019 at 8:18 am #280159InkyParticipantHi Samantha,
Be careful of rewarding people for bad behavior. It’s a slippery slope to people pleasing.
Your mom is probably critical of you because she wants the best for you, and would rather have you do things right the first time than have you be beat up by the world. Warped, huh? That, or she takes it all out on you and it’s become a bad habit.
I would let her be responsible for her own feelings.
Best,
Inky
P.S. I give my kids Valentine’s Day chocolate as a token, not the other way around, if that gives you context.
- This reply was modified 5 years, 9 months ago by Inky.
February 14, 2019 at 11:11 am #280189AnonymousGuestDear Samantha:
March of 2016 you shared that your father was aggressive when you were a child, that when you were 5-11, “I thought my dad was going to kill me because of his rage”, and that until the age of 11 you slept in your mother’s room, “otherwise I would have anxiety attacks”. At 13, during your parents’ nasty divorce, your mother’s health declined and you “had to pick up a lot of the responsibilities” while she was ill.
You wrote back in March 2016: “My mother and I have a great relationship… she’s my best friend and we pretty much are a team as we have been my whole life. She is working on building up her life again (still) so we have a major partnership in trying to do so”.
Later your wrote about your partnership, or teamwork with your mother: “the older I have grown and the more clarity I have of the past, I realize our relationship was more of teamwork/ survival oriented relationship” while your father and grandfather were in your lives, “it kept us sane at times”. Yet, “Our relationship now has changed slightly. We still are pretty much a team, however… I see us being less of a single working unit”.
Dec 2016 you referred to your mother as “basically my best friend”.
More than two years later, today, there is no semblance of a partnership or a team: “My mom is always annoyed with me. She’s pretty critical of me… I’d probably say I hate her. I always question if it’s me.. I just feel like she’s lonely and I am a place filler for her… Maybe my kindness will help her?”
My thoughts: your mother should have protected you from your father, being the adult protecting her child. Instead she formed a partnership with her child, as if you were an adult, a partnership aimed at helping and protecting each other against a common enemy, the father.
If I understand correctly, once the common enemy was gone, there was a new goal to keep you and her in partnership: the two of you individually building up your lives. Am I understanding correctly?
Maybe she told you that this is her goal but then abandoned it, and as your partnership deteriorated for lack of a common enemy and lack of a common goal, she has been angry at you for… aiming at making a life for yourself instead of being content being “a place filler for her”?
anita
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