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Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Feel so desperately sad

31 replies

immortalmarble · 28/11/2018 19:32

I am a lone parent to two young adult children. I became a parent very young. My own parents were extremely angry, disappointed and worried about the long term ramifications of potentially starting again as parents in their very late forties/early fifties. To cut a very long story short our relationship just broke down completely. My mum had always been a very heavy drinker and she died 18 months after my DD was born, and a month before my DS was born. My dad just left with another woman weeks later. So I suppose what I am saying is that I’ve raised two children totally completely alone. And it’s been hard.

Despite that we’ve coped and I’ve tried to be as good a parent as possible and looked after the children as best I could. But things just feel as if they have nosedived in recent years.

My dad died nearly five years ago, very very suddenly. We had not been close for years after my mum died but I was still devastated. There was so much left unsaid between us and even though I resented him for leaving me as a child really (albeit one a few months from her eighteenth birthday!) and for just standing by and letting my mum behave as she did, I also did love him very, very much and we ‘got’ each other. He was also always financially supportive although this also came with a certain amount of being overbearing and rather dogmatic some of the time. Even so, it was a great loss. My daughter was doing her a levels and my son his GCSEs at the time and they were upset too. Still they both did well. DD went to university. DS went to college.

My DS has autism but is very high functioning. He was generally okay when younger. He was definitely ‘intense’ and words such as ‘eccentric’ appeared with regularity when describing him but as a child these added to his charm: he had glasses and dark hair like a little Harry Potter and would regale any adult he met with stories about dinosaurs or Star Wars and he appeared cute and quirky.

As he grew up his difficulties became far more marked and he developed some quite macabre interests. His big problem (as I see it) is that he just doesn’t get humour - if someone tells him a joke he either doesn’t respond at all or robotically comes back with Ha Ha Ha. Unfortunately he started watching some comedians and reading books which derive their humour from ‘satire’ of a racist or sexist or generally socially unacceptable manner and because he doesn’t understand humour he repeats these jokes believing them to be daringly amusing and then of course they go down badly Sad I have had this conversation with him so many times but in the moment when he’s trying to impress he forgets and gets carried away. He’s caused a lot of offence to people though this. He is ridiculously easily led by others - he looks to others for acceptable behaviour and can’t see when they are laughing at him.

He started to overdose on prescription medication about eighteen months ago, when combined with alcohol this makes him downright bizarre, shouting in the street and (on two memorable occasions) smearing shit throughout the house, he had to be physically pinned down in hospital in August. That was awful as like many people with autism he hates being touched and lashed out and I had to plead with the hospital not to press charges. Anyway that is by the by.

But it’s all really breaking me. I have all but given up asking for help wit DS, he won’t engage with anything or anybody so there is no point. DD met a lovely boy and moved in with him, I am happy for her but she seems to be increasingly immersed into his family and it seems to highlight all that is wrong with mine. I don’t honestly want her to become my confidante or crutch but just the same for a mother and daughter that had been so close ... I feel like I’m losing her. In addition I also had some dear friends who I’ve drifted apart from, no ones fault, just life.

But I just feel as if everything I loved and held precious and dear to me is vanishing. My son hates me. He hates me because I had him, and he hates himself. Of course he doesn’t really hate me, he hates himself, but I’m an easy target. He rants on at me and tells me he is a loser, ugly (he isn’t actually, he is a perfectly pleasant looking young man but he has wild hair and he doesn’t shower or wash as much as he should and he wears clothes several sizes too large.) He controls every room in the house: if I am watching television and get up for a wee I come back and he’s there with a horror movie on. I got him his own tv but he prefers the one in the lounge so I am in my bedroom alone most nights.

My cat was put to sleep last month. I thought it was the right thing to do. But when it came to it he mewed when the vet injected him and his eyes were open in death looking shocked and scared. I had that cat for years, and I am so upset thinking his last minutes may have been terrified and in pain. He was old, and ill.

I just feel so unhappy about my life right now. I am so lonely with my friends and dd having drifted and DS being well DS and no other family. I am dreading Christmas.

I read a book where one of the characters drove away with a gun and their passport and it said something like it being the last Christmas they would have as things were and the inference was they’d either leave the country or die. And it’s weird but it sounded so peaceful. I keep replaying that in my mind, driving away to the sea maybe on Christmas Day and walking and coming back to the car and quietly drifting away. I wouldn’t, so that’s not a suicide threat so please don’t delete my post it’s just how it feelS.

OP posts:
Rayn · 29/11/2018 09:50

Oh and as someone said earlier! IAPT are fabulous x

immortalmarble · 29/11/2018 16:27

Thank you for your kind replies. It’s been really busy today.

There is no help available for DS - it isn’t something I can pursue. He doesn’t accept his autism. He believes he is totally NT.

In any case, DS is only a small part of this sadness which will not go away. Your replies have really helped though, thank you Flowers

OP posts:
springydaff · 30/11/2018 16:22

More flowers

💐 🌸 💐 🌸

BackInTheRoom · 30/11/2018 18:09

OP, I understand the MH and your son. It's heartbreaking. I don't have any suggestions, I just want you to know you're not alone Thanks

Ella15 · 30/11/2018 23:40

OP you're so young and you're in the transition phase before the next stage of your life begins. It feels scary and hopeless particularly because you're fearful of what's ahead for your son and you bear the responsibility yourself. It can be exhausting and wearing. I'm in a similar situation and it can weigh down heavily. I also think I'm in mourning for when my young adult child was younger. Even though it was hard then (single parent) it was familiar and there was at least the school system to keep things to a routine. Now I'm having to establish a new way of just 'being' which feels really lonely. I second the previous posters - small.kindnesses every day, making your room your sanctuary. And exercise, even walking fast through your local streets when you need to get away from the noisy TV, it does wonders! Running with loud music pumping through my headphones is like therapy for me - I can handle anything after that.
Volunteering too just for a couple of hours a week can be a great distraction. I was searching through hundreds of volunteering opportunities near me the other night ( quite like 'running for good' - you run to an elderly persons home one night a week, have a cup of tea and a chat, run back- simple but helps two lonely people :)).
I'm a bit older than you (wish I was only 39) but thinking positively I see the next part of my life as my second act. I'll always be mum and worry like crazy about the world my daughter has to negotiate with the difficulties she has and I'll do whatever I can but now it's time for me. And it sounds like it's now time for you. So small everyday stuff tp help you get through and some big adventures/ambitions you can think about to take you into your 40's. Sounds like you've been an amazing mum and if you can do that you really can do anything! Sorry for waffling/lecturing. I just recognised how you're feeling and wanted you to know it can and will get better. Flowers

immortalmarble · 01/12/2018 03:25

Thank you Flowers

Exercise does definitely help. I am a member of a lovely gym and just being there is good for me: I try to go after work.

I used to volunteer at the Samaritans but it just didn’t fit with my working hours very well and I’ve become a little tired of it to be honest. I mean volunteering in general. I’ve done it for years, and in a roundabout way it is how I got my current role as I started off doing volunteer work and then applied for a paid role within the organisation and then was able to access higher paid roles when I got my degree. The problem is that somewhere down the line I stopped feeling as if I was helping. I’d like to volunteer for the food bank or anything really where I was having direct contact with helping in a practical and hands on sense as that’s when I come into my own if you like, but our food bank closes at 3 so I wouldn’t get there in time (how they expect the working poor to get there I don’t know, or if you need food and it’s a Tuesday, Thursday or Friday or weekend ... but that’s by the by!)

Yet I do feel cheated a lot of the time and I think this is where I started to resent volunteering. In my darker moments I feel as if my life has been a long slog towards a particular goal and having apparently met that goal I now realise perhaps I backed the wrong horse. I was a terrified schoolgirl when I had my first child all those years ago. My elderly grandmother had only died the year before and my parents I think saw themselves as ‘free’ from the demands of aged parents (she was the last to go) and me getting pregnant was as well as being a real source of shame and embarrrassment to them also had them panicked that I would expect them to pick up the pieces and effectively become parents again in their late forties. As such they both shoved me away to such an extent that I ended up moving in with my then boyfriend and his family and got pregnant again (hence DS) ... it was a sort of general sense of misery that I had comitted myself to ‘this’ life and be hung for a sheep as well as for a lamb. And of course my mother died anyway, when I was still just seventeen.

And it just seems so impossibly strange that that one decision - or not - all those years ago, resulting in an unplanned pregnancy of DD, adored as she is, has led me to where I am now for good and bad - a bit like the poem ‘for the want of a nail’ although my version is more ‘for the want of a condom’ I suppose! I just see now that my friends are just starting this journey: they travelled and had fun in their twenties, met someone in their early thirties, married and had children in their mid thirties. Whereas I feel I am looking towards a cold and lonely future and to be honest it terrifies me.

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