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- Organization: Graduate School of Industrial Administr., Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!news.sei.cmu.edu!fs7.ece.cmu.edu!crabapple.srv.cs.cmu.edu!andrew.cmu.edu!bc1w+
- Newsgroups: alt.support
- Message-ID: <gedEY8u00iUzQ4PIEr@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 2 Sep 1992 14:33:44 -0400
- From: Barbara Carlson <bc1w+@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Subject: Re: Mom at College
- In-Reply-To: <1992Aug31.152625.29626@athena.mit.edu>
- Lines: 86
-
- Excerpts from netnews.alt.support: 31-Aug-92 Mom at College by Valerie
- Samn@athena.mit.
- > My mom called yesterday and said that she was leaving my father and she was
- > coming in to Boston, from Texas, today.
-
- > taken care of . . . such as where she's going to live after she's kicked
- out...
- > how she's going to get a job when she hasn't had a job for over ...
- > how she's going to manage living by herself...
- > how she will make friends ...
- > she doesn't believe in counseling
- > able to take offense in almost anything...
- > believes that everyone intends to hurt her in some way.
-
- Valerie: This may be a really dumb question, but why do YOU feel you
- have to accomplish all this for your mother? Why do you have to have her
- in your dorm room for more than a visit? You're not *allowed* to have
- her stay there, if I understand dorm rules. She's an adult, you're the
- kid. SHE left, she needs to work these things out, not you.
-
- I understand that being her daughter, you feel some sense of
- responsibility towards her, but this really isn't your job, to take
- *care* of your mother. No wonder you're upset and worried!
-
- > Furthermore, i don't know how long i can take having my mother around
- > watching everything i do and making bad comments about all of my friends
-
- I don't know how you feel about your mother. My mom never had a nice
- word for me or any of my friends, either. The thought of spending one
- night with her makes me feel nauseous. I would strongly suggest you just
- tell her that you CANNOT have her stay with you. Tell her the truth,
- tell her a partial truth, tell her a lie -- it doesn't really matter.
- What matters is protecting yourself. Don't do (or allow to happen)
- something you know is a bad idea.
-
- You wouldn't allow a guy you knew was a jerk to stay with you, would
- you? Blood ties do not extend to allowing yourself to be hurt, even if
- it is "just" emotionally. Emotional pain counts.
-
- > my mother would not approve of my trusting others
-
- Does she trust you? Do you trust her? Does she approve of you trusting
- her or her trusting you? There is something seriously wrong with this
- kind of attitude ...
-
- > meanwhile, i do not know how long i can take being the sole emotional
- > support for my mother . . . it is very tiring and i am not up to it now . .
- You should not and CAN not be the sole emotional support for anyone
- except yourself. You might (now or sometime in the future) end up being
- the sole financial support of someone (a child, for example), but no
- matter what, humans are social creatures (whether they admit it or not)
- and NO ONE is the sole *anything*. Don't take this responsibility onto
- yourself. If you end up with this responsibility, it's because you've
- chosen to accept it. If you don't think you can handle it (or you just
- don't WANT to handle it) don't do it.
-
- > helping people as "repaying a debt" . . . . i hate help in the form of
- > 'payment' . . . i like helping people and she tells me i waste my time in
- > doing so and she says that i shouldn't accept help either because then i
- > will owe someone something for life
-
- Is this how you feel towards her? Being your mother, I'm sure she did
- lots of things for you. Do you feel you "owe her for life"? How does she
- feel about accepting things from you? Seems to me, she'd take them and
- not feel "indebted" to you ... sounds like a double standard to me.
-
- All this sounds familiar to me. Sounds a lot like what I've dealt with
- for years.
-
- > me, whichever i can accomplish . . . .
-
- Whatever *you* can accomplish? No, just don't take on that
- responsibility. Just don't do it. If you have to, disappear from your
- dorm room and stay with a friend.
-
- I'm not saying totally abandon her. You can be emotionally supportive,
- but do not suck yourself dry. She won't appreciate it, YOU won't like
- it, and it's not a good thing to do.
-
- Please don't take this the wrong way. I'm sure it's rough hearing about
- your parents divorcing. Just don't allow this to ruin your life and your
- emotional stability. If you need to talk, call or write me.
-
- --Barb--
-
-
-