There's a small herd of deer that live in our neighborhood. Since we're close to a creek and a city-maintained system of hiking/nature trails, there's no shortage of wildlife to see, but the deer are the most familiar. They come out most nights as the sun is setting, and since we usually walk the dogs around that time, we see them pretty regularly. Usually they'll freeze if we walk past them and as long as we're not too close, they won't run. Even the dogs have learned to be very quiet so as not to scare them.
Last year a female deer kept showing up in our front yard with two little fawns. It was the cutest thing, but I never managed to get a photo. This year, another female (or maybe the same one) has been coming around, but this time she has just one baby, and a young male is often with them.
The other night, I happened to look out the spare bedroom window at dusk and the little family was back! I grabbed my phone and took a picture, and although it's not very clear (taken on a zoomed-in phone camera, through a window and screen, at dusk...) I really, really like the shot:
Doesn't it look like mom and dad are kissing, with the baby between them?
I sent that photo to my niece, Melissa. I knew she would love it. In return she texted me photos of an "owl family" who live near her home on Whidbey Island.
We miss Melissa. She flew to the East Coast for a visit last fall and drove down from Raleigh to spend a day with us. We love her and it's so rare to actually get to see her in person these days, that I nearly cried when she had to leave after a few short hours. I'm grateful, though, that she makes time to see me and her "cool uncle Gregg" (her words) whenever she's on this side of the continent. We have so few family members left these days, and the ones we love best are spread out all over the country.
So, speaking of family...yesterday was one week since my mother and I had what's probably our final falling out.
Her abusive behaviors towards me have escalated dramatically over the past couple of years. I finally (as kindly and gently as possible, I swear) told her exactly what behaviors of hers were hurting me and how, and how she needed to think seriously about getting some help for her mental health. I also said that until and unless she did that, that I couldn't continue having contact with her.
Well, that did it! She blew up. Raged at me and accused me of being the one with problems, not her. Told me I was a terrible daughter who mistreats her (!) as well as a liar. She even told me my dad was disappointed in me and "hurt" at how I "treated him" before he died. That was deliberately calculated to be cruel. That's how she acts when she's mad.
The last thing she said was that she'd changed her will, and that the new one was "no good to you now". (She added, bizarrely, that she "has a new power of attorney" so that I would never "have any power over me, in life or in death"). She concluded it all by telling me she would never bother me again, and that she's "done" with me.
Okay.
I don't quite know how I feel about it. Mostly relief, I think. Maintaining very low contact with her while trying to navigate her moods, her demands, her behavior veering wildly between utter hatefulness and "love bombing" was exhausting. Maintaining boundaries with her is exhausting. Every interaction with her results in nothing but stress and anxiety for me. It's become unsustainable.
So, I'm done. I've had some twinges of sadness and hurt over the thought that our relationship is over, especially since I just lost my dad a year and a half ago, but I think in the long run this is going to be the very best thing I can do for myself.
Bless you, that is a tough thing to go through with your mother. You can only do your best. Remember that! Love your deer photo and the owl photos sent to you. Nature is awesome. x
ReplyDeleteI've been trying hard for years now to do my best. I'm tired.
DeleteThe photos really are nice! Our niece loves animals and nature as much as we do, which is a nice thing to have in common with her. :)
I had to withdraw from a couple of different sisters after endless years of bullying. Such a relief mixed with sadness that all my years of reaching out never worked. I get it. And I think you're wise. You have to protect yourself.
ReplyDeleteI don't have siblings, so I can't imagine what our relationship would be like if I did. And I'm not wise, just at the end of my rope.
DeleteThat was a hard and courageous thing to do, and it sounds like it was indeed necessary. We must always protect ourselves.
ReplyDeleteIt took me far too long to start protecting myself, but better late than never. Thank you, Debra.
DeleteI have some toxic cousins and although it's not the same as cutting ties with a parent, it's been a positive for me. (much less stress and drama) I am very sorry though. Whidbey Island is beautiful! Although I live in Washington, I've only been there once.
ReplyDeleteOur niece landed a great job with a Whidbey Island land trust, and she loves it there. I hope to get to visit one day in the not too distant future. The pictures she shares are beautiful!
DeleteI get it. My mother was a 'punisher'. If you disagreed with her about anything, including your own decisions about your own life, you would be punished. It mostly took the form of actively working to turn the rest of the family against you. Mind game. I just bowed out. It is sad, but in the end, you have to do what you have to do.
ReplyDeleteMy mom has been estranged from half her birth family for years, and all of my dad's family for even longer. She can't maintain any kind of stable relationships. Not in this life, anyway.
DeleteI think we see so many "perfect" families on television. Real life is not that kind. I was blessed with my mom, but my mother in-law was big on the "writing you out of the will" if things did not go her way. I can't count how many times it was the last time she would ever talk to us. She did pass away a few years ago and it wasn't the huge family storm she had warned us about. The brother who took care of her in her final years inherited what was left. No one had a problem since we figured he deserved something for what he did.
ReplyDeleteI know cutting ties with a parent is one of the hardest things one can do. You have to protect yourself and your soul. I hope you can take a deep breath and breathe again.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this! Cutting ties is hard, especially coming so close after the death of the other parent, but I can't live with the constant stress and anxiety it was causing me. At one point last year my hair was falling out from the stress!
DeleteIf your brother in law had to put up with someone like you describe while caring for her, he certainly did deserve whatever was left. My mother acts like she has all these assets and money to leave behind...she doesn't.
I love to see Deer wandering about. We do see one or two on most evenings, at a distance. Last year Billy (our Border Collie) brought a baby Deer to see us. He came within a couple of yards of us, but when I turned around to try to stroke it, it bolted very quickly. I wish I'd had my camera with me.
ReplyDeleteBaby deer are so pretty. So Billy was gentle with the little fawn? That's so sweet.
DeleteI can only imagine how painful this is. But it’s clearly the right thing to do. My heart is with you and so is all my support. Good for you for respecting yourself. Enjoy your time with Cool Uncle Gregg.
ReplyDeleteMy anxiety had gotten so bad at one point last year that I had to make a decision to start detaching from her as much as possible. At this point I feel pretty okay about it overall. Honestly, it's a relief. I don't ever have to talk to her again if it makes me uncomfortable. I don't ever have to see her if I don't want to.
DeleteAnd I don't.
I can see why you love your photograph of the deer. What a delight to have such beautiful creatures visiting you so regularly.
ReplyDeleteThat little family have brought us so much joy! We've seen them together several times now. We finally started chopping raw sweet corn and leaving it by that lamp post for them to find every now and then. :)
DeleteOwls are great! We have a lot of deer around here, to the point of their being a nuisance.
ReplyDeleteWe see Barred Owls all the time, and the handful of deer in our neighborhood are more endearing than a nuisance. But I get how they could be! We still have to put nets around the bottom of our young crabapple tree to keep them from eating the new leaves in spring.
DeleteI wish I had had the knowledge and strength that you do when it came to my mother.
ReplyDeleteInstead it was just a horrible dance of pain and misery. And I know it was extremely hard for you to cut ties. I think we are all born with the idea that our mothers, above all, will love us and that we will love them.
I admire you very much for realizing what you had to do and then doing it.
And that is a beautiful picture of the deer.
I regret that it took me until I was 50 years old to stand up for myself and to put a stop to her abuse. I wish I'd wised up a whole lot sooner. :(
DeleteFirst of all, I love the deer family & owl pics; just wonderful to look at. Jennifer my heart broke reading about the interaction with your mom. I can't imagine going thru something that severe or final with my own mom, before her own passing 20 years ago, but our relationship had it's ups & downs too. And I have family members now who remain forever distant to me (haven't seen or spoken to one brother since 2008). But moms.... gosh I'm just so sorry. I'm glad you're able to get this stuff out of your system here.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words. I'm glad when other people can't imagine having a mother like mine...of course all families have ups and downs! But real dysfunction is something else entirely. There's a whole lot that I've never written about here, years of emotional abuse going back to my earliest childhood. I've never felt safe with or seen by my mother. In one of our last exchanges, I told her that I've always felt her underlying contempt for me. She didn't bother to deny it.
DeleteI remember you speaking about your trouble with your mom before and I'm sorry that it could never be better but it sounds like you tried and tried. You've made the decision that is best for you and I wish you peace and happiness in the future.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the kind words, Ellen. I really did try to keep things from coming to this point. I finally had to prioritize my mental health and well being, and my family's happiness, and not my abusive mother's...abuse.
DeleteI'm so sorry about that exchange with your mom, but I know this situation has been building for many years. If you (or she) decide to rekindle any kind of contact, I wonder if it would be beneficial to get some joint counseling and/or mediation, to talk things through with guidance from a professional? It might help you both communicate without the hurt feelings and anger getting in the way. Or maybe you'd rather not go there, which I totally get too. You certainly have already done your part to preserve the relationship.
ReplyDeleteIt's so great to get deer in your yard. And those owls! I've only seen owls in the wild once since we've lived in London but it was a magic moment.
So no Harry Potter owls flying through London, delivering secret messages? :)
DeleteThank you for being kind, Steve. At this point I'm not interested in any further contact with my mother, nor am I interested in doing any further work on our relationship. I've been beating my head against that brick wall all my life! Maybe in two years, five years, ten years something will change, but for now, I want to just let it be, you know?