Post
by Gman5256 » Wed Dec 12, 2007 5:47 pm
I just want to put in a quick note here about mothers. (Yes, I looked at this thread for humor, but stayed anyway.) I can't begin to add to the incredibly insightful comments and suggestions many of you made earlier on, but I do want to agree that "my mother is my negative center."
I am a 56-year old happily married man with a now-feeble 90-year old mother in a nursing home. I battled with her from childhood through my twenties, and by all accounts she was just bat-crazy neurotic her whole life. In my teens I fervently believed that either she was crazy or I was evil, and only time would tell. When I went away to college, I found out that I wasn't evil and nobody else's mothers were nearly as srange as she was. I swore to myself, literally, that "I won't become Norman Bates." That may seem crazy, but in retrospect it was me staying healthy.
I battled for my own self, I visited her and my mild-mannered dad, often with screaming arguments and long walks, and I lived my own life. Now my life-long anxiety and depression have gotten me into this program (fortunately), and I visit my mom regularly and take part in her care. Despite her reduced faculties she smiles at me with tears in her eyes, and it is worth the years of fighting to keep a connection.
In my personal, biased and uneducated opinion, you have to keep up a connection. As you get older, so do they, and at some point you have to take charge. They fear your leaving them, and you can use that fear to negotiate visitation terms. After all, you have your own life now and theirs is waning, so they need you more than you need them. At least on a short-term basis.
Years ago my wife asked me in anguish, "How do they know how to press all the buttons?" I said, "Because they put them there!"
Oh yes they did. And so here I am. But I'm driving 350 miles to see her this weekend, even if she forgets I was there the next day. It's another small deposit in the karma bank, and I know it.
I did the eulogy at my dad's funeral 20 years ago. My sister will probably ask me to do the same for our mom, and I have no idea what to say. Her life was a bit hard, and much strange, but still...
Not quite the "quick note" that I promised. Gee, I still can't wrap it up in a postcard! I'd better do Week 4 again before going back to Week 3 -- again.
We all come from "nuclear" families. Good luck to us all!
All for His praise, glory and the joy it gives Him.
Hugs, In His Love >:D<
Gman9259
"He who dwells in the secret place of the most
high shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty"