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Wedding Woes

You can't make her see 'your side', so let her reach out to you.

Dear Prudence, 

Three years ago my daughter was born a micro preemie at 25 weeks after I was in a car accident. She ended up in the neonatal intensive care unit three hours from our house for 14 weeks before coming home strong and healthy. Because my mother lives only 20 minutes from the NICU, I basically lived at her house during that time, with my husband coming for weekends and returning home for work during the week after the first two weeks. My mother can be completely oblivious to other people’s emotions and it really came out when I was at her house.

She would make comments about how I shouldn’t be tired since I didn’t have a baby to take care of (I was pumping every three hours around the clock, plus I would argue emotional exhaustion is worse than physical exhaustion) and how nice it must be for my husband and me to go out to dinner without having to get a babysitter like other parents would have to. She seemed inconvenienced by driving me to and from the hospital, despite volunteering for it and telling me not to worry about getting my car to her house once I could drive. If there had been another realistic option outside of a pricey hotel, I would’ve taken it, but there wasn’t. My husband and I would sometimes get a hotel on weekends for a break and we did end up getting my car there so I wasn’t so dependent on her. But those 14 weeks really did irreparable damage to our relationship, from my side at least. I’ve always been pretty independent and self-sufficient, even as a kid. This was the first time I really just needed to be taken care of. I thought since she was my mother she’d be able to understand how hard that time was and help me, but even when I would try to talk to her about it, she would just completely disregard how I felt and what I needed.

The last time she visited she asked if I’d done a baby book for my daughter and I said no but I did a memory box that I threw everything in and decorated the outside of because I knew I wouldn’t have the time or energy to keep up a book. She made a comment about how other mothers find time to and don’t have three and a half months at home without the baby after they’re born as I did. I told her that since she was there, she should realize that I wasn’t home and it also wasn’t the relaxing vacation time she seems to remember it as and she needs to stop making comments about that time because they were extremely hurtful then and still are now (this is not the first time she’s said something like that since the recovery time). She left hours earlier than she had planned and I’ve heard from my sister since then that she said I was rude to her and she isn’t going to be speaking to me or coming to the house for a while. Do I try to contact her and have a conversation about the hurtful things that have occurred between us to be able to move forward or just accept she won’t ever see my side of things?

—Tired of Hurt

Re: You can't make her see 'your side', so let her reach out to you.

  • So a lot of this sounds like my mom. She’s not THIS bad but she’ll make comments when my H is gone (or has been gone a lot like this year) like “he’s such a good dad, he deserves this time off” and “be thankful he comes home and starts helping”. She constantly tells me I look tired. Yah no shit I am and being reminded of that doesn’t help. 

    If it ever escalated to the level of the LW’s mom? I’d take the out and not think twice. 
  • The LW needs to accept that her mother will never see her side of things.  It sounds like she has tried to have numerous discussions about it and warnings of the things she finds hurtful, but the mother just barrels through anyway.

    It so sad.  I'm sure the mother has always been a critical person, yet still couldn't control herself when her daughter was going through such a traumatic and stressful time.  I agree the LW should let the mother stew in her own juices.  When the mother wants to reestablish contact, she will.  And then it's up to the LW and her H as to how much or little they want the mother involved in their life.
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • This sounds like something for LW to process through counseling. She's seeing that her mom is hurtful and wrong, but still trying to take responsibility for fixing it. Letting mom go no contact is a good plan for now, but I doubt this mother is going to be able to stay away forever. LW needs to work through realizing that she's not responsible and how she wants the relationship to play out once the mother forgets and decides to come for another visit. 
  • You weren’t an independent and self sufficient kid by choice. It was a product of an emotionally immature and manipulative parent. Take the out and go no contact. She will never understand you. You will be happier and healthier without her in your life. 


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  • So a lot of this sounds like my mom. She’s not THIS bad but she’ll make comments when my H is gone (or has been gone a lot like this year) like “he’s such a good dad, he deserves this time off” and “be thankful he comes home and starts helping”. She constantly tells me I look tired. Yah no shit I am and being reminded of that doesn’t help. 

    If it ever escalated to the level of the LW’s mom? I’d take the out and not think twice. 
    These statements literally make my eye twitch.  They are so infuriating because the underlying intent is that he shouldn't be 'expected' to and he's somehow going 'above and beyond'.  If you were to be like, "I'm a good mom who deserves time off," I wonder what she'd say.  It would be a 'oh yes, dear' or some BS about how it's what you're supposed to do/be. 
  • mrsconn23 said:
    So a lot of this sounds like my mom. She’s not THIS bad but she’ll make comments when my H is gone (or has been gone a lot like this year) like “he’s such a good dad, he deserves this time off” and “be thankful he comes home and starts helping”. She constantly tells me I look tired. Yah no shit I am and being reminded of that doesn’t help. 

    If it ever escalated to the level of the LW’s mom? I’d take the out and not think twice. 
    These statements literally make my eye twitch.  They are so infuriating because the underlying intent is that he shouldn't be 'expected' to and he's somehow going 'above and beyond'.  If you were to be like, "I'm a good mom who deserves time off," I wonder what she'd say.  It would be a 'oh yes, dear' or some BS about how it's what you're supposed to do/be. 
    It makes me so angry. That he’s not expected to love and care for his child while that’s the default for me to be the only one doing that. 

    I know a lot of it has more to do with her anger that my dad wasn’t involved and when he came home from trips he was drunk and an asshole. But that’s a pretty low bar. 

    I’ve said something similar the last time she was here and said it and her response was “oh honey you do deserve time too” with a look that she thought I was ridiculous for complaining. This is part of why we stopped having her at our house every day and why M is in daycare. 
  • mrsconn23 said:
    So a lot of this sounds like my mom. She’s not THIS bad but she’ll make comments when my H is gone (or has been gone a lot like this year) like “he’s such a good dad, he deserves this time off” and “be thankful he comes home and starts helping”. She constantly tells me I look tired. Yah no shit I am and being reminded of that doesn’t help. 

    If it ever escalated to the level of the LW’s mom? I’d take the out and not think twice. 
    These statements literally make my eye twitch.  They are so infuriating because the underlying intent is that he shouldn't be 'expected' to and he's somehow going 'above and beyond'.  If you were to be like, "I'm a good mom who deserves time off," I wonder what she'd say.  It would be a 'oh yes, dear' or some BS about how it's what you're supposed to do/be. 
    It makes me so angry. That he’s not expected to love and care for his child while that’s the default for me to be the only one doing that. 

    I know a lot of it has more to do with her anger that my dad wasn’t involved and when he came home from trips he was drunk and an asshole. But that’s a pretty low bar. 

    I’ve said something similar the last time she was here and said it and her response was “oh honey you do deserve time too” with a look that she thought I was ridiculous for complaining. This is part of why we stopped having her at our house every day and why M is in daycare. 
    I'm sorry that's so frustrating when the person you want to support you is projecting their own issues.  It's that "i suffered so you should too" that is infuriating. 
  • banana468 said:
    mrsconn23 said:
    So a lot of this sounds like my mom. She’s not THIS bad but she’ll make comments when my H is gone (or has been gone a lot like this year) like “he’s such a good dad, he deserves this time off” and “be thankful he comes home and starts helping”. She constantly tells me I look tired. Yah no shit I am and being reminded of that doesn’t help. 

    If it ever escalated to the level of the LW’s mom? I’d take the out and not think twice. 
    These statements literally make my eye twitch.  They are so infuriating because the underlying intent is that he shouldn't be 'expected' to and he's somehow going 'above and beyond'.  If you were to be like, "I'm a good mom who deserves time off," I wonder what she'd say.  It would be a 'oh yes, dear' or some BS about how it's what you're supposed to do/be. 
    It makes me so angry. That he’s not expected to love and care for his child while that’s the default for me to be the only one doing that. 

    I know a lot of it has more to do with her anger that my dad wasn’t involved and when he came home from trips he was drunk and an asshole. But that’s a pretty low bar. 

    I’ve said something similar the last time she was here and said it and her response was “oh honey you do deserve time too” with a look that she thought I was ridiculous for complaining. This is part of why we stopped having her at our house every day and why M is in daycare. 
    I'm sorry that's so frustrating when the person you want to support you is projecting their own issues.  It's that "i suffered so you should too" that is infuriating. 
    Yah I tgii it be it’s a “I suffered so you should know and be thankfully you’re not suffering the way *I* did. Or sucks because I feel like I can’t ask her for help without having to endure those comments so I just don’t really ask anymore. 
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