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Relationships

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

June 2021 - Well we took you to Stately Homes...

954 replies

Sicario · 08/06/2021 19:35

June 2021, and the Stately Home is still open to visitors.

Picking up from previous thread
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/relationships/4182916-March-2021-Well-we-took-you-to-Stately-Homes-thread?pg=39

Forerunning threads since December 2007 are linked on the previous threads if you want to click back and have a look.

This thread has become a safe haven for Adult children of abusive families.

The title refers to an original poster's family who claimed they could not have been abusive as they had taken her to plenty of Stately Homes during her childhood!

One thing you will never hear on this thread is that your abuse or experience was not that bad. You will never have your feelings minimised the way they were when you were a child, or now that you are an adult. To coin the phrase of a much respected past poster Ally90;

'Nobody can judge how sad your childhood made you, even if you wrote a novel on it, only you know that. I can well imagine any of us saying some of the seemingly trivial things our parents/ siblings did to us to many of our real life acquaintances and them not understanding why we were upset/ angry/ hurt etc. And that is why this thread is here. It's a safe place to vent our true feelings, validate our childhood/ lifetime experiences of being hurt/ angry etc by our parents behaviour and to get support for dealing with family in the here and now.'

Most new posters generally start off their posts by saying; but it wasn't that bad for me or my experience wasn't as awful as x,y or z's.

Some on here have been emotionally abused and/ or physically abused. Some are not sure what category (there doesn't have to be any) they fall into.

NONE of that matters. What matters is how 'YOU' felt growing up, how 'YOU' feel now and a chance to talk about how and why those childhood experiences and/ or current parental contact, has left you feeling damaged, falling apart from the inside out and stumbling around trying to find your sense of self-worth.

You might also find the following links and information useful, if you have come this far and are still not sure whether you belong here or not.

'Toxic Parents' by Susan Forward.

I started with this book and found it really useful.

Here are some excerpts:

"Once you get going, most toxic parents will counterattack. After all, if they had the capacity to listen, to hear, to be reasonable, to respect your feelings, and to promote your independence, they wouldn't be toxic parents. They will probably perceive your words as treacherous personal assaults. They will tend to fall back on the same tactics and defences that they have always used, only more so.

Remember, the important thing is not their reaction but your response. If you can stand fast in the face of your parents' fury, accusations, threats and guilt-peddling, you will experience your finest hour.

Here are some typical parental reactions to confrontation:

"It never happened". Parents who have used denial to avoid their own feelings of inadequacy or anxiety, will undoubtedly use it during confrontation, to promote their version of reality. They'll insist that your allegations never happened, or that you're exaggerating. They won't remember, or they will accuse you of lying.

YOUR RESPONSE: Just because you don't remember, doesn't mean it didn't happen".

"It was your fault." Toxic parents are almost never willing to accept responsibility for their destructive behaviour. Instead, they will blame you. They will say that you were bad, or that you were difficult. They will claim that they did the best that they could but that you always created problems for them. They will say that you drove them crazy. They will offer as proof, the fact that everybody in the family knew what a problem you were. They will offer up a laundry list of your alleged offences against them.

YOUR RESPONSE: "You can keep trying to make this my fault, but I'm not going to accept the responsibility for what you did to me, when I was a child".

"I said I was sorry what more do you want?" Some parents may acknowledge a few of the things that you say but be unwilling to do anything about it.

YOUR RESPONSE: "I appreciate your apology, but that is just a beginning. If you're truly sorry, you'll work through this with me, to make a better relationship."

"We did the best we could." Some parents will remind you of how tough they had it while you were growing up and how hard they struggled. They will say such things as "You'll never understand what I was going through," or "I did the best I could". This particular style of response will often stir up a lot of sympathy and compassion for your parents. This is understandable, but it makes it difficult for you to remain focused on what you need to say in your confrontation. The temptation is for you once again to put their needs ahead of your own. It is important that you be able to acknowledge their difficulties, without invalidating your own.

YOUR RESPONSE: "I understand that you had a hard time, and I'm sure that you didn't hurt me on purpose, but I need you to understand that the way you dealt with your problems really did hurt me"

"Look what we did for you." Many parents will attempt to counter your assertions by recalling the wonderful times you had as a child and the loving moments you and they shared. By focusing on the good things, they can avoid looking at the darker side of their behaviour. Parents will typically remind you of gifts they gave you, places they took you, sacrifices they made for you, and thoughtful things they did. They will say things like, "this is the thanks we get" or "nothing was ever enough for you."

YOUR RESPONSE: "I appreciate those things very much, but they didn't make up for ...."

"How can you do this to me?" Some parents act like martyrs. They'll collapse into tears, wring their hands, and express shock and disbelief at your "cruelty". They will act as if your confrontation has victimized them. They will accuse you of hurting them, or disappointing them. They will complain that they don't need this, they have enough problems. They will tell you that they are not strong enough or healthy enough to take this, that the heartache will kill them. Some of their sadness will, of course, be genuine. It is sad for parents to face their own shortcomings, to realise that they have caused their children significant pain. But their sadness can also be manipulative and controlling. It is their way of using guilt to try to make you back down from the confrontation.

YOUR RESPONSE: "I'm sorry you're upset. I'm sorry you're hurt. But I'm not willing to give up on this. I've been hurting for a long time, too."

Helpful Websites

Alice Miller
Personality Disorders definition
Daughters of narcissistic mothers
Out of the FOG
You carry the cure in your own heart
Help for adult children of child abuse
Pete Walker
The Echo Society
There are also one or two less public offshoots of Stately Homes, PM AttilaTheMeerkat or toomuchtooold for details.

Some books:

Toxic Parents by Susan Forward
Homecoming by John Bradshaw
Will I ever be good enough? by Karyl McBride
If you had controlling parents by Dan Neuharth
When you and your mother can't be friends by Victoria Segunda
Children of the self-absorbed by Nina Brown - check reviews on this, I didn't find it useful myself.
Recovery of your inner child by Lucia Capacchione
Childhood Disrupted by Donna Jackson Nazakawa

This final quote is from smithfield posting as therealsmithfield:

"I'm sure the other posters will be along shortly to add anything they feel I have left out. I personally don't claim to be sorted but I will say my head has become a helluva lot straighter since I started posting here. You will receive a lot of wisdom but above all else the insights and advice given will 'always' be delivered with warmth and support."

OP posts:
laalaaland · 22/08/2021 11:11

@therealsmithfield I'm so sorry to hear you got yet another message from TM.
It's so hard NOT to fall back into the roles family created for us. We were conditioned throughout our entire childhood. It can be exhausting to keep super vigilant all the time and, life happens, attention slips, and you're back in the same role again. So easily done. But I bet each time you notice it quicker and disentangle yourself quicker.

I don't know all the ins and out of your relationship with your family....but why do you have to do anything now? Can you just ignore the message? If not, what's the least you can do to give you back some sense of calm?

Thanks for your support with my issues too. Is it weird that I still find it hard to truly believe my family are in the wrong? Your reaction that what she did was horrendous...is just...I dunno...I needed to hear that. thank you.

My father was always very much the provider and didn't get overly involved in family life. My mum was always the one in charge. On reflection I can see how she manipulated relationships so we weren't close with my dad or any extended family - she would insist we hide if family came to call.

My Dad's wonderful sense of humour and laid back attitude would always be able to shake my mum out of her strops, but he's been ill for about 15 years and all of that was lost a long time ago.

My sis has always hated/been jealous of me. I don't have a single nice word to say about her.

laalaaland · 22/08/2021 11:15

@mummyoply am so sorry you are in a similar situation. it is awful isn't it? I also thought we were close but the pregnancy seem to trigger a huge shift and I felt like all my support network had been taken away just when I needed it most. It feels like such a betrayal. How old is your son now? Do your family respect your LC boundaries?

therealsmithfield · 22/08/2021 13:25

@Mummyoply @laalaaland

‘You sound like an amazing mum and lovely human being’

I concur. You truly do x

Re Fathers: I had mine up on a Pedestal as a child and he was idolised by me it was quite shocking for me to discover he was incredibly toxic as well. I’d been conditioned I guess to forgive him because he showed some love and warmth rather than zero that I got from TM.

I’m sorry to hear your father is poorly and it sounds like you have to some extent lost him already to a terrible illness . Having to contend with that as well as a soul sucking mother and being a mum of a little un… that’s a lot xx

@mummyoply 🤗

therealsmithfield · 22/08/2021 13:27

My Dad's wonderful sense of humour and laid back attitude would always be able to shake my mum out of her strops, but he's been ill for about 15 years and all of that was lost a long time ago.

By the way your father sounds lovely and nothing like mine !

therealsmithfield · 22/08/2021 13:31

I’ve decided to ignore TM - I had switched off notifications etc but I think I will block numbers as well because I don’t want her in my head, either at work or especially when I am with my dc.
I just don’t any to focus on being the mum my DC’s both deserve.

I have also started going back and reading the beginning of the June thread and it is really helpful!

@Sicario I could have written your post myself ! As much as it hurts me to know another person has been treated so badly by their family of origin it makes me feel slightly less crazed.

TirisfalPumpkin · 22/08/2021 13:32

I guess it wasn't going to be easy.

Went NC a couple of days ago. My dad, who does enable but tries to 'not take sides', called me to tell me toxic mum has left - has gone somewhere in another county 'for a few days'. I offered to go keep my dad company, said he was okay, thanks. Didn't sound it, but I guess I can only offer.

It's hard because I know he enables, but I am pretty sure he's been subjected to the most horrendous abuse and pressure over the past few days to make me apologise, grovel and resume contact, and he hasn't done. He has remained neutral - which isn't the 'fair' position (since I haven't done anything wrong) but he equally hasn't completely sided with my mum, and he did describe her behaviour as 'unacceptable'. And she can't handle it.

She's never done anything like this before, and despite everything she's done, I am concerned. She threatens suicide when told 'no'. I just picture her heading to some airBNB in the arse end of nowhere (I don't think she has gone to a friend, afaik she doesn't have any) and realising that she's alienated everyone in her life with her behaviour. Or, more likely, we're all terrible people who unreasonably abandoned her - either way, having that realisation that she now has nobody. I don't have good feelings about her but I don't want her to die or come to harm.

therealsmithfield · 22/08/2021 13:39

@TirisfalPumpkin

A while back when my TM wasn’t getting her won way over something she stopped answering calls and hid in her house to make my dsis think something had happened to her.

This is what they do and she will as others have reminded me… up the anti.

I can assure you wherever she is she will be fine!
They are very resilient. Rather like a cockroach really. Born survivors.

How are you feeling? What is going on for you right now. You are coping with a huge loss right now and need nurturing.

Keep a list if you have to of all the things she has done to bring this to pass.

Mummyoply · 22/08/2021 15:14

@laalaaland my DS is 4yrs old and they are very disrespectful of boundaries and fight LC all the time. To the point that my dad had threatened to harm himself if I don't do as they wish.

It sounds like you are handling things remarkably well with your family, it's not easy!

TirisfalPumpkin · 22/08/2021 15:19

@therealsmithfield - resilient like cockroaches - haha! That made me smile.

I guess it's hard to turn off the concern. I'm just picturing her rage-driving down the M1 and getting into an accident now, or perhaps turning around and coming back here to really hurt me. (OK maybe I am less past the 'fear' part than I thought). I hope it's part of The Pattern and she's just going to a bolthole where she can sulk and reinforce her beliefs for a few days.

I have taken your suggestion and blocked numbers, though. At least now my phone is one thing not scaring me. I'm going to find some trash TV to watch and try and forget about it.

I have a lot of admiration for those who are going through this AND raising children too. I can barely look after myself! Well done on breaking the patterns and making the next generation happy, secure and loved.

laalaaland · 23/08/2021 17:13

Thanks for the kind comments @Mummyoply and @therealsmithfield. How are you both doing today?

@mummyoply - have you considered going NC? What's holding you back? That kind of behaviour from your father is appalling, I'm so sorry you have had to deal with that.

@TirisfalPumpkin - how did the trash TV therapy go? Hope you're feeling a bit less anxious today.

Mummyoply · 23/08/2021 18:18

@laalaaland yes ive considered NC but I still struggle with FOG and my father has told me he has suicidal ideation and said it was caused by me basically. If I go NC I'm scared he will hurt himself or worse and I will have that on my conscience for the rest of my life...........

Nc4post99 · 23/08/2021 18:20

Hello all,

So I’m wondering what sort of help there is (on the nhs) for adults who suffered child abuse. I’ve been declined various types of therapy, the nhs healthy minds and perinatal mental health team have said it’s not in their remit and can’t see why it affects me, they’ve not been able to sign post to colleagues/ a branch in the nhs that can help.

Im 6/7 months pregnant and recently lost my dad, my non abusive parent, my mother (who was verbally, physically abusive and emotionally abusive) is left and she’s been a nightmare. She is still emotionally abusive and to be honest, im finding it hard to cope, I get a lot of flash backs and I don’t know how to navigate a relationship moving forward IF one can even be navigated. Im aware I need some additional support and or counselling to see through the FOG but I just can’t find any. I can’t go NC as I stand now as I’m not sure I trust my own version of events anymore. She is unrelenting with her demands on me and refuses to acknowledge or adhere to requests for space as I deal with my own grief.

Does anyone know that sort of help that I should ask for? If it even exists?

AttilaTheMeerkat · 23/08/2021 18:58

I am very sorry to read about your late father. 💐

None of the abuse you suffered was your fault. This is on them and them alone.

I would be contacting NAPAC in your circumstances and also have a look at the BACP website for therapists. The NHS won’t be of much help to you here in any event due also to a lack of resources.

Always trust your own truth. Sounds like your abusive mother has tried to gaslight you as well making you doubt your own version of reality. You absolutely need to stay well away from her as there is really no relationship to salvage.

Someone like your man here needs to field her calls and I would actually consider now blocking her. She is not respecting you nor any boundary you set her, all she wants of you is to be her human punchbag.

If she is too difficult/toxic for you to deal with it is the same deal for your child too.

She was not a good parent to you when you were growing up and she will in all likelihood be a toxic grandparent too. I implore you to keep her well away from you and your child going forward. You do not owe your mother anything.

If the other set of grandparents are nice then concentrate your efforts on them.

Nc4post99 · 23/08/2021 19:44

Thanks @AttilaTheMeerkat, I know severely limiting contact is the way forward but I feel a huge amount of guilt at even the thought of it. Even though I know she felt 0 guilt for all the times she’d fly at me in a rage, wish me dead from cancer etc. That’s where I need the help, to not be guilted back in and to feel at ease with my decision. I know with a person like that there are only 2 options, accept them as they are because they’ll never change or to cut them out completely. I can’t really accept her as she is because she always wants more and more and even our history it actually enrages me. At the moment it’s not a punch bag she wants (although this will change) it’s an emotional support system, to listen to her, to tell her how amazing she is, to sort all the legal paper work and to spoil her and make her feel special- which is equally exhausting. To others she’s an angel and a perpetual victim. My husband has seen glimpses of the real her so he understands and believes me but I am starting to question myself.

I will look into those therapies, do you know roughly what the charge is? Xx

AttilaTheMeerkat · 23/08/2021 20:24

Don’t question your own reality here. I would also suggest you read Toxic parents by Susan Forward as a starting point. You may also want to look at the website Daughters of Narcissistic Mothers.

BACP I think operate a sliding scale.

It’s not your fault your mother is abusive and you did not make her that way. She as you state does not feel any guilt about her abuses of you and you really owe her nothing.

I hope you find the peace you need an deserve. Remember too that the only acceptable level of abuse in a relationship is none. I implore you again to keep her well away from your child going forward, no relationship should be established.

MonkeyfromManchester · 23/08/2021 21:15

@Nc4post99 this is so familiar - the child as punch bag. She can no longer slap you around, but is toxic. I’m so sorry that you lost your dad. Counselling is absolutely brilliant. It’s an investment. I feel much better after mine. Always remember it’s her, NOT YOU.

Klaxon! Hag alert.

She’s excelled herself today.

Mr Monkey has done a brilliant community history project and it launches on the 5 Sept. He’s gathered up The Hag, his brother, my mum (as Human Shield) and our lovely older friends to go to the event. I can see it’s a mix of ‘I want a normal family’ and ‘come and be part of this community event’ by him.

It’s all arranged.

The brother in law phones this afternoon. He offers to drive - he’s disabled.
MM: we can get a taxi so we all have a drink.
BIL: are you sure?
MM: yes, it’s no problem.

Hag then rings:
You’ve really upset him. He thinks you don’t want him to go.
MM: he doesn’t think that, I want him to chill out, have a drink and not drive across Manchester.
Hag: no, you’ve upset him. You don’t want me to go either.
ETC ETC ETC ETC 10 minutes worth.

It has REALLY upset him. He did the push back.

Brilliantly. You’re not going to ruin this for me. I’m going to have a nice time. If you don’t want to go, then that’s your choice.

But it still leaves him with a lot of hurt and brings back memories of her gameplaying and his toxic Narc GB brother joining in when he was a child.

Basically, lies to make him feel guilty and insecure. Controlling him and divide and rule between two brothers. She’s absolutely fucking toxic - trying to ruin something that he’s achieved.

The classic line.
‘You don’t want me to go. And all I want to do is spend time with my family. I NEVER SEE MY FAMILY.’

MM: and whose fault is that? You could ring people. You could accept invitations.

She doesn’t.

It has just dawned on me that the REAL reason taxi gate has broken out is that a taxi means she’s not driven by Slave Son in his tiny car. She literally sits in the backseat like some royal personage. The tiny car will also not comfortably sit me, my mum, our friends. Quite deliberate. Trying to exclude us. My family, indeed.

She has a ton of hospital appointments - sadly, not fucking Dignatas - and has manipulated Slave Son to drive her and MM to accompany her. Slave Bil because of his disabilities can’t walk her to her appointments so why not let him stay at home? He can barely walk. She’s got her boys (the sons she abused as children) right where she wants them.

But….

MM has realised all the games and pushes back more and more. I’m so proud of him. I keep reminding him that if she was my mum, I would have gone NC years ago. By being in a top security prison.

She is absolutely Fucking VILE.

But every day she’s more and more transparent.

Hideous woman.

therealsmithfield · 23/08/2021 23:41

@laalaaland hello 👋🏻 thanks for asking after me.
I’m fine and not had much time to think about TM as I’m away with work. Actually that’s a lie. She’s like a spectre but in the background today not foreground. Today I’m disguised as a woman who has her shit together, whilst inside I am in turmoil.

How are you doing ?

@Nc4post99 - my heart goes out to you! I had a terrible birth experience with my first and it really was due to my mothers presence. It has affected my relationship with my first born because I can’t help but associate the level of stress to his birth. She marred forever what should have been a beautiful, precious event.
You must put yourself first somehow. Find it within you if you can . Whilst pregnant you are so vulnerable and you need to put your mental health first more than ever.
I wish I could be more help with regards to resource. Would your husband be willing to shield you from her as Atilla suggested?

@MonkeyfromManchester hag sounds like a real piece of work. Is MM scapegoat? Makes me feel like he may be with her sabotaging something that she should be happy and proud of him for.
So glad he is breaking away from her toxic traps with your help but it sounds exhausting!

noirchatsdeux · 24/08/2021 01:30

Hello all

I've posted here before, quite awhile ago. My story is much the same as many on here - both parents narcissistic, both put themselves and their marriage before their 3 children etc. Parents divorced when I was 21 (father left for OW...that he's still married to 30 years later). I've been NC with father for 31 years, LC with mother for 20. I deliberately chose to live on the other side of the world from her, even though I'd be far better off in and really miss my home city...

Anyway. My mother was one of 9 children. 3 girls, 6 boys. So myself and my two brothers had 6 uncles. We were the first grandchildren in the family, and lived in the same city as 3 of the uncles, so saw a lot of them for the first 10 years...one uncle in particular we were very close to, there was barely a weekend that for at least for 1 whole day he'd take us to the museum, fishing, to the cinema, etc...all the typical type of stuff that uncles do. About two months after my father left her my mother completely out of the blue told me that this particular uncle had sexually abused her when she was about 6...obviously I was very shocked and taken aback at this...particularly as she let both myself and my two brothers spend so much time alone with him when we were very young children?

So I've talked to my younger brother about it (she also told him, but years after she told me...there's only a 2 year age gap between us) and basically he doesn't believe her, because what mother in their right mind would let a paedophile spend so much time alone with their young children? I know the mantra about sexual abuse is always 'believe them' but I'm really struggling with this, because to me it boils down to 2 scenarios - 1. It did happen, and she knowingly put her own children in the path of an abuser or 2. It didn't happen, and it's narcissistic attention seeking off the fucking scale.

I call my mother on average once a month. I called her last Friday and we got talking about my paternal grandmother's will (she left a lot of money to my father and didn't even acknowledge myself or my brothers existence but left money to my cousins).

This led on to me asking why when a move abroad went very badly wrong when I was 10, that we hadn't returned to our home country but instead had yet another move to another country (in that year we ended up moving 5 times, my younger brother was 6 at the time, it was insanely upsetting and stressful to myself and my brothers) she basically blamed it on me...saying that she was 'protecting' me from this particular uncle...so basically putting all the horrible stress and upset of that year on my shoulders, like it was all my fault because I was so 'tempting' to my uncle! "We were protecting you Noirchatsdeux" ... So why didn't she protect me and keep me and my brothers away for him for the decade previously?

Sorry this is so long. I just can't make sense of any of it.

noirchatsdeux · 24/08/2021 01:43

I should add that I have asked my mother the question directly....she completely ignores it, refuses to answer and changes the subject.

therealsmithfield · 24/08/2021 08:32

@noirchatsdeux that’s a lot for you to unpick ! This is awful that’s she’s dumped this on you when I’m sure you have your own life to focus on.🤗

My initial thoughts are that she sounds like she has form for lying to you? Otherwise it wouldn’t have occurred to you that she may be fabricating.
Secondly either way that’s really toxic behaviour isn’t it.
To lay it on you now. Regardless. Smacks of attention seeking behaviour.
The main concern is your metal health and well-being in all of this.
Could you engage with a counsellor to help you work through all the emotions this is bringing up?
Also just write here and document any feelings thoughts to help decipher the impact this is having In the here and now.
Could you consider having NC whilst you work through it?

TirisfalPumpkin · 24/08/2021 09:17

@MonkeyfromManchester - I know it must be no fun at all to live through this, but I love your way with words. I can just picture her sat there like a tiny evil queen scowling at everything in slaveson's tiny car. Your struggle for sanity and peace while achieving proper hag management would make a great blog or column and I'm here for it.

@noirchatsdeux sounds like you have a selective historian on your hands - everything is reframed to fit their narrative. Moving countries as a child is tough. Kids need to feel secure. It sounds like you didn't get that.

I got this from an infidelity support site rather than a narcissistic/toxic parents one, but I think it rings true here - 'trust that they suck'. I also devote too much head space to questioning why they are like that and what they hope to achieve by doing the things they do - but there's never going to be an answer more satisfying than, 'they do it because they suck'.

Sicario · 24/08/2021 10:59

@Nc4post99 - I'm afraid that mental health support through the NHS is absolutely crap. Do please follow Attila's advice and seek out a private practitioner as soon as possible. Also advise your GP and maternity team that you are struggling with your MH so that it is out in the open.

Going NC is really really hard because we feel so fucking guilty about it. Excuse my language, but it makes me really angry. So many of us in the same boat, being made to feel terrible by family members when we have done nothing wrong.

Please please look after yourself and try to re-think your contact with IT'S NOT YOU - IT'S HER.

I too had a highly abusive mother (I'm NC with her now), and in more recent years realised that my nightmare sister is cut from exactly the same cloth. I am NC with my whole family of origin now. It was really hard to do, but definitely the right decision and I don't regret it for a minute.

Good luck with finding a therapist - a good therapist can be life-changing. I hope you find the strength to cut your mother out of your life so you can start your healing journey.

OP posts:
noirchatsdeux · 24/08/2021 11:16

@therealsmithfield To me, what makes it worse is that I was diagnosed with type 2 bipolar when I was 23...so 30 years ago. All my mother was bothered about when I started seeing a psychiatrist is that 'I was going to be bitching about her'... hence why I live on the other side of the world and have only seen her twice in 20 years, I have to keep the distance for the sake of mental health. She had already driven to one nervous breakdown, after I left my husband when I was 24.

Form for lying? God yes. The last time I saw her was about a decade ago, I'd planned to go out for a holiday... I wasn't working at the time and me and my then husband had saved up for a long time for me to be able to go...about a month before I was due to travel she rang saying that she'd just had a major heart attack and was basically at death's door...I bought my flight out forward by a month, which cost an extra 500 pounds...money we really couldn't afford. I get there, she's fine (and demanding that I visit her when I've been in the country less than 1 hour after travelling for 2 solid days)...I go with her to her doctors, where he tells her outright that she's not had any sort of heart attack, it was a angina attack. She's not had one since. She was an utter nightmare that 'holiday', expected me to wait on her hand and foot 24/7 even though she was perfectly capable of doing everything herself. My younger brother was living with her at the time, and used to lie about having work shifts just to get out of the house and away from her. I didn't blame him at all.

Due to my bipolar I've been (pre Covid) seeing a psychiatrist and psychologist every 6 months for the last few years. Earlier this year I was also diagnosed with C-PTSD. My older brother told his wife he has no happy memories of our childhood...his wife made the mistake of telling my mother...she now blames his wife for it all and slags both of them off as much as she does my father. If I told her about the C-PTSD she'd be disgusted.

Nc4post99 · 24/08/2021 11:20

Thank you @Sicario unfortunately it’s the cost that could hinder my getting help. But I’m going to do some research and hopefully can find something xx

AttilaTheMeerkat · 24/08/2021 11:41

NAPAC's link is here and their service is free:-

napac.org.uk/