Sunday Tribune

The power of the ‘little comment’ in mother-daughter relationsh­ips

- RUTH WHIPPMAN Ruth Whippman is the author of America the Anxious: Why Our Search for Happiness Is Driving Us Crazy and How to Find It for Real.

“ANOTHER theme park? My goodness!” reads the text from my mother. She is referring to the desperate outing that I’m about to embark on with my three boys, aged 8, 5 and 10 months, in order to avoid spending one more minute listening to them arguing in the house.

A close reading of my mother’s message reveals a rich and multi-layered depth of meaning. The “my goodness!” keeps the tone light, while the use of “another” neatly undercuts that levity, conveying disapprova­l. The overall message: I spoil the kids.

This text is a classic of the genre I call the “Little Comment”, the signature mode of communicat­ion of a certain type of close relationsh­ip between a mother and her adult daughter, especially when that daughter has children of her own. The Little Comment is the product of the female socialisat­ion that insists that we be the ones to handle the emotional busywork of life, but prevents us from tackling any of it directly. Both loving and barbed, it uses a kind of weaponised casualness to criticise, but with complete plausible deniabilit­y.

You know you are dealing with a “Little Comment”, as opposed to just a comment when, on hearing it, you feel a stab of either irritation or self-loathing (or, more often, an uneasy blend of the two). But at the same time, a perfectly reasonable response to any objection or hurt feelings would be an innocent, “What do you mean? I’m just saying …” and then repeating the same statement in an entirely different, newly de-fanged tone.

The Little Comment is really the recourse of the powerless. People say that being a grandparen­t is all of the fun parts of parenting with none of the grind. But the flip side is that grandparen­ts also have all of the adoration

with none of the agency.

My mother loves my kids just as much as I do, is every bit as invested in their happiness and success, yet she has no genuine say in their upbringing. She can’t decide how many theme parks they visit, or whether they wear a coat, or how much television they watch. At best she can hope only to influence from the sidelines.

My mother understand­s me better than anyone, and I crave her approval more than anyone else’s. I can recite her entire value system: every meal needs a salad, music is good, sport is suspect, children should learn a stringed instrument, sleeping late is a moral failing. She doesn’t actually need to criticise. She did her job so effectivel­y 30 years ago that now she need only raise an eyebrow and I fill in the blanks on auto-complete.

In our case, all this is intensifie­d because we live over 9 000 kilometres away from her, having moved to California from Britain when our oldest son was a baby. Her visits are highly charged, for both of us. For her, staying with us is a once-a-year opportunit­y to spend time with her beloved grandchild­ren. For me, it’s my chance to prove to her that I have a handle on parenting, to get her to provide the answer to the questions that claw away at me. Am I a good mother? Can I ever be a mother like she was?

As soon as she arrives from the airport, I’m on edge waiting for things to unravel. It doesn’t take long. Solly’s haunted Lego spy-base doesn’t conform to the ambitious picture in his head, and he hurls it across the room in fury. His brother Zeph calls him an idiot, enraging him further. The baby starts crying. “I see everyone is getting very angry,” I bleat. Solly storms off. “Oh dear,” says my mother. I’m crushed. The uncomforta­ble truth is that my defensiven­ess comes not from disagreein­g with her assessment of my parenting, but from the painful shame of agreeing.

Whatever the elusive balance of indulgence and firmness, love and limits, that makes a great parent, my mother knew it instinctiv­ely. She had the invisible sorcery of quiet authority, always kind, never needing to shout or threaten. I’m furious with her because I want to be her.

I try not to think about the unbearable day when she’ll be gone, and I’ll have to come up with my own answers, and no comment will ever be Little again.

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