Motherhood Moments: Love Means Having to Say You're Sorry
Filed under: Holidays, Opinions
Jacquelyn Mitchard and her daughter. Credit: Jacquelyn Mitchard
Now, picture an old photo of Grace Kelly.
That's the difference between old photos of my mother and those of most mothers. When women my age look at pictures of their moms, they're amazed at how much older their mothers got, even though, in pictures, they're much younger than the daughters are now.
I'm amazed by just the opposite.
My mother died when she was five years younger than I am now, but, at that age, was more stylish and exquisite than I was in my first bloom. That's just how it was. Not long ago, my youngest daughter found a big wedding portrait of my mother in the storage room.
"You know a princess?" she asked me.
That's how she looked, in her satin dress with the 58 buttons down the back of the bodice, and her waist that honestly measured 24 inches. In that picture, she looks the way she was -- gallant and smart, funny and charming, with a strong bright vein of mischief through her personality.
I loved how she looked. I loved how she smelled. I loved how she read. I loved how she refused to cook, telling my brother once, when he complained of a variation on Campbell's tomato soup, "You know, the first thing you need for pot roast is another mother." I loved how she adored me and absolutely believed I would be a sensation.
What I didn't love about her was that she regularly drank herself from Mama Jekyll to Mama Hyde, with a stop along the way at Mrs. Robinson. And even that would have been OK: She was just outrageous enough that flirting with the band at weddings (even if the band included my boyfriend) verged on tolerable. After the flirting and the dancing (she could dance; she could even still do a handspring, at the age of 50, although she would have considered the idea of exercise for its own sake a joke), there came another stage.
It was when there was more lipstick on the filters of her cigarettes than on her lips, and, along with the lipstick, she left the editor on what came out of her mouth. She was a sad clown then, a Pierrot with streaked mascara, and she was dangerous.
And even that, while not OK, would have been bearable, if she had ever, ever once, even once, said that she was sorry.
She weighed only 105 pounds, at 5-feet, 5-inches tall. And I weighed more than that when I was 13. But although it wasn't much more, not more than 20 pounds, it outraged my mother, who said I should start smoking or I'd always be a slob.
And she never apologized.
The only time I ever defied her, coming home from college to attend the wedding of two friends who were having a baby they didn't plan, she called me "slutty."
And she never apologized.
She intercepted and read my letters from a boy five years older, who died in Vietnam, and wrote to him saying that my father didn't approve and that we would never see each other again. By the time I found out and tried to explain that this message wasn't sent with my approval, it was too late. My invaded self was so wounded that I told her that if she ever touched another one of my private things, I would kill her in her sleep. Half an hour later, I was on my knees next to her chair, crying, telling her how much I loved her and that I was sorry.
But she never apologized.
I got used to that ... the never apologizing.
When the first guy I loved hit me, and he didn't apologize, when he said, instead, that it was "unfortunate," I decided no one would ever hit me again, and that, when I was a mother, I would never hit, and that I would never say anything like the things my mother said to me -- the bad things -- and if I did, I would apologize.
It was not a big worry, though, because I would never say any of those things, the bad ones.
When I did become a mother, my mother was already gone.
I could never ask her if it was a function of her generation or a function of her fear that she never said she was sorry when she was wrong, and that my father said he was sorry only once. Perhaps parents didn't, then. Perhaps apologizing seemed to be a '60s sign of weakness, a diminishing of authority that would dilute all other laws or examples by its semblance of self-doubt.
Yet, I have said things to my children that scald my soul in the memory. I once, in a rage, told the daughter I adopted at birth that I wished her birth mother could see what a writhing brat she'd turned out to be. My anger at my middle son once was so towering I slapped him across the face and told him to go live with the girlfriend who'd sneaked in through a sliding door to his bed. The words were worse than the slap.
My lips are not as loose as my mom's were, but the lock on them is faulty. I have done more harm with what comes out of my mouth than anything I've ever put in it.
Once, it took two hours, while I paced and screamed. I told my daughter to stand outside because I was afraid of what else I might say.
But I always apologized.
Usually, it's not hours, and it's never days. It's 10 minutes -- which makes my anger seem just like what it is, virtually a seizure. I always apologize when I'm wrong.
If you don't apologize to someone you've wronged, especially if it's your child, at some point that child starts to doubt himself, or herself, to wonder if he or she is wrong, or even worse, bad, or even worse, crazy.
I'll never be the mother my mother was, in some ways. I'll never be so charming or so much the mistress of the grand gesture. I'll never be the enthralling beauty in black satin whose wide-eyed little girl sits next to the lighted table and watches a pretty woman become breathtaking. I'll never be brave enough to outlive a husband and a son, as she did, during the Korean War and one year afterward, or to survive my grandmother -- whose evil guilt trips made my mother's rages look like patty cakes.
All that said, if one generation is in the water, then one is on the sand, and we hope that one will be up on the highway, and then the next one in the foothills, on the way up to the mountaintop.
If mine is on the highway, it's because they had a flawed mother, as everyone has a flawed mother. I have done so much that was wrong. The only thing that I did right was to admit it.
Jacquelyn Mitchard has written numerous books for adults, young adults and children, and contributed to several popular anthologies about love and parenting. Her novel "The Deep End of the Ocean" was named the second most influential book of the past 25 years by USA Today. Look for her next novel, "Second Nature: A Love Story," this summer, and read her blog on Red Room.
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ReaderComments (Page 1 of 7)
5-08-2011 @ 4:13PM
naomi said...I have just read your story, and it brings back all the verbal abuse
I took from my Mother, verbal abuse stays where physical abuse
will eventually fade.
My Mother was quick, smart where I was not, my brother was
also like Mother, after my father passed Mother faded and brother
took full control, of her and money.
Reply
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5-08-2011 @ 4:20PM
DecoDecadence said...This was a nice read, and I'm glad to see something like this posted on Mothers Day, that's not all sugary sweet. But saying you're sorry, doesn't make the pain or hurt go away. You cannot just mouth off, saying whatever you want to your child at the time, and erase it from a childs memory with a "sorry". The writer needs to learn how to not act out like her mother did. Just because she adds "sorry" to the end of it does not make acting out OK. The writer needs to learn how to not say negative things at all. That's where the real control come in....not saying "sorry".
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5-08-2011 @ 5:46PM
Allison said...You are right that saying sorry doesn't excuse blowing up in the first place, but I think that misses the author's point. She acknowledges she makes mistakes and runs at the mouth - but she recognizes from her own expereience that she also needs to apologize when that happens.
My mother is likely from the same generation as the author and she also doesn't believe in apologizing - ever. I remember all of the hurtful, confidence eroding things she has spit at me over the years and still does. It has taken a lot of time to heal those old wounds and to learn how to let the comments roll off my back.
Not apologizing sends the message that the verbal abuse is OK and the norm. It can tell a child that they aren't worthy of respect or consideration. "Love means never having to say you're sorry" is such a line of poo. Those we love are the ones to whom we owe to the greatest apology when we "do wrong".
But you're right - in a perfect world not blowing up at all would be best.
5-08-2011 @ 5:30PM
phyllis said...Saying you're sorry would mean you care even if it was minimal. And apologizing would only be admitting they knowingly did something hurtful.
5-08-2011 @ 6:19PM
mandy said...DecoDecadence, I agree with you 100%! My mom maybe apologized once or twice for the terrible things she had told us as kids, but even then, we were hurt much more by what she said to us than what she did to us. Words cannot be taken back, even those followed by an apology. One would think that having a parent say awful things to you would make that person think twice before saying hurtful things to children of their own. An apology does not make it any better than not getting one!
5-09-2011 @ 1:10AM
Beverly said...The saying "love means never having to say your sorry" means that you will never do anything to apologize for... not that you dont have to say your sorry
5-08-2011 @ 9:15PM
Lila said...Well . . . my mother was an abusive junkie and I thought when I was a child that if she just would say she was sorry and admit that it was wrong I could deal with it. Saying your sorry really does matter.
5-08-2011 @ 4:24PM
Steve-a-rino said...Do you really waste that much time feeling guilty? It's as if you aren't being beaten anymore so you just beat yourself. Start a new day tomorrow. Seek inner peace, serenity and contentment. Forget about solving your mother's problems, your sister's problems, your daughter's problems and trying to make up for everyone's faults - including your own. Do your best every day, protect your feelings (and those of others) and dump the load of guilt that you insist on carrying around all your life. Let go of the demons and they will let go of you. Otherwise, continue to wallow - but remember it is YOUR choice!
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5-08-2011 @ 5:02PM
Lavender said...Sometimes people need help to do this....counseling worked for me.
5-08-2011 @ 5:56PM
AliPatricia said...Wow, well said!
5-08-2011 @ 6:58PM
loveformyson said...Steve, your words are so true! I know of many women, far to many IMO, who understand where a certain Faux Celeb is coming from due this very issue (I'm sure many of these women here posting know who I'm speaking about). These women tend to buy into this woman's line of b.s. "because they've been there". Well, I've "been there too" but unlike these women, I didn't jump on the bashing my parents bandwagon for the very reason you just posted (not only that, I don't buy her line of b.s. because she has something to gain from it... $$) because as you said, it was up to ME to change and to let it go. Getting an "I'm sorry" helps but it DOESN'T move you past your childhood issues. It NEVER WILL!!!
It's a CHOICE you make... PERIOD!!!! If you're into feeling sorry for yourself, having others feel sorry for you, then of course, holding onto your childhood issues serves you well. At some point, you have to stop blaming your mom/parents and do the work to make the change. If you don't, that only tells me and others that what you're really looking for is that pity and sympathy. If that's what you want, that's fine but at that point, you can't continue to blame your parents. Also another thing to keep in mind. Should you continue to hold onto it for said reasons, you WILL pass this on to your children in some form or another. Children are not stupid. Either you'll repeat your parents ways or they'll catch onto what you're doing. Case in point.....
I have a sister in law who uses her childhood as an excuse for her bad behavior, for her biting words, for every wrong she does towards another. Her 17 yr old daughter asked her father "Why do you stay with mom when she treats you so badly". His answer? "Because she's had a really horrible childhood and I can't leave her to be alone". My niece, with all of her 17 yrs of wisdom said... "Dad, she CHOOSES to hold onto her childhood past because it gets her what she wants. It gets you to stay with her, it gets her pity and sympathy from those she tells her story to". You know, my niece is right. If my 17 yr old niece was able to figure this out, why can't grown women?!
As I said, I too had my own childhood issues, mainly with my dad. I could've went through the rest of my life holding onto them but I CHOSE NOT TO for not only my sake but for the sake of my husband and son. I don't know 1 person (no matter the gender) who hasn't had some type of childhood issue. I believe we all have because people are not perfect (those people I speak of include your parents!) but at the end of the day, it's truly up to YOU to make the changes. If therapy is what you need, go get it, (just don't do it on TV because therpay wasn't meant to be done that way), if it takes talking to your mom/parent, do it, if it takes writing it all down and burning it, do it. Whatever the process is, do it. If you chose not to do anything but whine about it then you only have yourself to blame IMO!!!
5-08-2011 @ 7:09PM
Carol said..."Sons of a sinner, sons of a saint; who is the child without complaint?" Jacques Brel. The worst pain is the one you have, the worst problem is the one you are presently facing, and the worst injustice is the one done to you. If we allow ourselves to dwell upon past wrongs we will miss the present blessings. It isn't easy to let go of anger at a parent, but since that parent is no longer around to try to make amends, it is a pursuit that garners no benefit, and does you even more harm. If you can't let go, seek help.
5-08-2011 @ 7:54PM
Indigo said...Great example of victimizing the victim, Steve.
You clearly did not have narcissistic or abusive parents or you are abusive yourself. Narcissism is a gift that keeps on giving because abusers have a way of making a victim feel guilty for abuse.
By the time you realize that your childhood was not normal, pathology - guilt, perfectionism, self-abuse, extreme high empathy are part of your DNA.
It might take decades before a person even realizes that what happened to them was NOT normal and that their own reactions are not normal.
"Get over it" is the worst advice you can give a victim of abuse.
Great article, Jacquelyn.
Terrible comment, Steve.
5-08-2011 @ 4:26PM
alex said...After reading that short story, it was as if it was my mother was being talked about. I always say my mother wrote the book "Mommy Dearest" and "No Wire Hangers"... It appears the Joan Cleavers were few and far between......
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5-08-2011 @ 4:41PM
theresa said...my mom was "Mommy Dearest" when I saw the movie I thought it was about my life. Then I realized we weren't that rich
5-08-2011 @ 6:11PM
Beverly said...June Cleaver was totally fictional. She wasn't real. After reading some of the previous posts, I have a feeling most of you were not raised by a parent with an addiction and haven't a clue how difficult it can be to change what you have grown up with, it's continual work to behave differently that what you know, how you were raised....her mother was her example for Motherhood.
5-08-2011 @ 8:48PM
Tim said...Please to all Moms: Please read this carefully. It's on how my Mother destroyed our relationship forever.
Everyone in this world would claim my mother as the best mom in the world for me with all she's ever done in her life. But there's a catch to it. What destroyed this relationship in all is just that. WHAT? All she's ever done for me and never has stopped. Still today myself at 47 my mother won't slow herself down on not doing things. She'll just keep on doing the things she doesn't need to do one bit at all.
I'd just like to tell some MOMS not to abuse their love with their children like she had with hers. Today she has 4 sons. One in California, One in Texas, One in North Louisiana, I'm not far from getting away from her now. None of her sons want to be by her with their families. She has destroied 3 marriages. All in the surrounding area was she lived. Now they're all gone far away. Don't make the mistakes my mom did. Lay back an feel those pain when having to.
5-08-2011 @ 4:26PM
Pat said...The reason I love what I've learned from my mother is because through her I have learned what to say and what not to say I'm sorry for.
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5-08-2011 @ 4:28PM
Tip said...Your honesty is both cleansing and healing.
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