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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.











ReaderComments (Page 3 of 7)
5-08-2011 @ 5:10PM
Amy said...Sounds alot like my mom-she was NEVER wrong. She would often tell me she wish she could have aborted me-but it was illegal in 1959. She would tell me when I was born I was the ugliest thing she had ever seen. And now she is in assisted living and I go 2-3 times a week to do her hair and makep-water her flowers-straighten her room-walk her and change her-and keep up with her endless supplies she needs. I do it out of duty than real want-she is nicer to me without the alcohol-but the words she said to me gowing up I 'll always remember.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:11PM
Bree said...Wow, to be completely honest with you, after reading this, you're almost just as bad as your mom.
Like someone else said, saying you're sorry doesn't make the pain of what you ALREADY SAID go away. Maybe if you took the time NOT to rage out and fly off the handle would you never have to say sorry.
Good job at being an almost carbon-copy of your crap mother. Good job. -claps-
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5-08-2011 @ 5:10PM
babette said...My mother passed away ten years ago, but some hurts never heal. I was raised in the 40's and 50's, and she considered herself the world's most perfect person. Naturally, I fell way short of her expectations. She would belittle me, constantly criticize me, try to run my life (even when I was an adult) and blame me if I was unhappy. She was very sarcastic and totally unsupportive of anything I wanted to do. I never heard her say "I'm sorry," either. I don't miss her at all.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:12PM
Nancy said...Maybe it was the generation. I am always amazed that my mother never apologized to me about ANYTHING. It seemed that she never saw me as a person with feelings, just an extension of herself. I think that hurt us both.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:14PM
JudyK said...Ms. Mitchard, that was a beautifully written narrative, and I love the title. I don't remember either of my parents ever saying they were sorry, and it's important to be able to do that. I was never complimented, either, and that's also important. I remember one time overhearing my father bragging about my college grades to a neighbor but never saying anything to me. I also remember my father talking about how beautiful a couple of girls my age were but never telling me that, and I was beautiful, too, but I never realized it until I was older. My parents were professional, educated people...and nice people...but to this day, I have insecurities because I was never encouraged when it mattered--when I was growing up. And that's a lesson all parents need to learn. I don't see this as a pity party at all but a reflection on some important life lessons which we can all benefit from.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:23PM
Susan Johnson said...Wow....Jacquelyn, Did you ever hit a nerve! Your mother and minemust have been clones. I thouroughly enjoyed your article about your relationship with your Mom. I will follow your Red Room blog.
Thanks so much!
Suzie Johnson
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5-08-2011 @ 5:13PM
Patti said...I guess I was very lucky to have a mother and father who treated
myself and my 2 olders brothers They gave us love and respect. They told us how much they loved us all the time. My mother has been gone for 5 years, and I think of her all the time, and miss her very much
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5-08-2011 @ 5:16PM
Eddy said...This is Mother's Day....your supposed to appreciate your mother, not rip on her and complain about how horrible she was. That's left for the other 364 days of the year. What a horrible article.....yes your mother certainly wasn't great, but she could've been much worse. At least we know from reading the article that you got your guilt tripping from your grandmother....
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5-08-2011 @ 6:28PM
Peter said...Reading that story about mother never shocks me. How children say Love but put them down. Its amazing they will take there parents wealth when they die without bating an Eye lid, I just say to bad the parents are not here to defend themselves, they always wait till they are deseased. Then they blame there actions and sorraful lives on thier parents. They should be half the the people there parents are. I have no respect for those kind of children. Then they go to therapy and the sick therapist instead of helping them attack there parents. The world isnt scewed up just these ungrateful children are. Im not saying some parents dont deserve to be put do but hope people can read between the lines of these children who wine all the time over nonsense. I say if only the parent were alive, but there parents would love then anyhow with there childrens short changes, thats a real parent. After all they kept your sorry asses and still raised you. Thats a true parent. You forgot the times they stayed up with you when you were sick or when you fell and they cuddled you, or when you threw your tanturm and lived to tell about it.You forget the happy times which were more then the sad ones. You forget because you were all to young to rember the scarfices they made. Saying your sorry dont give you the right to be abusive over and over again. You are the sorry one, a shell of a child,looking to blame anyone but yourself for your actions. If your parent was so bad How did you turn out so good. Who makes you the rightous one. Look in your backyard not your parents yard. Disgusted of ungratefully children. When you became an adult you had your choice, Show me a normal family and I will tell you they are the most difunctional family in the world. There is no such thing. Its always easier to look in someone eles home and say whish they were my parents. I tune idots out like that. Mommy Dearest was written by a sorrfull person who was written out of a Will. I woder Why.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:34PM
KAsey said...Jacquelyn,
We all have our demons. Things we have said, things that we obsess over time and time again. I've said some of those things, I know your pain. But I do always apologize and we start fresh every day. I makes sure my children know how much I love them every single day, so when I do have a witch day, it doesn't overshadow the rest of our days.
Thank you so much for posting about it. I think we all need to know that we aren't alone in our craziness and that we can move forward... if only we say we are sorry.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:37PM
Vanessa said...wow reading this reminds me of my mother. I have come to the conclusion, she will never say Sorry for what she said to me after I told her my dad tried to do something to me. and she blamed me. I also believe when you say I apologize to someone, its not sincere, If the words I am sorry are not mentioned.
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5-08-2011 @ 5:49PM
Piluga said...This story shows me how a Mom and daoughter who have not the knowledge and the love of God through Jesus who paid for both their sins and fallen short of being perfect, can destroy eachother simply by not admitting that in the human Heart, God who is Love is of utmost inportance for a life filled with peace. This is why the first step in coming to Jesus is to repent, to admit that we need a savior because we are sinners, more that that, the Bible says we are children of wrath, UNTIL God adopts us as His own children of peace.
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5-08-2011 @ 6:00PM
Tex said...Face it, despite the nice packaging, your mother was shallow. Happens in the best of families.
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5-08-2011 @ 6:01PM
SnoWhtNotQQn said...I read your story & it kind of reminds me of my mom. Never once do I remember her telling me she loved me. And as a child & young teen she would put me down because of my weight. I once heard her tell my older sister she doesn't know what the boy that liked me saw, he just wanted sex. that was about 32 yrs ago and i will never forget it. When i got married @ 25 yrs old she did not help me plan my wedding all i got was jealousy because I was going to have more than she ever did. But i survived and now I am a mom, I try to watch what i say to my daughter in anger because I now words hurt more than a slap. And as a mom I hope the best for my little girl when she grows up, she deserves it and did not ask to be put on this earth.
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5-08-2011 @ 6:09PM
Cienna928 said...This hit the nail right on the head for how my mother was in regard to the "inability" to ever say she was sorry, for anything... even to this day, when she has clearly inflicted her vemon for spite and the need to hurt, and soooooooo clearly in the wrong,.. she will make up an excuse.. or there is always a.."but" But never heals the wound to take responsiblity, accountabilty to say she was wrong, or "I am sorry" I hurt you.
It is something I made as a concscience effort at about the age of 8 or 9 years of age.. that when I would have the chance to be a Mom, the negative and hurtful things my Mom or parents did to us.. I would never do. And saying I am sorry when it was needed was at the top. I know to the depths of my heart and soul, I broke that pattern and chain.. and succeeded. My 2 daughters would tell you the same.
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5-08-2011 @ 6:17PM
sandra manos said...To Jacquelyn Mitchard: your mother gave you life. You should not hold up her faults for the whole world like this. Basically, shut up. I am tired of people criticizing their mothers to the world. None of us are perfect, and to see this picking apart of your mother on the internet on Mother's Day is distressing.
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5-08-2011 @ 11:54PM
butterfly1 said...I think you are wrong. When a person says they are sorry for doing something hurtful, it's supposed to mean something. Saying hurtful things, then apologizing doesn't mean you can do it again!
Every time you say you're sorry to your children, it probably doesn't mean anything to them anymore. Saying sorry may make YOU feel better, but it doesn't for them. And why should it? You're just going to verbally berate them again. Oh, but don't worry you'll just apologize and everything will be ok until you have another outburst.
Maybe try seeking counseling and not being a verbally abusive person in the first place. Then you will show your children that you are TRUELY sorry.
Look at it this way. If you beat your children, would saying you're sorry after each time make it ok for you to do it again? No it doesn't. Being upset with your child is one thing but I assume that since you were verbally abused as a child and maybe haven't sought help that you do the same thing to your children. It's just in a different way than how your mother did it.
Get help and stop saying you're sorry.
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5-08-2011 @ 9:12PM
Marla said...Well said!!
5-08-2011 @ 10:38PM
J said...What we need to know and remember is to forgive.
Our parents did the best they could with what they had and what they knew. This statement I learned as an adult, when I listened to my mother instead of blamming her.
Will we every know what they lived as a child? What did our grandparents suffer growing up. We will only know what they tell us. Sometimes their actions paint a better picture because children only learn what they live.
It is more important we learn from others mistakes and do not repeat them. Don't use your childhood as an excuse for your mistakes. Thank God for blessing you with a child. Set a good example for your child be leading by example.
We all make mistakes nobody is perfect, forgive those who have sinned against you and be the best you can.
If need be reach out for help it is available. But let go of the past and make a bright future. The world is a beautiful place if we quit looking at it through broken dark glasses
Love and except your child for who they are. Praise them for all the good they do. Most important be they to boost their confidence when they fail because it is then when they need you the most.
Happy Mother's Day!!!!!!!!
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5-08-2011 @ 6:26PM
Jerry said...My father was a selfish pig. He kept his pay all for himself. We had little to eat and we were nothing but a responsibility to him. He beat me and my mother all the time because we cost him money that he wanted to drink and smoke. While I was mad at my mother for going back to him all the time I also knew that the alternative was hunger. One time when we left him we lived in the unfinished basement of a nursing home. No a/c and no heat. They got a divorce this time but when we moved back in with him I was 13yo and I told him I would kill him if he ever touched me or her again. No calling the police. He truely understood that I would do it since I had him on the floor with my hands around his troat. I never had a birthday or got anything for Christmas my entire life. I only wanted my mother to say "I love you" Neither her or my father ever said it. I never hunged my mother or father. I prayed for my mothers sou when she died but prayed my dad would burn in hell when he died. To feel loved as a child is so comforting I wish I had been since I have never been able to truely love someone. Ah, I do feel love from my dog and my cat. Happy mothers day? Maybe! ! !
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