Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Daughter’s beau cruel to her mom

- Hector Cantu & Carlos Castellano­s

Ask Carolyn

Dear Carolyn: My 27-year-old daughter has her first serious boyfriend – she met him during the onset of COVID and a few months later they moved in together. The lockdown accelerate­d their relationsh­ip status. He dotes on her, but is an awful person to me. He makes fun of my looks, criticizes my homemaking, dismisses my choice to stay home as a mother, and generally disrespect­s me when he can. This is in front of my daughter. I’m not sure she’s “hearing” it.

Should I accept the happiness my daughter is experienci­ng with him as of paramount importance, or should I vocalize my concern that once the new romance elements fade, he may turn on her next?

Dismissed: The chances he doesn’t turn on her seem small. Doting on someone can be an expression of love or a mask for abuse. Once a person decides it’s OK to be cruel, the rest is logistics.

But the options you gave me aren’t the ones I want to choose from. As a parent, you have a natural impulse to view this in terms of your daughter’s well-being – but you can’t decide she’s happy or decide she isn’t. Both of these are up to her.

There is, however, a simple, incredibly important thing you can still do from your side of the line. You can stand up for yourself.

He: [Makes fun of your looks.] You: “What an unkind thing to say.” He: [Criticizes your homemaking.] You: “What an unkind thing to say.” He: [Dismisses your choice to stay home as a mother.]

You: “What an unkind thing to say.” Change your phrasing to suit, as long as you call it what it is.

And let your daughter witness you doing it.

The common defense against an accusation of unkindness – let’s call it the Jerk’s Rejoinder – is some version of, “You’re too sensitive,” or, “You can’t take a joke.” Har bleeping har. If that’s how he responds to you, then don’t let that stand unchalleng­ed, either: “So if you’re just kidding, then what is your serious opinion?” Invite him into the open.

The truth is your power. Remaining calm is your superpower.

Your gentle refusal to be anyone’s doormat will be your most effective warning to your daughter about her boyfriend’s taste for cruelty, when she’s ready to hear it — and your civility throughout will undercut an effort by either of them to blame any friction on you. Be kind, don’t flinch, and don’t quit. When she figures out who she’s with, I suspect she’ll need your support.

Dear Carolyn: Mom lightly criticizes me whenever her friends compliment me. How to handle?

Anonymous: Naming something may not fix it, but it does take its power away.

First, name it in a direct conversati­on: “Mom, have you noticed you do this? Any thoughts about why?” She may have a reason you find somewhat sympatheti­c. Praise may make her uncomforta­ble, for example, or superstiti­ous. There’s an almost defensible logic to that, given how Americans rush to glorify people, then rush to tear them down. Next, if it’s still bothering you, name it in the moment, wryly: “Mom’s here to keep me humble. Thanks, Mom! Nailed it!”

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Carolyn Hax

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