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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

Resent that mum never worked/had a job - causing rifts between us

584 replies

Waferbiscuit · 10/10/2021 10:19

My mother married right out of University and since then has been a SAHM/SAHW. She only ever held one job, over the summer, when she was 20 and and has never had a job since.

She has lived a very comfortable life - children at a young age, divorced but remarried quickly so no change in her financial circumstances, moderately successful husband and kids at home until they left when she was 48. Since then she has spent the last 40+ years travelling, pottering and quite frankly stretching out daily chores into the day. She is part of a weird generation of mc women who expected to be cared for and probably never expected to work.

By contrast I have worked FT since leaving University, now a single parent, still working and juggling everything.

The fact that mum has never worked means she's lived in a real bubble, and has very skewed views about public life and the world of work. This causes huge rifts between us and really affects our relationship.

  • She has very little concept of what work is like and the pressures of modern work so when I explain that I am stressed she thinks that it's my fault and I need to manage it.
  • She doesn't understand that people need to do work outside of 9-5
  • She has no real sense of what it's like to have someone instructing you/telling you what to do; she has literally been 'self guided' her entire life
  • She thinks it's easy to get a job and promotion so doesn't understand why they aren't forthcoming for me or my siblings.
  • She is deeply unproductive so thinks juggling means trying to do the dishes and laundry in the same morning and considers that 'busy-ness' to be on par with mine
  • She is very naive about money and assumes everyone is on a relatively good wage. She doesn't understand why I can't go part-time.
  • She dresses in organic frocks and proudly doesn't wear makeup or do her hair but her 'hippyness' is a privilege - she doesn't clock that other people actually have to look and dress professionally for work.
  • She doesn't help me in any way - financially or with DCs - because she's always too busy doing nothing at all, but she's 'very busy'.

I know I should be grateful that she's not working in a factory to scrape by, but her naiviety means there's an entire aspects of my life she doesn't understand and over the years it's caused real tensions. I partly resent that she doesn't get it and partly resent that she's had such an easy ride that she takes for granted or really considers her due.

Posting just to see if anyone else has the same problem and how they made peace with it.

OP posts:
GreeboIsMySpiritAnimal · 21/10/2021 05:58

This thread is really weird. Like a Mumsnet version of the Three Yorkshiremen sketch. Hmm

Intercity225 · 22/10/2021 20:38

@Intercity225 - there are so many people all over the world who have neither money nor health, including many in the UK, that your statements here are rather tone deaf.

Everybody can find people, who are worse off than them! Practically everybody on here, by virtue of the fact they clearly can read and write; and have the use of a PC, tablet, smart phone and the internet is likely to be better off than the starving in the 3rd world. So, what is anybody complaining about on MN, yet there are plenty of threads?

You don't know everything there is to know about my life or DH's, so don't make judgements about what I or he have been through, and what we have seen in our families on both sides, and make assumptions about what we don't know.

mathanxiety · 23/10/2021 03:55

You've been stating quite categorically that money doesn't make things better or easier.

I am stating quite categorically that lack of money makes bad things even worse. Don't assume I know nothing of what I speak.

Lana07 · 24/10/2021 20:43

@fuckoffImcounting

It sounds like you had a very privileged middle class upbringing - which your good old hippy mum provided for you. You sound very selfish and entitled. I grew up with a paranoid schizophrenic mother in dire poverty, I would have given anything to have your arsehole little gripes.
It's ok and normal to be entitled.

It means the person has high self-esteem.

Lana07 · 24/10/2021 20:45

@mathanxiety

You've been stating quite categorically that money doesn't make things better or easier.

I am stating quite categorically that lack of money makes bad things even worse. Don't assume I know nothing of what I speak.

Money, good financially stable life is 99% of life happiness.
Lana07 · 24/10/2021 20:58

Money CAN buy me happiness.

It certainly buys it for me.

Lana07 · 24/10/2021 21:01

@callmeadoctor

3 channels on the tv, no shops open on Sundays. No cheap clothing shops (home made knitted school cardigans).
Most people still were happy with the basics and luxuries of that time.
mathanxiety · 24/10/2021 21:58

Agree with you, Lana.

Money makes a big difference.

LaurieFairyCake · 24/10/2021 22:24

Yeah I've got to agree that having financial security is about 95% of happiness

Only someone extraordinarily privileged would say otherwise

Like those kids of multimillionaires or royalty who deliberately develop various addictions by snorting a grands worth of cocaine every weekend Hmm

Just .... twats

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