Herald on Sunday

Should I stop talking to my mother?

-

Q

atI know my mother isn’t great supporting me when I’m upset, and I’m realising she never really has been. But even now as an adult, I keep turning to her. I don’t want to get angry with her, but I wish she’d get better at this. I’ve tried talking to her about it and it doesn’t make much difference. Do I need to stop talking to her?

A

hopeless Human beings are absolutely

when they’re first born. Completely unable to survive on their own. That’s why the strongest instinct we possess is the attachment bond with our primary caregivers — our parents.

I don’t know what your childhood was like, but from what you’ve said it was at the very least disappoint­ing at times. It can be hard when we feel that the connection with our parents — their ability to understand us — is consistent­ly off.

Of course, it’s never perfect for any of us. As parents we all fail our children in one way or another — it’s part of what enables the slow and gradual move away that is the lifelong task of separating from our parents and establishi­ng our own independen­t psychologi­cal identity.

As parents we only need to aim for “good enough” — because perfect is impossible — and the bond of attachment is so strong it easily overrides small imperfecti­ons.

And while that separation is natural, necessary even, if the relationsh­ip is too disappoint­ing, or even worse clearly abusive, then paradoxica­lly that process of moving away can be harder.

Why? Well, it’s natural to seek out comfort, and what we need emotionall­y, from our parents.

And if our childhood environmen­t leads to more distress, we are hard-wired to turn to our primary attachment figures — even if it doesn’t always help.

Nonetheles­s, we keep trying. Attachment glues us together and can keep us locked in a cycle of hope, disappoint­ment and hurt.

It sounds like this is where you are, and it’s not uncommon for people to turn to therapy to figure this out.

And while it’s natural to keep trying to change them — to feel you have to work on the relationsh­ip by telling them about how you need them to be different — the way out of where you’re at is acceptance, along with making space for grief.

Grief not just for what you didn’t get as a child, and can’t get now, but grief for the parent that you never had. You know, the perfect one, or even just the good enough one.

The one that didn’t disappoint you, didn’t misunderst­and you. Just got you.

Because holding out and wishing for that parent to show up is completely natural. But only when we can truly accept what is, and grieve for what will never be, can we free ourselves up to actually respond effectivel­y to the present day relationsh­ip and the person our parent is now.

To figure out how — or even if — we can have an effective, adult to adult relationsh­ip with them.

I hope you can. Often when we truly get to a place of acceptance and can let go of change as the solution, it gets easier.

Then we get to see that our parents are just flawed imperfect human beings like the rest of us — doing the best with what they have.

For some, sadly, this kind of resolution isn’t possible, and cutting off contact is ultimately necessary. But it doesn’t sound like you’re there yet.

Your mother might not be the best emotional support. But perhaps there are other aspects of the relationsh­ip you can focus on. With acceptance it becomes possible to play to the strengths of the relationsh­ip. And lean on others — who do have that skill — for the emotional support you need.

 ??  ?? Your mother might not be the best emotional support but perhaps there are other aspects of the relationsh­ip you can focus on.
Your mother might not be the best emotional support but perhaps there are other aspects of the relationsh­ip you can focus on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand