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When Adult Children Fight, a Mother's Heart Breaks
Filed under: Siblings, Opinions, Relationships
The author's sons, Alex and Nicolas, in simpler days. Credit: Jessica Barksdale Inclan
When my older son Alex was a child, he did everything before he knew how and without considering if it would work. He walked and fell, rode a bike and crashed. He tried to be a grown-up his way. He crashed, he burned, he learned.
When my younger son Nicolas was a child, he didn't do anything until he knew he could do it without fail. He waited until he was 16 months old to walk, and one day, he stood up and ran. He read when he could understand complete sentences. After many difficult bike riding lessons with his father, he couldn't do more than one or two pedals before falling. Then one day when his father was facing the other way, Nicolas took off down the street.
Alex is an anarchist. He is a hater of leaders and laws, a college graduate and now a writer who envisions a government as slim as a piece of paper. He despises anything that enforce rules on the masses -- traffic signs, tax laws, social norms and customs.
Nicolas, on the other hand, was a military history major, now a police-academy aspirant and law-abiding citizen with one moving violation that he erased through traffic school.
At one time, these were my happy little boys, my sons who played together all day on the weekends, slept in the same room for years. In that small bedroom, they had an enormous Lego town, a town that stayed together through two moves, only dismantled when Nicolas was a sophomore in high school. When they played with the town, Alex took charge, taking the role of the main character; Nicholas was everyone else.
They both went to the same college, called each other frequently, hiked together, laughed together. But when Nicolas began to become the man he is, their ideologies started to pull them apart.
Nicolas could no longer go to the rallies, the protests, the angry mob scenes at the United States Army base in Tacoma. He couldn't listen to Alex's wild tales of anarchist revelry. He began to despise all that Alex stood for, and their drives home from Washington State began to get ugly, full of silences or harsh words. When Alex found out that Nicolas was applying to police departments for work, he felt his brother was attacking his principles.
Our last meal together, all of us sitting around the table of our new home, was as unpleasant as could be.
"Could you just stop?" Nicolas yelled, putting down his fork. "I can't listen to this propaganda anymore. You're just lazy. You just don't want to work."
"And you're doing this cop crap to spite me," Alex shouted back. "You don't really want to be a pig, do you?"
"You think my choice is about you?" Nicolas said. "How narcissistic can you get?"
Finally, after more emotional punching, Nicolas pushed away from the table. Alex followed him in to the kitchen, words flying like missiles, despite my attempts to break up the fight. I eventually managed to quell that argument, but throughout their visit here, the fight erupted again and again, ending with a tense, silent ride up to the Northwest and a standoff that lasted for months.
I have a photo on my desk of my two curly-headed boys, Nicolas hugging Alex, Alex's arm pulling him close. Both are smiling big-toothed smiles. But these two little boys are gone. And the little brother doesn't want to be the tag-along anymore. He's his own man, with his own values and his own life, and what he wants is his brother to accept him. Alex fights back, wanting his ideas to be heard and honored. Seeing that the past is slipping away, big brother grasps for the memories of what was.
I also want to cling to that long-ago brother relationship because it was magical. Somehow, I thought back then, I did something right with these two.
The fighting. This is the part of parenting that we don't think about when children are in diapers. Here is when children become adults, and adults don't always agree and then happily eat peanut butter-and-jelly sandwiches together. Young adults learn how to individuate, and that's what I'm watching now.
It's possible that these two will never come back to one another. The fight could be the axe that splits their relationship wide open, forever irreparable. I close my eyes and breathe in hard when I think of them forever at opposite sides. Siblings are the closest relationships in time and age and place. Siblings know each other in ways no one else can, and to see my boys approach an end to this connection is more than I can bear.
Though it's possible things may never be repaired, and their eroding relationship is painful for all three of us, I have faith that buried beneath the hurt and anger is that hug, those smiles, those two boys in the photo taken so long ago.
Jessica Barksdale Inclan is a novelist who teaches literature and creative writing for Diablo Valley College. Visit her at Red Room to read about her work, including her supernatural romance novel Being with Him, now available in paperback.
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ReaderComments (Page 4 of 18)
11-01-2010 @ 8:39PM
KellyAnn said...Why should siblings be forced to be each other's best friends? My sister and I are 18 months apart in age and were never each other's best friend. Even from the beginning, we had separate interests and separate friends. We rarely played together as kids. As adults, we have little to nothing in common, live in different states, and have only spoken twice in ten years. There is no animosity between us but if we met as strangers on the street, we wouldn't be friends so why should we pretend we are best friends because we share a last name?
11-01-2010 @ 9:53PM
Jennifer said...KellyAnn - Your position is a true poverty. You share more than a name. You share DNA (you know, a mother and a father). She is a blood relative, someone you grew up with. She can't be compared to a stranger on a street. I'm glad you're not my family because you are ice cold.
11-01-2010 @ 11:34PM
KellyAnn said...Jennifer -- Actually, we don't share DNA. I was adopted as an newborn, she was homegrown. According to the draconian state laws regarding closed adoption, I'm not permitted to know the identities of anyone I share DNA with. We moved a lot so we never grew up with family around. Holidays were no big deal and did not involve an extended family gathering. We saw our grandparents/aunts/uncles once every three or four years as we grew up. I'm not ice cold; I just didn't grow up in a particularly close family. My sister and I weren't friends growing up and we aren't friends now. It happens.
11-01-2010 @ 3:00PM
Elaine said...There are always situations where adult children can become estranged. However, I think there is more going on here. Alex seems to be very extreme in his beliefs and actions-way over the top of normal behavior. I wonder if he might not benefit from testing and counseling-he has very extreme reactions that are not normal. We have siblings on the other end of the political spectrum but we respect each others opinions. Alex does not seem to be able to do that and is, in fact, intolerant of normal behavior. Is there a possibility he has a mental illness? Most people who have "anarchist" beliefs are able to compromise and deal with society as it is. The ones who can't could end up having major problems. I would do everything I could to have him checked out.
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11-01-2010 @ 6:28PM
cyclgrrl said...What you are saying sounds extreme, but I actually agree with you. I had the same response. The older son sounded a little over the top in a concerning sort of way. This may not be something that the mother can change, but at least it puts things into perspective. She may be viewing her oldest with rose-colored glasses, not seeing that there is a problem there.
11-02-2010 @ 2:53AM
Laurie said...My thoughts too. Alex hates all authority and yet he withholds love because his younger brother won't conform to Alex's views on life. Pretty controlling, considering he doesn't want anyone telling him what to do. Something's not right.
11-01-2010 @ 3:02PM
John Burns said...To pick on the parenting here is so wrong! It sounds like two children who just grew up and became adults! Our whole country is divided so it is easy to see how this can happen in these times! I hope the mom finds peace in knowing she raised strong willed young men. We all make mistakes its what we learn from them that makes us whom we become. I hope they can reconcile in time. Hate hurts in many ways! I hope this pain for this mother and her sons goes away! Positive thought my friends negative is a waist of breath!
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11-02-2010 @ 3:00AM
ebertmadwoman said...malarky John Burns, one always has to look at how the parents have brought up their kids, if they were fair and tried to show each child that their brother had good points in his beliefs when they were young and then the two went sour later then I can say its not the parents, but it could be as simple as parents doting on the 'first' son born. We dont know because we weren't there, but this mother has to search the past and where she and the father was in all of this raising of these two kids.
11-01-2010 @ 3:04PM
tami said...How was the anarchist raised that he turned out this way, I wonder. He has no respect for anything or anyone, it seems. The other son is a decent human being and I don't blame him one bit for disliking his brother. I would hate if one of my kids called themselves an anarchist. Maybe he should have been taught rules and respect.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:05PM
mike said...simple ALEX is immature and a idiot, why would his smarter normal brother want to listen to or socialize with someone so weird,,you are judged by the company youkeep and the company of alex would not do anyones reputation any good
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11-01-2010 @ 9:47PM
Corinne said...If Alex would grow up and see his way is not the ONLY way his brother may actually be able to like his brother again. Otherwise the Nicholas id right to stay away. If Alex can't be respectful he deserves the companions he can acquire with the same hateful thoughts.....
11-01-2010 @ 3:08PM
Muriel said...To this mom I will say this. We moms all have pictures that remind us of what might have been. And it's hard to let go of these dreams. I do understand your pain because my children and grandchildren all live thousands of miles away. Thankfully I have one son who still lives in the same town as I do,and he is a wonderful son, but I miss my other children and grandchildren terribly. Sometimes I feel as thought my heart is broken. But, when I think about it in reality I know each of us has to live our own lives the best we can. Let go of your dreams, mom, and let your boys be grown-ups. You can't change anything. Just accept them both equally and don't ever compare them. It will just drive the wedge between them even further apart.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:28PM
David said...I just had this talk with my ailing mother last night. I cannot forgive my three older brothers for just "splitting" when she got sick and times got rough, I despise them for the "men" they have become. It hurts, I ha ve emailed all of them, told them I dont agree and tried many times to fix this, to no avail. I just cant spend the holidays with a bunch of hypocrytes, we all live in the same city, all four of her boys......what do I do?
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11-01-2010 @ 3:42PM
Jay said...Something bad happened in your brothers' development, which stunted their path of maturity. If you think about it, there is ongoing conflict b/t the more mature people and the less mature people around us all the time. Will you agree that older people are not always the ones with the most mature approach to life? You are youngest, and yet you know your mother needs you ...so just forget which siblings are chronologically older. That fact is irrelevant at this point. Face your mother's illness with dignity and grace, while the "kids" (who never truly grew up) hide from reality. I offer this advise because I've been there; you can't control your older siblings. Just do what is right for you and for your mother, and let the older siblings deal with their child-like response in their own time. Best wishes to you and your Mom...
11-01-2010 @ 3:10PM
David Sandler said...Just so they don't start trying to eliminate the kulaks as a class you will be ok.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:18PM
M2Cute4Jerks said...Two adult brothers, did not get along but lived together. One is 6 feet under and the other is in jail for putting him there. Imagine that mother's anguish, my friend's daughter does not have a father now. So sad......
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11-01-2010 @ 3:09PM
Jennifer said...Carol - To say topics and arguing are off limits during a visit isn't fixing anything. It is no more demanding than the social courtesy you would show when you go to a public place for dinner or a mutual friend's house. I don't allow my children to hash out their differences at my dinner table. It's rude and not the place for such mish mash. I don't try to fix anything because the relationship they have with one another is different from the one each has with me, and what they together have with me. Expecting civility at the dinner table, and during a visit, is not over the top. Each son should understand they owe their mother that RESPECT and save their petty bickering for a time when they aren't visiting her. Our society is seriously lacking in manners and courtesy.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:14PM
Madalyn said...Isn't it rather ironic that the anarchist ... the one who doesn't like authority figures of any kind ... is having a fit because his brother will not 'follow his lead' and do what he thinks he should?
I hope they work it out someday but there is nothing Mom can do about it. I would not however allow heated arguments in my home. Play nice or leave and go fuss at each other elsewhere.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:13PM
tam said...At times, pulling away from family to be your own person is the only way to survive. I had to do this because to be "close" to older brother, I had the live the type of life he thought was best for me, not the one I chose. I'm 49 yrs old and I think I should be able to make my own choices, but he doesn't. He's actually this way with everyone, but it's worse within the family. If you disagree or don't comply with his wishes, you're "cut off". It's happened all through my life, but the last time 2 yrs ago was enough for me. I'm not willing to be hurt anymore.
These young men may have to make the same choice I did. To stand up for your principles and be your own person sometimes means letting go of those that can't accept you as you are.
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11-01-2010 @ 3:36PM
sally said...Diagreements always happen especially in the family. We are unique and everybody is different. I have children and they are all different. As a mother I always set good example to them and dont side with anybody but I try to give good advice to them. The best thing you can do is to pray for them and love them. Ask God to touch their hearats.. I believe in the power of prayer for nothing is impossible with God. Ultimately the purpose of all of these is to be peaceful and loving.
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