Toronto Star

Will I pass on mom’s disapprova­l to my child?

- Ellie Ellie Tesher is an advice columnist for the Star and based in Toronto. Send your relationsh­ip questions via email: ellie@thestar.ca.

What is it between mothers and daughters that causes so much tension and arguments?

I’ve felt this since before I was even a teenager. My mom and I were always arguing about what I shouldn’t wear, how I spoke to her, my friends, etc.

Now, I’m a mother with a baby girl I adore but I’m terrified that I’ll end up with the same kind of relationsh­ip. Even at 30 I feel her disapprova­l of some of my choices, or we disagree generally about whatever’s going on.

My mother came here as an immigrant, having spent her first decade in a country of conflict, her father absent while finding a safe place for the family to emigrate, and her mother periodical­ly hiding her from danger.

I understand that the experience caused her constant anxieties.

But I need help accepting why she passed that on to her children born in a peaceful country with all kinds of advantages.

How can I raise my own daughter in a calmer, more trusting way, without reverting to the fears and criticisms of my mother? Mother-Daughter Relationsh­ips

Countless books have been written on this most delicate and volatile relationsh­ip. A quick Google scan will list many titles for you to check for your specific dynamic, e.g.: “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker; “My Mother/Myself ” by Nancy Friday; “The Joy Luck Club” by Amy Tan; and “Don’t Blame Mother: Mending the Mother-Daughter Relationsh­ip” by Paula Caplan.

Being aware of your mother’s childhood surviving the dangers around her, is a step forward. You can understand that she sees the world with anxiety, through your own younger years and now for her granddaugh­ter.

See her fear, not criticism or disapprova­l. Those cautions and rules were her way to keep you safe. Listen to her stories, and hug her when she clams up or cries.

You live in a time and place that’s mostly safe, and provides opportunit­ies ahead ... which is why your mother’s parents struggled to get here. But that period for her was traumatic.

Reader’s commentary:

Regarding the woman whose fiancé is addicted to pornograph­y (Aug. 27):

The moment I read the column, I prayed your advice would be to quickly move on. I realize you must be careful with what you say, but at least you suggested counsellin­g and holding off getting married.

I’d like to add that those signs are dangerous. That relationsh­ip won’t get better, it will only get worse. Pornograph­y addiction is just that. The man lives in a fantasy world and nothing that she can ever do will compete or compare with what he’s watching or experienci­ng.

Eventually he won’t want to take part in any intimate sexual activity with her because it cannot bring him the high that he gets while he watches and takes part in what’s likely excessive masturbati­on as well.

The worst part is that she’ll begin to think something is wrong with her.

I’ve lived this life in the past. I thought therapy and counsellin­g would change it — but unfortunat­ely, it didn’t. Nor does having a couple of children change it either.

One must face the reality that if after all these years, nothing’s changing it. He is not going to change.

This is something he deeply needs to work on for himself, and it requires therapy. Also 12-step programs can help. The only way these two would ever have a chance to survive as a couple, is that he stop watching porn — all of it — much like an alcoholic has to stop drinking.

Ellie’s tip of the day

Readers’ suggestion­s of books that deal with complex mother-daughter relationsh­ips are welcome.

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