Commenting on the last post, De mentioned her own mother’s “God given right” to pass judgement. I’ve been considering it and how it relates to many of us. It’s a vicious pattern passed down from generation to generation. I think the right to pass judgment is closely related to fear that “my children’s behavior will reflect poorly upon my abilities as a parent”; sort of a transfer of responsibility. Mothers are often concerned about how others will judge them or their parenting capability. Their concerns are relevant when you regard society as a stampede of lemmings. Each following the misguided direction of his predecessor until there is a cascade of bodies descending over the cliff into the sea.
This “reverse” judgement affects mothers and fathers alike. My husband has concealed the transgressions of his offspring, both in their youth and adulthood. Initially I thought he was protecting their bad decisions from the public domain. Saving them a little humiliation as it were. Now I wonder what his true intentions were. Was it an effort to protect his children, or an effort to protect his own reputation? Even after the young have flown from the nest, parents are not absolved of the responsibility of parenting. Had I been in his situation, I don’t know which approach I would have taken. I would not advertise their mistakes, but I wouldn’t deny the actions if questioned. As a wise woman once said, “Own your own shit.”
Having considered my own mother these past few days, I fear I may not have allowed her the fairness she deserved in the previous post. I didn’t embellish the “drama”, but I did omit a few points that would have aided in her defense. I strive to be many things, however unfair and over-dramatic aren’t on the list. My mother knows much about the person confined within this skin. We are not strangers and we’ve never been estranged. She mails me articles from newspapers and magazines about art exhibits and animal rescues, she finds looms at antique stores and sends them to me, and she calls to tell me stories about her cats. She knows me and for that I am lucky. So many parents go through life never knowing who their children really are, the shape of their hearts, or the strength of their character. We are connected by blood, and by heart yet incompatible on other emotional levels. (I hope I have explained myself better).
My Big Mama (my mother’s mother) is perhaps the most judgmental woman I have ever known. I adore her, because she is ballsy enough to get away with stuff like this and this, but I don’t think I had the strength to grow up in her household. When I consider her holding the scales of justice, I shudder and wonder how my own mother turned out to be as gentle as she was. As a kid, I remember feeling like I was a pawn for my grandparents. They wanted to know all about achievements, sports awards, honor roll, SAT scores, height and weight. They weren’t interested in growth or accomplishment.They wanted stats to compare the achievements of my mother’s children to my aunt’s children, and the sewing clubs children. It wasn’t an object of pride; it was an object of gloating. “Na Na Na Na Na, my kids are better parents than your kids. I was a better parent than you were. And I am a super awesome grandparent.
The cycle has been building up steam for centuries. Is it excusable? No, not really. It is understandable, but understandable isn’t justifiable. Childless, I am breaking the cycle, but my brother and sister, by the very nature of becoming parents, will see the cycle lives on. Hopefully with my niece’s and nephews’ generation the cycle will lose more power, just as it did in the transition from my grandmother to my mother.
June 21st, 2007 at 11:29 pm
I have to be honest and admit, even though i don’t want to, that there are times when i want Em to behave so that i will look like a good mother. The competitive sport known as child rearing is alive and well.
I also have to admit that i still don’t understand the wall between you and your mother. I feel like i wish my mother had even this much understanding of me.
It’s hard to explain a reltionship isn’t it?
June 22nd, 2007 at 7:51 am
meno, it is competitive. As long as society contributes to raising a child it will continue to be so. As it stands we still need the “village” so there really isn’t a remedy. It’s easy for me sit and observe such things because after all, I’ve raised four cats in my life and they all turned out okay…in other words a complete absence of credibility.
The wall baffles me as well. I credit myself as the mason, not her. I think it works in the same manner as when we decide who will be acquaintances in our lives, and who will be friends we confide in. Often it is just an issue of compatibility. I suspect both of us are stubborn alpha females; we can’t help butting heads. She’s trying to maintain her power as the matriarch, and I’m trying to earn a little credibility for my own intelligence rather than being frozen in time like a twelve year old. We always remain children, long after we prove ourselves to be adults.
June 22nd, 2007 at 8:57 pm
My mother in law, for whom I have a lot of respect, has a saying that rankles: I’m the Boss of the Bosses. She says this to the little ‘uns who she babysits frequently.
I was 35 when I had Fiona. I think our relationship has changed in the past 5 years in that my mother only has time for one of us, and she chooses Fiona. By spending time with Fiona, she’s freeing me up, but that’s the extent of our relationship. Other than the nebbing in.
June 23rd, 2007 at 10:01 am
De, your MIL seems to enjoy the time honored tradition of being the matriarch. I bet she waited for years to say those words.
Relationships grow and change. The changing part is hard to accept. Change isn’t always bad, sometimes it is just change. Children possess a potential beauty adults can never harness. There is something appealing about a lump of clay you can mold and shape, the promise of a brilliant tomorrow. Alas as grown ups, many of us are not so easily influenced and our potential is drying out. I guess the real question would be whether or not you are content with your current relationship with your mother, or do you long for more?