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poisonous relations

Guest_3712
Community Member

Hi all,

is it just me or does it appear to others that everything seems to be against you when you are battling this disease. You make a conscious decision to address one or more of your triggers, and then Wham! something happens to start it all over again.

As you all know  I have spent many many hours with my psych working out my triggers and how to deal with the demons that come with them. I have recently decided to severely limit my interaction with my family and in particular with my mother and one sister.

I almost felt I was getting to a place where the hurt wasn't quiet as raw, and the rejection didn't make my anxiety peak until yesterday. I received a text early in the morning from one sister advising me our mother had been taken to hospital in an unconscious state ( she resides permanently in a nursing home).

So of course instant panic and I prepare to drop everything to rush to her side( 2 hour drive). I was aware I had a psych appointment in the afternoon and desperately wanted to keep it as I need that regular support. I waited till lunch time and when my sister let me know my mother was stable I decided to go to psych.

the battle I had going on inside me about whether I had made the right decision or not had me in quiet a state by the time I arrived for appointment. My psych was proud of me for resisting the urge to once again try and gain 'brownie points' or be the best daughter by rushing there.

My resolve was slipping though and despite the sensible side of me knowing it would not enhance my relationship with my mother to go I was sorely doubting my decision. I said to my psych over and over that it didn't matter what she had done to me, she was my mother and I should be there. His concern as always was that the constant rejection and disdain my mother showed me would ultimately  break me.

my other trigger is my need to be needed. I have always been the family organiser, the go to sibling. I organise all family events , almost to a manic level. I am obsessed with the need to keep the family together as much as possible. I am currently exploring the reasons behind this too, and have consciously dropped out and not done any organising- the result being no-one else does it.

Anyway half way through my session I received a phone call from my uncle to let me know my last living aunt had passed away. OMG ! it was like someone had flipped a switch. Straight away I was telling my uncle don't worry I will be over asap , I will help organise things and I will let all of my sibs know. I then advised him that my mother was in hospital and maybe shouldn't tell her, blah, blah .

When I hung up my psych was just staring at me . there I was receiving therapy for major, control issue among other things and in one moment I had forgot everything. It's not like there isn't anyone else who can do these things, it's just that I think it has to be me- obviously these behaviours stem from the issues in my childhood which I won't go into .

I need to get this balance right. I need to accept my mother is never going to give me what I want , she will never change and I am destroying and wasting my life hoping otherwise. My previously fractured relationship with one sister is beyond repair and the hurt is so painful at times it's physical.

I have at the moment decided not to jump in car and race down to see mother, right or wrong I don't know. I think I am going to hurt either way. It is just so hard to cut family out of my life, even though it seems that most if not all of my issues stem from these poisonous relationships.

My husband supports my decision because although he doesn't know the extent of my problems he has seen the rejection and the hurt it causes me. I don't know how long I am going to be able to stay strong though as I know the guilt I would feel should she pass away without me seeing her would be devastating.

I know a lot of my friends here on BB are facing similar issues so maybe can see something I maybe missing.

thanks for listening

Stressless

34 Replies 34

dear Stressless, well that was a beautiful story, and your mother in law must have been a lovely lady, it's so sad that when someone we dearly love passes away, it leaves us with a void that can not be filled.

Please don't disappoint this beautiful memory. L Geoff. x

Guest_3712
Community Member

hi Geoff,

thanks for your insight and as always you make some good points. In fact you say pretty much what my psych has been telling me.

My mother is still in control of her faculties and knows what is going on around her. Sometimes she may be a little vague or forget things but otherwise ok. She was prone to dizzy spells and blacking out and now we know it is a heart issue.

She is now conscious and stable so the urgency I felt to rush down has abated. My psych says I have to admit why I am doing this. He says it's not for her but for me. I have this need to be the good child, still seeking approval and praise.

He also tells me it will never happen. Part of me knows this is true but damn I still hope for that happy ending, where she tells me she's sorry and loves me. It's my fantasy world I guess where I feel loved and safe- unfortunately it is not real life.

be kind to yourself  geoff

Stressless

dear Neil,

thanks for your reply. You hit the nail on the head several times. I just had to take time to absorb and then I thought I would write about my mother in law so maybe this would help explain my guilt and thought process.

Yes I know now that these relationships are toxic and I don't need them in my life, but accepting this as you say is hard.

I have had over 10 major surgeries over the last 10 years and my mother has not visited me once. ( you know until you mentioned that I hadn't even thought about it- not consciously anyway.) I have also as you know had 5 admissions to psych hospital and again no contact at all. Wow what does that tell me?

When I have this conversation with my psych and yes I do say," Just because they're like that doesn't mean I have to be. Family is family and we should be there...." This is when he asks me why am I doing this. Not for my mum but for me..

My continual need to be loved and needed and cherished as a daughter makes me throw all logic out the window. I haven't gone to see her yet and i'm working all week so will not be able to go before next week. My older sib who I no longer talk to is with her now, so I guess I won't be missed.

having had that amazing experience with my mother in law when she was dying, makes me hope this would happen with my own mother. My psych says this is my fantasy world and it won't happen ever. I am scared I will never recover from this ultimate rejection and wonder if I am better off staying away.

Cheers Neil, hope you are travelling ok and

Be kind to yourself

Stressless

Neil_1
Community Member

Dear Stressless

Thank you so much for sharing that absolutely wonderful story.  That time spent with your mother-in-law will be with you forever and it’s memories like this that can give so much benefit and positiveness to us. 

 I know we’ve all got our evil and horrible memories of terrible past events and they are burned into our memory banks (our hippocampus), but if we can harness in and hold on tight to the wonderful times like you shared with us, I believe that these can go a long way to helping us on our path forward.

Now Stressless (and yes, please try that a bit more often) 🙂  you are not an awful daughter.  You simply shared the exact feelings with your mother-in-law about how you honestly feel – totally genuine and true.  BUT if your mother was a different person, if she was more like the person your mother-in-law was, then you would have opened up from the get-go about how you felt about her and how wonderful she was, etc etc.  But she’s not that kind of person and as a result, how could you feel anything else towards her.  She hasn’t given you the chance, the opportunity and that is no-one else’s problem, no-one else’s fault except hers.  Unfortunate and troubling as it is, this is just the way some people are – I wish I could know why they are this way, but that’s not to be.  (This is the very same situation that Jo is faced with also).  And yet if you were to ask them about how they are and how they performed their role as being a mother, I bet they’d say that they were great. 

Anyway these words aren’t helping out at all. You have absolutely NOTHING to be guilty about – guilt usually is associated with things or events that have happened that has been caused by the person who is feeling guilty.  You have done nothing to cause any event being bad – you need to absolve yourself of these kinds of feelings – because they’ll continue to stab at you and inflict pain to you when there should be NO stabbing taking place at all.

This coming Mother’s Day, my suggestion is to buy a very nice ‘blank card’ and you fill it in from there.  Dear Mum, Wishing you a lovely Mother’s Day and hope that you are soon feeling better, love Stressless.  (ok ok, you probably aren’t known as Stressless around the family circle, but you can fill in what you feel is appropriate there). 

Also, that is just Neil doing one of Neil’s things and providing a suggestion – feel free to do with it, what you will.

Thank you again for your really wonderful post that you wrote.

Neil

Ps:  I’ve just seen your latest response and thought I’d just chip in with regard to your final part of that post. “I am scared I will never recover from this ultimate rejection and wonder if I am better off staying away.”

 I think this is one of the key issues for you and that IS the “going to visit” part or the “better off staying away” part. 

Only you can really know the answer to that, however if it’s been a lifetime of disappointment provided to you by your mother, I believe there’s no way that she’s going to change her manner now. 

I also think that you WILL recover and you will be able to find peace with the way she’s treated you – it won’t be easy and it won’t be a quick process;  it’ll be a little like sculpting a large block of ice – where you’ll just chip bits off along your journey. 

The main thing to know here is that you are a wonderful, loving, caring, thoughtful, kind, considerate (need I go on, I’m hoping you’re getting the picture here 🙂 person – AND moreover, daughter to your mother.  You’ve displayed this all the way through and yet the same feelings haven’t been reciprocated – and as sad, hurtful, disappointing, awful (need I go on, I’m hoping you’re getting the picture here 🙂 that that all is to you – you’ve done nothing wrong, you’ve done nothing to create this. 

 This is just purely the way your mother is ‘hard-wired’ (and who knows, maybe it was the way she was bought up? – things we’ll never ever know) – this is who she is and there will be nothing that will ever change that.

Whoops, sorry Stressless, my ps:  got a bit too carried away with – but I’m just trying to infiltrate into your inner psyche/your inner thoughts and for those technical lovers amongst us, I’m trying to extract from your hippocampus (where long term memory is stored in the brain) these deep-seated feelings of regret that you have with regard to your mother – removing them from there and taking them away to a rubbish bin – or a shredder, so that you’ll be able to move forward without these nasty, stressful thoughts/images.

Hi SL

Reading your story was like reading mine, almost to the letter...

I am a nurse and in my experience very few people die suddenly, we usually give the family plenty of notice if we think the decline is major.  I can't imagine what you are going through with this dilemma, my heart bleeds for you truly.

It's a feeling of "you wouldn't care if I lived or died so why do you expect me to?"  Then there's the guilt of when they have cared and done "their best" as people love to say.  I say stay in contact because it will eat you up more if you're not there in the end.  Find the deepest love and forgiveness you can....because it's a gift to YOURSELF...that you could find LOVE at such a heart breaking time.  if you don't those feelings of guilt will only increase.  I call my family FIFOS (for important functions only), but I can't bring myself to send a mother's Day card either.  I guess I will.

Anyway, that's just my experience...keep your distance for the most part but be there when it's really expected/needed.

Best of luck, strength and peace...if you were raised right, you wouldn't be having these issues...just so hard to see that ourselves I know.  There's no mistaking real love though is there..

L 🙂

Jo3
Blue Voices Member
Blue Voices Member

Hi Stressless

I am confused, why can't we all live a happy and peaceful life without all this rubbish from our family. And then we feel guilty - why? why?

I'm sorry I don't know what else to say at the moment, I need to stop. Maybe I should stop everything in my life. It's so not fair, family - who needs them.  I am angry, frustrated, emotional, sad, depressed and feel that my trauma of the abuse has come back again to get me again. I don't want this trauma, i don't want to see it again, that session with my psych on tuesday has set off a terrible few days.

I'm sorry to hijack your post, I hope you're doing okay.

Thinking of you

Jo xx

Hi Light9,

thanks so much your post was very insightful and I loved your acronym  FIFOS. I know what you are saying about finding forgiveness and it being a gift to me To not carry this burden, this guilt would be awesome.

I think you are right about keeping my distance. Like Geoff said the balance isn't right. ,I'm sorry you are suffering with the same issues

be kind to yourself

Stressless

 

Hi friends,

I love the anonymity of masks.

Today I have chosen the mask of confidence. This has a trim of self esteem and  around the edges is a flourish of hope and happiness. It takes me 3hours to fit this properly before I set off for work.

Alas as the day goes on the mask begins to fade and wilt and the true me will be revealed within moments of reaching home.

According to my family I am selfish, ungrateful, and self absorbed drama queen.

Maybe they are right, otherwise why the need for different masks?

Stressless

Dear Ess Elle (get it S L - short for Stressless - ohhhhh some days)

Whoa whoa whoa - "according to your family ...", um may I ask 'which family'?   Surely not your 'own' inner circle family ... it'd be your 'extended' family yeah and by extended I call them your siblings and your mother.

Sorry, just had to ask, that's all.

Neil

ps:  sorry about the over-sized rant I went on with yesterday.  Quiet day at the office, you see.

 

My Dear Stressless

What a sad comment to make when you were begining to come to terms with your mother's attitude.  It's not what your family think but what you think.  You say your psych has asked why you want to do things like rush off to your mother's side.  Is it for you or your mother?  This is such a hard thing to answer.  If you say for your mother then you are probably denying the truth and keeping alive a forlorn hope that you will be acknowledged.  But when you admit it is for yourself you become consumed with guilt and grief.

Such a hard place to be.  Just like those who have answered above, I can relate to your situation.  No matter what I did it was of no interest to my mother.  My brothers were number one and my sister who has a disability.  My other sister and I were left out in the cold and this has hurt for many, many years. Mom manipulated us so that she did not have to deal with things that went wrong and this resulted in all sorts of barriers and disagreements in the family.  Because of this my siblings thought I was an awful person and it has taken many years to be reconciled with them.

I was not at her bedside when she died.  My family live in the UK.  So no further opportunity to be told she loved me.  I cried for months, not so much for her death, but because I would never have her approval.  And I still feel bad about it.  It is destructive and useless and I am becoming more resigned, but I think I will never truly get over it.  Just learn to live with it.  Not much comfort for you I know, but understanding the situation helps enormously.

Please take care.  Continue to talk to us.

White Rose