Herald on Sunday

Stuck in the middle of my wife and mum

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Qstand My wife and my mother can’t each other. For some reason, my mother has never liked my wife and at times has been quite rude to her. My wife thinks she’s jealous and has now refused to have anything to do with her. I feel stuck in the middle and get in fights with both of them about it. Help!

A—What an awful place to be stuck right in the middle of the two most important women in your life. I suspect on some level your wife is right about your mother. It might not be as simple as “being jealous” but it certainly seems she is struggling to accept that you are moving on with your life and that her role in your life has changed.

It’s been said that as parents we start grieving the loss of our children the moment they’re born, as the process of maturing and growing up means naturally moving away from our parents.

That work, of grieving, letting go and adjusting to the changes lies with the parent, and when parents get stuck it causes problems — like you’re unfortunat­ely experienci­ng.

Of course, this isn’t about picking sides, but I do believe you need to prioritise your marriage and get yourself out of the middle of this.

How? Work with your wife, and support her in the struggle she has. It sounds like she feels under attack, and probably fair enough. It isn’t okay for your mother to undermine and not support your relationsh­ip. Validate her struggles, and her feelings and be open with her about how this is really hard for you but that you stand by her.

With your mother, it’s important to be clear she needs to do better if she wants to maintain a relationsh­ip with you and that working on her feelings — whatever they might be — is her work.

Be clear that you’re not making ultimatums, or picking sides, but that if she isn’t able to find a way to accept your wife and get along with her then the natural consequenc­e of that is she will be less involved in your life — and you don’t want that any more than she does.

Q14-year-old We’re worried about our

daughter, she’s been getting more and more angry and we don’t know why. She won’t talk to us and has started ignoring our rules and requests and just spends time in

her room on her phone. What should we do?

Afeelings

Such a tough age, so many

and it sounds like your daughter is really struggling. Resist the urge to escalate by punishing the anger — it’s highly likely she’s angry because she’s hurt and in pain and doesn’t know what to do.

I’d be concerned about her device use.

If you don’t have them already, set some family limits about devices after certain hours, explaining this is about helping her manage her use and that she will need to leave her phone in a central location — out of her bedroom — when she goes to bed. You may even want to do the same thing as well in solidarity.

Make it clear this is not a punishment, and that you’re worried about her. Because it is possible that she is engaging in unhelpful social interactio­ns online, or even being bullied — or it could just be she isn’t getting enough sleep and scrolling late into the night.

Usually, when a young person’s behaviour changes suddenly, the first things to look at are if they’re being bullied or if they are isolated in their social relationsh­ips.

Either way, when we allow our young people — and 14 is still young — to use devices in an unlimited way, without any oversight, we essentiall­y allow the complicati­ons of the teenage social world into our homes — and their bedrooms — and don’t make space for our kids to have a break from it, or leave space for still relating to their families.

She may say she doesn’t want to, but try for a week or two and see if she emerges from her room. You might be surprised — and hopefully you can start to support her with whatever she’s upset about.

 ??  ?? Kyle MacDonald
Psychother­apist Kyle MacDonald answers your mental health questions. If you have a question, email kyle@psychother­apy.nz
Kyle MacDonald Psychother­apist Kyle MacDonald answers your mental health questions. If you have a question, email kyle@psychother­apy.nz
 ?? Photo / 123rf ?? You need to prioritise your marriage when the two most important women in your life don’t see eye to eye.
Photo / 123rf You need to prioritise your marriage when the two most important women in your life don’t see eye to eye.

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