Only recently have I started to notice too well how the relationship with a parent changes from good parent to alcoholic parent to abusive parent...then you grow up and the parent apologizes for the wrongdoing, you mend fences, become friends, even. Then the manipulation begins. Once they realize you have forgiven them, they have a clean slate and full permission to begin abusing you in a whole new set of ways. Years of therapy going down the drain. I'm headed back, but it'll likely be months before I can get in the groove with a good counselor. How do I maintain my boundaries in the meantime. Thanks to all of you for your encouragement, it helps a lot, but I need something I can keep in my when she's railing about all the arguing going on at home (which is mostly due to her and her negativity)....deep breaths....
Boundaries require concrete consequences not as instruments of change or punishment, but means of self-protection. Forgiveness to me does not mean giving them a clean slate to abuse you once again. One consequence might be significantly reduced contact. Some have found it necessary to reach a point of no contact.
When she goes into one of her irrational rages, you can calmly reply that you are leaving until she is able to talk calmly. Or if this happens on the phone, tell her that you must end the conversation for the same reason. Yes, she is and will be upset, but she needs to learn to calm herself. Not setting boundaries and following through with concrete consequences only serves to enable and embolden them.
It sounds to me like she has some personality disorder. It's not as important to know the exact diagnosis as to realize that you did not make her that way. You can't control her personality. And despite all hope which I realize often lives eternal, you will not be able to change them. The only person that you can change is yourself. You can chose to step out of the mire and put yourself on a healthier path regardless of what she chooses to do. She's not going to stop her dance of fear, obligation and guilt. However, you don't have to dance this emotional black mail dance with her. She's groomed you for this dance, but you can get out.
It does not sound like she is the type of person from whom we would expect change via various motivations and in particular, sacrificial love.
Like some abused spouses who return in hopes that if they just love their spouse more, then they want get abused again. This is the same dynamic, but instead of the abuser being a spouse, it is a parent.
This is very hard to deal with because parents and particularly mothers are not supposed to be this way.
Sometimes there is a religious aspect to all of this that misuses a healthy biblical principle and statement in a very toxic manner which is an example of when religion gets sick because the person is sick and not because of faith itself.
None of this is easy as you've read me say this often today and yesterday. The F.O.G.y parent will get mad as hell, attempt to make you feel that you are the problem as their means to get you back in line. Remember, they can't succeed if you don't offer a codependent response back to them. Actually you have more power than they do because you can quit the dance.
Stop dancing her dance and dance your own. Have a great anniversary trip!
You wrote:
I need something I can keep in my when she's railing about all the arguing going on at home
The answer is: have an escape route!!! Do not be in the home!!!
This is the strategy that a lot of recovering alcoholics use to protect themselves. They just remove them selves from people, places, and things. Conversely, you must do the same.
My mom is not an alcoholic but my dad was and I have used this strategy for many years: keep visits frequent and very short, an hour or 90 minutes. Done and done. Get out of there. Even now, my mom is in AL and she is very nice but her behaviors (incessant interrogation) wear me out. So, lots of really short visits.
You can do this. Plan the day and the visits. Have a life. Go get'em!
Take care of yourself first!
Carol
During my adolescent years, I suffered with depression and an eating disorder (which continued through my young adulthood).
As I spend so much time caring for mom now, I'm beginning to realize a lot of my early emotional struggles stemmed from her. Long story short, I've managed to overcome whatever bad feelings and behaviors of my early years, through counselling and just plain hard knocks.
What works for me is to be able to bring down a mental curtain between us if I feel manipulated or used. I mentally back away, maybe walk out of the room. Of course, she doesn't realize what I'm doing, and she interprets it as my being difficult. But I know in my mind - I'm nurturing myself when faced with toxicity.
I've tried talking with her, and before long, we're talking in circles. When she feels confronted, she brings out her arsenal of defense to distract from the issue. It's scary to see her do this, my own mother. The fact that I am her daughter seems to be meaningless to her. She has always been this way, so it's not that this is a new behavior due to being elderly.
I've learned to become a juggler of sorts- throwing multiple balls of responsibility in the air (my sanity being one of them) - and not letting any one of them drop. I've worked too hard to become an emotionally healthy human being to let my elderly mother (who has lived her life her way) bring me down.
I had wonderful parents, couldn't have asked for better. But caregiving is still very hard on the caregiver.
Sorry, but why do people who grew up with physical, mental, and emotional abuse do this? I believe that if your parents need help when they're elderly, you help them, to not is wrong.
The exception being if they were abusive. Than you have no obligation to get involved.
Can I blame my mother for all this? Yes and no. I now acknowledge that she is sick...but I still suffer from the aftereffects of her words and actions. I do distance myself from her as much as I feel I can. I tried to be the most "opposite parent" I could be--and I did the best I could, but often felt hobbled by the voice in my head telling me I was a mess and not able to do anything well.
Mother has never apologized for anything, ever. I don't expect it, although it would be nice.
Why do we stay in these relationships? Guilt, probably, duty, I don't know. My mother lives with my brother. If were up to me, entirely, she'd be in an AL facility. And I would see her once a month. Not because I am mean, but because I simply have to self protect.
Congrats on the seeking to be a totally different parent. That is how the chain is broken.
I feel sorry for those who don't see it and for those hurt as collateral damage in the wake of the person who does not see their bondage and get professional help to get out. Some get therapy but quit because the work is too hard or too fearful.
Good job! I did something similar. I left for a month and then resumed visits. Is a great idea.
All the best!!!!!!!!!!
Because I have been working a program of recovery I learned how to better set my boundaries and take care of myself. At the end of our relationship we had mended fences and Mom had learned respect for me all because I stopped taking her crap and I stopped allowing her to make me feel bad about me. Here's what I learned: when I stopped allowing it, she slowed down doing it and eventually stopped doing it. Here is an example. I am a heavy woman. My Mom was very passive/aggressive. She gave back handed compliments--"That is such a pretty blouse" pause while I say thank you then picks up with "It's a shame you had to buy it in such a large size". ZZaaPP! When I finally told her it hurt my feelings she told me I was too sensitive and that she was just joking (which was always her fall back, the "joking", when she was called on something). I told her it wasn't funny...it was hurtful. I only had to do that a couple of times 'til she stopped. Then there was the time, after my Dad had passed, that she asked me to come over and hang a couple of pictures for her over the weekend. I had told her I would run over on Saturday. When Saturday came I was in the middle of something and didn't want to stop to run hang pictures. When I called to tell her I would come on Sunday instead she replied (angry & pissed)..."Well never mind. If you can't come today just don't come at all!" In the passed I would have swirled around that, felt guilty and finally dropped what I was doing for myself to go hang her precious pictures. But this time I simply replied, without anger or any emotion "Ok. If you change your mind let me know" and with that I hung up the phone. It wasn't 30 minutes until she called me back and asked me if I would come Sunday as I had said. My point to all this is that it is up to us to not tolerate, accept, allow behavior which is no longer acceptable. It took AA and a therapist to get me there. For now, try not to swirl with her. Step back and set your boundary. And I agree with above, Al Anon doesn't cost a penny and will definitely help you learn to take care of yourself. Check out the website. Good stuff. Good luck to you!
Enough said.
the check. Then the final move came. Even though I had reminded her of the expenses ahead of time, there was no money to pay for it. I had to do it. Shes a writer and found out she was being sued so we were not supposed to bother her. My daughter shorted what she was supposed to pay her sister for packing up the house and handling the move. They have always been very close. She wouldn't pay me for the storage unit or for the companion charges we had for he month of June, saying she didn't like her (the companion) and she could just wait. She also wondered why my moms regular account wasn't sufficient to pay for everything. My daughter doesn't want the money from the house. This is not like her. She thinks she is protecting her granny from us spending all of the money, but I was scrambling on moving day to pay everything out of my own pocket. My husband and I are determined that we will stop helping out my mother, but my relationship with my daughter is definitely damaged. My mom keeps telling me to pay this or that or to take some extra money for myself. I haven't told her yet about the problem with my daughter.She did something similar with my middle brother when my dad died, setting him up with all of this power that actually left him having to handle everything alone. My daughter's answer to me is that I have issues and I need therapy. I'm not rich. I told her several times we would have to be paid back. I've paid for supplies,for medical costs, for her companion, for prescriptions.I don't know how to handle this situation,but I really don't want to see my mother. But she calls and calls me.
This leads to mourning the parent that we never really had and creates the need for us to treat ourselves like a loving, healthy parent would.
When my mother demands something, or tries to ask by bending me with guilt tactics, or her other bag of tricks, I know I don't have to jump. I will choose to respond or not. My life is about God and myself.
It's all a play. Actors don't feel personally responsible and guilty for the way they must play their part on stage in this story. Neither do we.
Try to be loving as possible, for YOUR sake. If you fail, (and Ha, believe me I sure do!) I am glad I can still learn while she is here. I do admit I often wish this test were over and how free I will be when she's gone. But some daughters never recover no matter how long their mothers have gone.
Try to find that uniqueness that your parent has and try to be amused. Yes, BE AMUSED. That denotes distance, and the kind of love with no baggage.
I long to be free, within myself and be able to love again: as a human, not a lover. I believe it IS possible.