The Columbus Dispatch

Daughter should steer talks with mom away from religion

- CAROLYN HAX Write to Carolyn Hax — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@washpost.com

My husband and I were both raised in the same religion, which we have not chosen to continue as adults. In my household growing up, we were not exceptiona­lly observant, but my mother has grown more devout over the years.

I have tried on a few occasions to discuss my religious views with my mother, and it always resulted in vitriol that took us months to begin to repair. She asks why I have chosen to reject the religion — I know she sees herself as being rejected, by extension — and why I am choosing to hurt her in this way.

I try to explain that I came to a gradual understand­ing that this religion did not fit my worldview. After the last explosion, I kept religious discussion­s out of my relationsh­ip with my mother. I did not bring it up, and whenever she did, I would guide the conversati­on in a different direction.

This seemed to work until we became parents. I know it greatly pains my mother that I do not follow our family’s religion. I, too, would be upset if my children rejected something that I hold dear, but I hope I would be able to see that they are still good people. I don’t know how to answer her other than saying it’s not something I believe, and I don’t want to turn what is a mostly good relationsh­ip into something horrible again.

What do I do?

If your mother wants to destroy your relationsh­ip over this, then she can, and you won’t be able to stop her. Being close takes two people but estrangeme­nt takes only one.

Refusing to discuss something takes only one person, too, though; unless and until she ends your relationsh­ip, you are just as equipped as you have always been to keep religion out of your conversati­ons.

Your mother is pushing harder, yes — grandkids are the classic accelerant, though the aging process could also be having its say — however, neither circumstan­ce says your approach needs to change along with hers.

In fact, loving disengagem­ent is even more critical now to your chances of getting along. Instead of answering the same question, please keep guiding the conversati­on away from the fire.

“Nothing has changed, Mom” might be necessary sometimes, or, “Asking again won’t change the answer.” But first do what you can with your tactic of introducin­g a new subject — warmly, with a smile, even if you aren’t smooth about it.

Non sequiturs can also be your friend:

She: “Are you having (child) do (ritual)?”

You: “I love you, Mom.”

I could even argue that your response does follow logically, if indeed the heart of every inquiry is “Why don’t you love me?”

“I do love you, Mom. That’s why I won’t discuss this again.”

— Without My Parents’ Religion

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