I’m writing this the day after Mother’s Day so as not to take away one iota from the celebration of really terrific mothers. Tribute after tribute on Facebook brought tears to my eyes as I read about these wonderful women who trained up a new generation of daughters to be mothers just like them. It’s a beautiful thing. But my mother wasn’t one of them. And since I know I’m not alone, I’m writing this Mother’s Day thought for the rest of us.
A Little Bit of History
My mother didn’t like me much. It was pretty cut and dried. I didn’t look like the correct side of the family and I wasn’t what she had in mind when she thought she was getting a cute little daughter. And I never lost my baby chubs which was anathema in a family that worshiped thinness. I was well-spoken, well-read, got straight As in school and really tried my best. I made her beautifully hand-crafted Mother’s Day gifts, but I was fat, ugly and good for not much, according to her. She wasn’t physically abusive. She just didn’t like me. And she seemed to think her ugly words would turn me into what she thought she was entitled to in a child.
I saw the moms of friends when I went to their houses to play or do schoolwork. Their moms were kind and sweet and looked at their children with love in their eyes. I was envious. Hell, I was downright jealous. There were times when I went home, crawled under the covers and cried. My mom wasn’t bad. She just didn’t like me. I knew it. She knew I knew it. It made for a very awkward childhood.
A Rather Rude Awakening
And then came the day I found out the hard way that I wasn’t the only one with a mother who wasn’t straight out of the pages of Ladies Home Journal. My then best friend invited me to be her maid of honor. I was over the moon. Her mother wasn’t. She didn’t like the way I looked either and said I would ruin the wedding photos. Where had I heard that before? She was afraid to tell me, but she finally had to because her mother threatened to not pay for the wedding if I were included in it. So I bowed out gracefully. And. . . you guessed it. . . I went home and cried.
As much as that hurt, it opened my eyes. Now I knew that I wasn’t alone in the not-so-perfect mother department. Some moms were physically abusive. Some stood by while their daughters were abused. Some drank and turned into monsters. Some were nasty and vicious. If my mom fell into any of those categories, it would be the last one. And as I said before, she just didn’t like me.
Life Goes On
Time passed. We lived a little ways apart. She still slung her verbal missiles at me every chance she got. One would think she enjoyed them. Maybe she did. I don’t know. And then two things happened that changed everything. My father died. She started getting wonky or wonkier, as the case may be. Then my grandmom (her mother) died. She lost her mind. By this time, she lived with me. Yeah, I know. She took all her grief out on me. And there I stood, a 50-something year old woman transported immediately back to when I was ten years old and getting browbeat about how I wasn’t good enough, didn’t look right, wasn’t good for anything, nobody would ever want me, yada yada yada. That lasted for ten long years.
Life Changes
And then came the day she broke her hip and went into rehab. I was fully prepared to take her home and let the cycle begin again. She was my mother. I had to take care of her. I had no other choice, right? That’s how we were raised. So imagine my surprise when she told me she wanted to stay in the nursing home! The place wasn’t all that great either. But she wanted to be there, so I signed her in.
The Beginning of the End
She had two happy (????) years there before I am convinced their lack of care let her die. One day they told me my mother was sick. The next day I was running to the intensive care unit of a local hospital to be told she was dying from total organ failure. The last time I talked to her, she asked me to sign her into hospice. She said my father (he passed 14 years earlier) had come to take her home. I had her power of attorney so I made the arrangements. She said, “Thank you.” Her last words to me and some of the kindest I remember. That night they took her to a beautiful hospice unit of another hospital. Two days later she was gone. It was the day before what would have been my parents’ 63rd wedding anniversary.
Moving Forward
That was six years ago. Do I miss her? I think I miss the idea of having a mother. But do I miss MY mother? Maybe. No. I honestly don’t know. I know I can think about her now without getting too upset. When I drive by her grave these days I yell out the window, “Hey, Ma, how ya doin’?” Maybe I use some profanities. And maybe after a lot of years, I’m okay. Or sort of okay.
So I’m writing this for me and for all of you who didn’t have perfect mothers either. It’s a Mother’s Day thought for the rest of us. I try to keep in mind that nothing in life is perfect. Nothing will ever be perfect. But it’s up to us to take what we have and do the best that we can with it. And most importantly, we made it in spite of that mother thing.
I love this! Thanks for speaking your truth Carla.
Dear Carla, Thank you.
Carla, this is the first year in my entire 46 years that I didn’t go spend Mother’s Day with my Mom. I didn’t get her gifts or even send her a card. I ALMOST didn’t call. I did however pay her phone bill & told my sister to let her know that was her gift. I did call and as usual got her answering machine, but told her Happy Mother’s Day and that I hoped she enjoyed her day. Why such a change you ask? Well, to be honest, these past 4 years have been the most difficult of my 46 years on this planet Earth. My husband has battled cancer and then 2 months ago had stents put in his heart. My Dad has been in hospice care since March 10, 2023. Through all of this I have been alone. Not a call from my Mom or if there was a call it was to see if I had talked to my sister (her GOOD daughter, her words to me) or to ask about my brother who I have practically raised since he was 16 & I was 18 or to see if I could drive almost 2 hours to drop things off to her because she refuses to get her license and drive even though she is capable. One day I just woke up, completely exhausted and at the end of my rope and said “This is complete bullsh*t and I’m done with it”. Yep, growth had reared it’s painful ugly head at the most in opportune time BUT it made me look & SEE that no matter what kind of relationship you are dealing with it SHOULDN’T be one sided and if it is, it’s FAKE bullsh*t! So, I let go!!! I let go of trying to make her like/love me, I let go of being the only one to make an effort, I let go of racking my brain trying to figure out what I could fix/change about me that would make her like/love me, I let go of being hurt by her good daughter comment, and I also let go of her USING me and taking up time and energy that I don’t have to give, while she contributes nothing to the relationship. Do I feel bad, YES. Will I get through it, YES! Am I happy with it being this way, NO!!! Sometimes we just have to be okay with the situation though. For my own mental health, I have had to STOP carrying people who are capable of carrying themselves. I have had to say NO even though it SHATTERED my HEART to do so. I have had to realize that my shoulders weren’t built to carry everyone’s burdens. I have had to ACCEPT that since the call I made to her on 4/11/23 I have had NO communication with her BECAUSE I wasn’t making the EFFORT and that per her usual she WASN’T going to make an effort. I do love my Mom and being out of communication with her is extremely hard for me, but I can’t allow myself to continue on a one sided path any longer. Like you, I caught myself dodging social media yesterday. There are no easy answers and sometimes, no answers at all that make sense. To those who have supportive Moms, be grateful and appreciative of them!
I’m just seeing this now, Carolyn. Rest assured I totally understand. Mom/daughter relationships are difficult at best, but when there is this level of contention it’s downright torturous in some cases. I tried many things to get my mom to love me. I think she did down deep somewhere, but I wasn’t successful in having her do anything to show it. And, yes, if your mom is supportive and loving, treat her kindly and well.