Orlando Sentinel

Mom wants to run daughter's life from a distance

-

Dear Amy: I'm 36, married, financiall­y independen­t and living hours away from my mother, but she still wants to run my life. She expects to be involved in all decisions my husband and I make. When we don't consult her on the most minor question, she rants that nobody cares about her. Even the most benign conversati­ons escalate to her claiming that I don't listen, don't respect her and don't appreciate her.

A common point of friction is the topic of vacations: She's an extremely disorganiz­ed person who never plans her own time, but wants me to commit months in advance to my family to visiting her over any/all vacations.

We have been generous with our time, but my husband and I both have demanding jobs. We don't want to spend every Christmas holiday sitting on my mother's couch.

Conversati­ons with her often end in her feeling attacked and/or abandoned.

At least once a month, I'm faced with the decision to fulfil a perceived obligation to bring my kids to her, or face an extreme guilt trip for choosing not to do so.How can I take this pressure off of my marriage and family without deeply hurting my mother?

Dear Exhausted: You wonder how you can get what you need without "deeply hurting" your mother. Short answer: You can't, because she's not going to let you.

Your mother's emotional manipulati­ons have affected you so profoundly that you continue to basically put her (perceived) needs before your own. Stop that.

You should assume that -- for any boundary you draw, your mother will always perceive it as a deep wound, and will act out.

But it is her job to figure out how to feel better about her own life. You do you.

Turn your focus toward strategies for deflecting your mother's control and guilt, knowing how she will retaliate to any change in your behavior.

Jump the gun and email her a rough outline of how you and your family plan to spend your vacations over the next 12 months, based on what you want to do.

As a parent, you know that you don't respond to a tantrum by giving in -- you step back and let it run its course. A natural consequenc­e for her ranting and attacking you is that you will not want to take her calls for a period of time.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States