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My mother is not very nice and she's getting worse as she ages

28 replies

PremiumPony · 01/01/2024 09:43

A few months ago a neighbour of mine died. She was an older woman in her late 70s. She was lovely friendly lady. Her family were grown and all around the world doing their own thing except for one son who remained at home. He was in his 50s. I will give him the initial A for this post. It's not his real initial.

Ever since the woman dies my mother has showed a huge abdunance of concern for the man and my mother has started conversations with me many times focusing on the man. Saying things like

  • I can see that home now turn to rot
  • I can see him turn to drink
  • I wonder does he even know how to pay bills
  • he wasn't allowed to do anything
  • she did everything for him

The first few weeks after the woman died, I engaged in conversation with my mother but I realised that this was nearly turning into an obsession with my mother.

She would criticise the woman who died for babying her adult son and doing everything for him and my mother would even become angry. I realised that this isn't a normal, healthy response. I would change the subject and get busy and walk out from the room and not engage with my mother about her conversations on the neighbour. My mother is someone who I think should be focusing on herself and her own life instead of being concerned and worried about the neighbours.

The kicker in all of this, I had brothers living at home and my mother was exactly the same as that woman and if anything my mother was worse. At least the neighbour charged her son a 'housekeeping' charge of 50 pounds a week. My mother never even took 50p of any of my brothers and often getting into debt over bills because she allowed all of my brothers even as adults to live at home and not pay anything and she supported them in every way. She bought their food and cooked for them and did laundry and she did everything for my brothers.

I find it hypocritical how my mother is getting angry over a dead neighbour because she has a son in his 50s living at home and my mother has dreamt up a scenario where clearly the man can't do anything for himself and she's angry even though she is engaged in the very same behaviour.

I bit my tongue and I held back my words to my mother and I never pointed out the similarities.

I have a brother home from abroad on holidays for the Christmas. It's great to see him. She's doing everything for him. Cleaning his room every day and cooking for him. She's doing the very behaviours that she was critising our dead neighbour about. My brother is gone away for a few days over the new year. Last night she came into me in the sitting room showing me a box that she found in his room. She found jewellery that he bought in his room. For his girlfriend. She opened the box and shoved it into my face and asked me to open the jewellery. I told her that there was a clasp on it but it's very small and delicate and I asked her to leave it back and I refused to open the jewellery for her to try on.

She went snooping in his room invading his privacy and trying to try on the jewellery he bought for his girlfriend. Its horrible behaviour from her. She had no right to snoop in his room and dress it up as her cleaning his room when it wasn't.

OP posts:
jackstini · 01/01/2024 14:20

PremiumPony · 01/01/2024 12:22

Yes she always did everything for them - cooking, laundry, paying for their food and bills and everything.

I don't expect her to do things for me like what she does for them but I wish she didn't play favourites. I wishe she wasn't so completely absorbed in men to the degree that she nearly hates women.

I think you have hit the nail on the head there OP - she is one of those women that really favours men and is not that happy your brothers finally moved out after she did everything possible to keep them there!

I do think you should check if she put the jewellery back - just in case she is telling you not to as she's moved it! She might think it's a sign of the relationship getting more serious and losing 'her boy' to another woman

She could really do with something else to occupy her time and stop her obsessing but it sounds like she has not got many opportunities for that (or want to do it)

Make sure you have plenty of time apart from her and keep saving so can eventually move out

Abergale · 01/01/2024 15:52

PremiumPony · 01/01/2024 14:00

No, one of my brothers lived at home til last year and he was well into his 30s at that stage when he left. He never paid a bill, did any DIY, or cut grass or laundry. She would insist on buying his food and cooking for him but he would fight back on it but there were many times when he had to give up the fight for peace and let her do things. Everything was done for him.

I know what you are saying about ahvi g someone home and it's great he's home and I organised a lot for the Christmas and Christ's dinner and hopefully we put on a good Christmas at home for him.

All of my brothers were into their 30s when they left home and she did everything for them.

She's now crisitising a dead woman for babying her son into his 50s.
The last brother who left home last year, she cried for months after him a d prayed his adventures abroad wouldn't work out for him. She wanted him home. He stuck it out and he's doing well now, thank goodness. If it was up to her he would be still living at home and doing nothing and her doing everything for him. She's living her life through serving men because it's the only thing that's making her feel signifiant.

She's not babying me thank goodness. I have a lot of independence at home. I just can't afford my own roof over my head. Different situations.

I then witness that last night from her - snooping in his room and investigating jewellery while she dresses it up as cleaning.

Yeah totally different I’m sure. I’d love to hear your brothers side to this, I imagine they think you are equally spoilt.

it’s funny how your brothers not leaving till 30 is because they are spoilt but you it’s because you can’t afford it.

your mum does sound like she’s acting out of order but if you don’t like living with her you need to work out a way to afford to move out. Not just bitch about how it’s not fair that your brothers who no longer live there didn’t do chores but you do.

PremiumPony · 01/01/2024 17:00

jackstini · 01/01/2024 14:20

I think you have hit the nail on the head there OP - she is one of those women that really favours men and is not that happy your brothers finally moved out after she did everything possible to keep them there!

I do think you should check if she put the jewellery back - just in case she is telling you not to as she's moved it! She might think it's a sign of the relationship getting more serious and losing 'her boy' to another woman

She could really do with something else to occupy her time and stop her obsessing but it sounds like she has not got many opportunities for that (or want to do it)

Make sure you have plenty of time apart from her and keep saving so can eventually move out

That's ridiculous that she might think she's losing her son to a woman when he's been living abroad for the past 15 years. She's not losing him to a woman and a piece of jewellery. I never thought of it that way until you said it and you're probably right. She likely sees the piece of jewellery as a sign of the relationship being serious. But he's a man. She doesn't own him and he's free to have a relationship.

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