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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

October 2021 - well we took you to Stately Homes

999 replies

AttilaTheMeerkat · 29/10/2021 09:22

Its late October 2021 now, 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:
AttilaTheMeerkat · 29/10/2021 10:10

Purplrayhan posted this on a previous Stately Homes thread:-

Thought this from another thread might be helpful to anyone who hasn't see it. Hopefully@singlemummanurse wont mind me copying and sharing here.

#Don't rock the boat.

I've been thinking about this phrase a lot lately, about how unfair it is. Because we aren't the ones rocking the boat. It's the crazy lady jumping up and down and running side to side. Not the one sitting in the corner quietly not giving a fuck.

At some point in her youth, Mum/MIL gave the boat a little nudge. And look how everyone jumped to steady the boat! So she does it again, and again. Soon her family is in the habit of swaying to counteract the crazy. She moves left, they move right, balance is restored (temporarily). Life goes on. People move on to boats of their own.

The boat-rocker can't survive in a boat by herself. She's never had to face the consequences of her rocking. She'll tip over. So she finds an enabler: someone so proud of his boat-steadying skills that he secretly (or not so secretly) lives for the rocking.

The boat-rocker escalates. The boat-steadier can't manage alone, but can't let the boat tip. After all, he's the best boat-steadier ever, and that can't be true if his boat capsizes, so therefore his boat can't capsize. How can they fix the situation?

Ballast!

And the next generation of boat-steadiers is born.

A born boat-steadier doesn't know what solid ground feels like. He's so used to the constant swaying that anything else feels wrong and he'll fall over. There's a good chance the boat-rocker never taught him to swim either. He'll jump at the slightest twitch like his life depends on it, because it did.

When you're in their boat, you're expected to help steady it. When you decline, the other boat-steadiers get resentful. Look at you, just sitting there while they do all the work! They don't see that you aren't the one making the boat rock. They might not even see the life rafts available for them to get out. All they know is that the boat can't be allowed to tip, and you're not helping.

Now you and your DH get a boat of your own. With him not there, the balance of the boat changes. The remaining boat-steadiers have to work even harder.

While a rocking boat is most concerning to those inside, it does cause ripples. The nearby boats start to worry. They're getting splashed! Somebody do something!

So the flying monkeys are dispatched. Can't you and DH see how much better it is for everyone (else) if you just get back on the boat and keep it steady? It would make their lives so much easier.

OP posts:
Orangetractor · 29/10/2021 14:09

Just marking my place to follow this thread

IAAP · 29/10/2021 14:14

Afternoon all thanks for the new thread.

I had a really good counselling session yesterday. We talked about my self esteem and why my daughter isn’t anxious but I am about the same issue. The main difference the counsellor pointed out is that she has a secure base with me whereas I don’t with my parents. We talked a lot about a potential meet - why I might do it and what it would ‘cost’ in terms of emotional health and fear and anxiety and then the pay back - of what I might possibly gain - which would be at best hollow words and being told they love me before reeling me in again. I’m beginning to see I’m like a fish on the hook - that they can throw me in, pull me out and all I can do is twist on the end of the line. We talked about Christmas - they ignored mine and eldest birthday. I ignored Father’s Day. I think I have decided to be reciprocal if it feels right but not to make any moves. Eg I have written texted phoned and emailed all offering an olive branch - all have been ignored so I’m drawing my line in the sand. If they texted happy Christmas I might reply same to you and just leave it but it’s been a bit of a release to think I’m not sending a card or a birthday card to my mother (right after Christmas) they didn’t send one to me so I’m not going to bother investing with no return.

My anti d meds are kicking in and sleeping pills mean a good 6/7 hour sleep. So that’s good. I’m starting to see my self esteem is nothing - as they make me feel worthless. When I asked the counsellor when with I stop wanting love and approval - he said actually everyone wants it. But you’re going to have to look from it from other relationship but watch for people that prey on those wanting love - you are going to have to learn what healthy relationship are and healthy boundaries as you haven’t had any. Food for thought.

nahnahna · 29/10/2021 14:20

I am going through that very boat rocking situation with my Dh, he is being told by his mum not to rock the boat and just be friends with his very abusive brother. We have been together just over a decade and I told dh that he needed to address this because I couldn't cope anymore with it.

I have addressed my own dysfunction relationship with my narc mother and of course been told not to rock the boat etc by my brother at the time. Now after years we are on the same track and we are united in how we deal with my mum and it really helps.

I want this for my dh but his mum cries and says she just wants the family altogether, I said to dh that that behaviour seems really manipulative to me and he just thinks she is really upset. I now have to go through it all again with dh's family and it's exhausting.

Pigeontown · 29/10/2021 15:52

Hi
I missed the boat analogy when posted. But yes its very good. I'm going to come back to that.
If we think of our parents like little toddlers who never grew up then even more so.

I was told an expression recently(to do with managing DC). It was
' don't be a fruit machine be a cash machine'

Meaning don't let your dc get into habit of moaning and moaning and moaning until you give in as they know eventually as long as it takes you will give in and they get pay out big (fruit/slot machine). They have to put in once in the right way and you pay out what is yours to have(cash machine).

It resonated with me so much regarding my parents rather than my DC. Whole life I've allowed them to treat me like a slot machine (a very rusty not very well maintained one). They keep on going until I give in.
They have been neither Fruit or cash!Hmm

Snowdropsandbluebells · 29/10/2021 17:20

Thanks Atilla

therealsmithfield · 29/10/2021 18:28

Great analogy!

Ohflipflopextra · 29/10/2021 19:38

Place marking. Thank you so much is hugely helpful thread.

tinkletinkle · 29/10/2021 20:12

My "father" recently said "you're lucky I didn't sell you." He meant it - it's a wonder I've had issues!

IAAP · 29/10/2021 21:30

@tinkletinkle

My "father" recently said "you're lucky I didn't sell you." He meant it - it's a wonder I've had issues!
Wtf. My father told me that if he’s known I was going to be a loser (apparently 3 degrees and a good career are being a loser) he would of had me aborted as they already had an older girl. Nice heh.

I happen to know that when my mother was pregnant with me he pushed her down the stairs for backchat and she bled and nearly lost me - as she screamed it at him in front of me during a row when I was about 10 - his response I should of pushed a bit harder and broken your neck followed later than evening (she was sleeping in my bed with me) him asking her / coercing her to go back to their bedroom as had she ‘finished making stuff up’

Hideous absolutely hideous. Hugs to everyone.

Snowdropsandbluebells · 29/10/2021 21:40

That's awful tinker

Does anyone feel hurt (I know it'd silly) if their husband or partners mother is so loving and they don't it themselves.

Dh mother used to ring me at around 5pm if she hadn't heard from him that day (he rings her every single day along with all 4 siblings)

I had to tell dh to ask her not to ring me and for her to wait for him. It hurt me so much that my own mother is so self absorbed and mil only rang me to check on dh.

ScabbyHorse · 30/10/2021 11:30

Hi everyone. Will write something soon but just wanted to say @IAAP that is so appalling. And to find out about it when you were only 10 - so awful.

therealsmithfield · 30/10/2021 11:33

@IAAP I would quite like to push your father down a flight of stairs quite frankly.
I really hope you don’t find that too much to read . I am so bloody angry on your behalf . He sounds like an utter a- hole. Your mother is culpable as she chose to stay with him and chose an abuser over YOU. Literally you should hold your head up high lady you survived these utter idiots that call themselves parents . They should be the ones questioning their worth in this world not you!

therealsmithfield · 30/10/2021 11:34

@tinkletinkle and he’s lucky you haven’t disowned him… YET

MonkeyfromManchester · 30/10/2021 11:37

@IAAP that’s so, so brilliant. Counselling is such a journey and it sounds like you’re on the right track. GREAT NEWS. Your positive relationship with your daughter is 100% down to you. And you’ve achieved this AFTER horrific ‘parenting’.

All OK here. Had terrible cold for two weeks. No dealings with The Hag. Mr Monkey is getting himself out of the phone loop - the daily call and associated spleen. . Hag (The Toxic One - aka MIL) is having to behave as, perhaps, she’s realised that you don’t get attention if you are vile to your son. He is calling the shots. The power balance is shifting. She actually asked after me the other day. Lol. I was coughing like a Victorian Orphan in the background.

Very, very low contact - VVLC - is great. It’s working for me. MM has realised the boundaries he’s put in place are a very positive thing. Very proud of him (and me for facilitating this).

Just got Xmas Day to contend with, but if she doesn’t want to come, she doesn’t come. At my calculation the next time I see her will be her birthday in March 2022. I have seen her four times since 22 April. MASSIVE AIRPUNCH. She lives 10 minutes walk away.

I will do ‘duty’ stuff e.g. birthday and Xmas, but the days when I did Sunday / Bank Holiday lunches / meals out out of ‘mending MM’s family’ are over. MM doesn’t even mention ‘having my mum over for lunch’ anymore (it was never a point of tension between us, just him trying to make a ‘happy family’ which you can’t do with toxic people*)

I am the living example of what LC can do. Admittedly, she’s NOT my mother (thank fuck), but I’ve pushed** through the guilt of what a ‘good’ DIL should do. She deserves nothing.

*and, I think, everyone on here is struggling with doing their best with fucked up people. I certainly have.

**the only other pushing I will do involves her and a double decker bus.

therealsmithfield · 30/10/2021 13:42

@MonkeyfromManchester - your post has made me think about how their behaviours can perhaps be blunted somewhat by our reaction to them.
After all they display the behaviours and continue to do so in order to get a pay off and if they pay off keeps coming of course so do the behaviours. Like the boat rocking analogy really.
Of course when it comes to emotional and physical abuse that carries into adulthood then the only way often is NC because that is not ok and should never be ok. We are at liberty to say this will stop or I am gone. Ultimately we know they won’t and never change.
With TM she is still on the rocking boat and if I were physically and mentally in it with her and go and sis I’d be back a jibbering wreck or worse.
I’m definitely off the boat but TM still wants me back on and she knows outright nastiness, neglect won’t work so tries to play the harmless loving mother card. She is Wiley as a fox.
So for example the TM illness she was struck with is clearly a cough ( as it turns out) but she writes ‘lung infection’. Read come back to your helpless mother .
I instead state ‘get better soon’. I also make light with a joke not a dig by any means but to lighten the mood.
It escalated into her saying I was being mean ‘again’ to my ‘old’ mother. Read you are an unkind , uncaring daughter Smithfield. Guilt trip.
I didn’t react as I will no longer give her attention for her crappy behaviour. I’m not unkind or uncaring.
In the past I would try and reverse her opinion of me in that moment to gain her approval and love.
I’m not getting back the boat mother !

therealsmithfield · 30/10/2021 13:45

Congratulations to MM for also keeping out of the boat. If the boat sinks with hag and slave brother aboard that’s on them.

MonkeyfromManchester · 30/10/2021 13:59

@therealsmithfield yep, we’re off the boat. Why do they thrive on negativity? I can’t imagine going out to cause pain to someone. To continue the patterns from their shit parenting.

I honestly think with The Hag that she would physically abuse MM, like she did when he was a child, if she wasn’t so old and frail. She would love to slap me and I can imagine her thinking: ‘if you were my daughter’. Well, I’m NOT so fuck off.

Good for you and jumping off the boat into warmer, lovely waters. They will try EVERY trick in the book. ‘Poor old mother’ and then if that doesn’t work revert to type. It’s pathetic. All to get a reaction and cause pain. It’s truly dreadful. Oh, and the making shit up. Jesus.

When The Hag was here, she couldn’t make a cup of tea and it was the constant groaning about the agony she was in so she could stay here / live her so she had slaves, attention and people on tap to abuse. She would have lived here if she could - pure entitlement.

Back in her flat, she could whisk round her flat cleaning and cooking. No groaning to be heard. WITHIN A DAY.

I realised something the other day. We got her a ton of adjustments for her broken arm - special kettles etc. She acted really confused and then angry (really angry). This was 1) poor old me, I can’t possibly cope at home 2) then when that didn’t work, it became absolute HATEFUL rage.

You’ve clocked her behaviour, dodged the bullets, and your TM will do ANYTHING to get you back into the fold.

Honestly, by writing all this down over the last 18 months I’ve got something recorded so when I read it 1) NEVER AGAIN 2) I’m right to fuck her off and 3) I’m joining up the dots all the time.

Nothing can be taken at face value with the toxic fuckers.

MonkeyfromManchester · 30/10/2021 14:00

@therealsmithfield absolutely re Slave Brother.

He knows she’s horrible to him and he accepts it passively. His life is 1) her 2) watching TV and 3) going to the pub every afternoon.

Jesus.

ScabbyHorse · 30/10/2021 16:48

Hi people I haven't posted anything on here for ages but I sometimes lurk as a lot of it resonates with me and my relationship with my mother.

She is accusing me via text, of bullying and criticising her (I'm not). This is because I have been trying to cut down contact as last time I tried to go round to hers, it got into a weird discussion about what she did to me as a baby. She makes out she is the victim of my dad (recently passed away). He cheated on her and in her anger she hurt me (broken skull). I think she was also at the mercy of her mum who was very narcissistic. But I have trouble forgiving her not really because of what she did, but the way she has been emotionally weird with me since childhood. As a child I didn't realise it was abnormal but by the time I was around 16 it became obvious that she was jealous of me, neglectful in certain ways, and verbally abusive sometimes. She also used to smash our bedrooms up as kids (me and DB).
Since my DS was born however, she has tried really hard to be a good grandmother. She has calmed down a lot in her old age and come to live near us. She arranged counselling for us but unfortunately we didn't get anywhere, the counsellor was trying to make her aware of her behaviour. My mother only saw it as the counsellor siding with me, and suddenly ended the sessions. This really set me back, I had hoped she would see my point of view. I think she only expected to be able to say how she saw things, and for me to suddenly understand. She doesn't have many friends, she cut contact with her own family years ago. As my dad has now died, I am struggling with feeling really conflicted about whether to still see her occasionally. Every time she gets angry with me and sends these long texts, it affects my mental health really badly. I'm a single mum and need to concentrate on my DS and job.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 30/10/2021 17:06

horse,

Its not you, its your mother. And a woman at that who was violent towards you in your younger years. She remains a menace towards you even now. She has certainly disrespected your boundaries by choosing to move nearer to you (a deliberate move on her part because she wants you to look after her in her dotage).

Your mother remains an absolute horror as well as a toxic menace to both you and your child. If she is too difficult/toxic/abusive for YOU to deal with, its the same deal for your child too. Keep your child as well as you well away from her going forward. Concentrate your finite resources on those who need it i.e. you and your child.

I am sorry also that your late father did not protect you as well from his wife as he should have done.

You have two qualities she entirely lacks; empathy and insight. She has not changed in all the years since your own childhood and remains very much a danger to you. That is also why the joint counselling (never embark on joint counselling with abusive people) you had with her did not work because she was never going to apologise or make herself responsible and or otherwise accountable for her actions.

People like your mother do not have friends and truly alienate people. Its not your fault she is like this, her own family did a lot of damage to her.

I presume you are only bothering with her at all because you've been very much conditioned by her to put her needs first with your own dead last. Time now to put both you and your son first. You do not need someone like this in your lives now and you do not owe her anything, let alone any sort of relationship with your child. If her text messages affect your mental health like they do you can imagine what direct contact with her would do. Do not bother with her and drop the rope she keeps on holding out to you.

OP posts:
AttilaTheMeerkat · 30/10/2021 17:09

Does your DB have any sort of relationship with mother these days?.

Deal with your own feelings of FOG (fear, obligation and guilt) here through therapy and go to such sessions on your own. BACP are good and do not charge a small fortune. Such people though are like shoes, you need to find someone who fits in with you. Interview such people carefully and at length before choosing any one particular therapist to work with.

I would also suggest you contact NAPAC as well.

OP posts:
ScabbyHorse · 30/10/2021 20:37

@AttilaTheMeerkat thank you for your replies, it is unbelievably helpful to me right now. I am keeping DS well away from her as he is innocent in all this. She desperately wants normal close attachments with people but ends up pushing everyone away. Even though I empathise with her, it is never truly appreciated. I only have so much to give.

ScabbyHorse · 30/10/2021 20:38

DB ha ha a different experience with her as he is younger, he does not remember certain things and as a man, he feels protective in a different way. She actually treats him a lot worse.

Escapingafter50years · 31/10/2021 00:50

I was referred to this board following posts under a previous username, thanks so much, I have read the previous thread and feel sorry so for so many and also identify with many stories.

My "mother" recently told me that if I had been a proper mother she'd have a better relationship than her non-existent one with my children who are now adults. This was the proverbial straw. She never babysat, helped or gave them the impression she was happy to see them for more than 5 minutes. She criticised my mothering from early on. I'll post more about this soon, trying to reduce a book-sized post down to something short!

People on MN recommended NC when I posted about her recently and as I was so upset I blocked her but did send a long WhatsApp message making my view clear that what she did was unacceptable and asking that if she does want a relationship with me going forward, she reply to me by WhatsApp having considered some questions I put to her, such as How often did you look after your grandchilden, how did you support me, how did you show them they were loved unconditionally.. I've seen a therapist who recommended I keep her blocked but check WhatsApp whenever I feel mentally strong enough. Just to add my dad, now deceased, was alcoholic, often violent, stopped drinking when I was mid teens but he was never an engaged parent. "Mother" has never accepted responsibility for anything in her life, and for years I blamed him for the dysfunction in our family life although I am now only beginning to understnand the extent of it.

She hasn't replied by WhatsApp as I asked (I think she would need assistance), she left voicemails, I didn't know you could when blocked but it has happened. One, I reckon in front of someone said
"I don’t know what I did that has you that you want an apology from me but I am very sorry"
and begged for me to come and see her. 20 minutes before that she had left a message in a normal voice. She has previously snarled at me that "I've said I'm sorry what more do you want", making me the bad person that I don't forgive and forget.

There have been a couple of flying monkeys, one, my aunt, told me about how my "mother" "gave you a great start in life" (I was adopted). I hope I'll eventually get my thoughts into enough order that I can post info without it being boringly long.

"Mother" is in her 80s and has loads of health issues. I'm over 50 now and only in last few years have started to realise how excessively toxic "mother" is. I feel devastated that so much of my life has been lived under a fog, and the effect on my children. My husband is supportive but hadn't understood until recently how bad she is.

I came across this conversation that I recorded and transcribed a few years ago, I suppose I know it was something she wasn't going to like, and because she has gaslit (didn't know the phrase back then) me so often, I needed proof for myself - here is the conversation, and tonight reading back I have now realised how it sounded from her neighbour's point of view -

(I was calling to let her know that I was upset that for the umpteenth time she hadn’t respected my right to decide my own name and had never changed it after marriage, yet she still sent a Christmas card to me in my husband's last name), we had a brief intro, she didn't tell me her neighbour was there, I tried to explain my issue, her responses are in bold, she interrupted a lot:

Well, just something that’s upset me – it’s the Christmas card
What to do with the Christmas card?
I’ve been asking you for almost 25 years –
what –
that my name is lastname
Oh jesus firstname– ah firstname!
I’ve been asking this for well over 20 years years Mum …
[Interrupt] sorry sorry
… but I’ve been saying it’s important to me
Oh sorry, I really am, I wasn’t thinking, sorry
But you know, this has happened again and again Mum
Ok it won’t happen again, ok, now leave it at that. Don’t upset me will you
Ok – oh now hold on – is it all right for me to be upset
I didn’t deliberately upset you firstname
But you see I’ve been saying it for nearly 25 years Mum
[interrupt] honestly look I did it without thinking
But Mum when I’ve said it hurts me
[interrupt] Firstname I don’t know how many times I’ve said sorry
I just would like you to understand how I feel Mum
[interrupt] I understand and I’m sorry ok?
But you see it’s happened again and again so I
[interrupt] It won’t happen again ok?
Ok well ‘cause if it does Mum …
[interrupt] it won’t
… it’ll go back in the post, cause
[interrupt] neighbour’s here with me now can I talk to you again sometime
Ok. I don’t want an argument Mum but I just …
[interrupt] You’ve upset me terribly, goodbye love bye bye
… am upset

So tonight I read it without my responses, and this is it:
What to do with the Christmas card?
what –
Oh jesus firstname– ah firstname!
sorry sorry
Oh sorry, I really am, I wasn’t thinking, sorry
Ok it won’t happen again, ok, now leave it at that. Don’t upset me will you
I didn’t deliberately upset you firstname
honestly look I did it without thinking
firstname I don’t know how many times I’ve said sorry
I understand and I’m sorry ok?
It won’t happen again ok?
it won’t
neighbour’s here with me now can I talk to you again sometime
You’ve upset me terribly, goodbye love bye bye

Looking at this, I can now see how calculating she is about everything she says, she stitched me up proper, I imagine her neighbour thinks I must treat her so badly.

This conversation was followed by 3 weeks silent treatment. (Another long story)

The next year SHE DID IT AGAIN
But my husband happened to be there and phoned her. She said sorry sorry she forgot (that I never changed my name in the first place) and would send another card. I'm still waiting.

Due to a tragic bereavement close to my family, I haven't seen my counsellor for about 6 weeks but have an appointment next week. My husband thinks I need some sort of resolution. I don't know how this can be achieved.

I really don't know what I'm looking for, if anything, by posting here, but feel at least I've got some of that crap off my chest and knowing it's recorded somewhere kind of comforts me that I'm not imagining things. Because you know I'm too sensitive and often I tell her she said something and she completely denies it, and her family will back her up because she is always right so therefore I must be wrong.

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