Hot on HuffPost Parents:
Zoe Armstrong: Five Ways to Fake a Break and Avoid Parenting Burnout
How To Help Victims Of The Tornado
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.
Your<span>Voice</span>
Ask Us Anything About Parenting
Recently Asked
- Is permission required from both parents in every state . to become a foster parent? are there name's changed; would i need a court order
- Alot of .gov when submitting a program or proposal for government agency (be sure you personally can provide for the agency)
- Federal reserve board of governors appointments ( understanding owning a tv image )











ReaderComments (Page 5 of 7)
5-08-2011 @ 7:39PM
rostatt51 said...You can forgive but you can never forget...That for me says it all...My Mom was very possesive and it severely affected my adulthood and kept me from doing what others were doing...So I lost experiecing a lot of things that others were experiencing and eventually affected relationships I got into...But it also taught me a lot about myself, my mother and others....It was a learning experience...I learned, looking back, that she had things about herself to deal with too as my Dad did...Only today we are more free to deal with them outright and seek help where help is needed....Years ago it was more taboo and kept underwraps...She passed away six years ago right before Mothers Day....My head laid on her side as she passed from here to the other side...I could feel her soul rise to the heavens above and leave her worldly body behind...She wanted my sister and me there when she passed and we were...No matter what we went through when I was younger my love for her surpassed everything...I've been told in life I'm a good woman...If that's so then I owe it to her...Good or bad...And when I look at old photos of my Mom I see a young woman with her whole life ahead of her and part of that life included me...I try and concentrate on the good that came out of it and little by little the bad falls far behind...Happy Mothers Day, Mom....
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:36PM
Peg E said...You are human, and to apologize to your child is a good thing, I have done it on many occasions. Your mother was flawed and from a different and sadder time. Our generation learned from that generation. We are blessed to be able to recognize our flaws and say we are sorry, Peg E. Connecticut
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:37PM
WTF?? said...My mother beat me with wire coat hangars, drank too much and smoked incessantly. I left home at 19 and went to war. I was never quite sure what I was trying to escape from but I was running as fast as I could.
On my own I finally tried to make something of myself, became successful in business and failed a marriage.
Years later, I had a long talk with my sons and told them I was sorry and today and for years past we have been inseparable. My true friends.
I remarried to this wonderful woman and now life couldn't be any better. I feel blessed.
I never did feel sorry for myself and only through overachieving did I get a false self worth. This too I passed on to my sons...
As I approach the "twilight years" I feel pretty good about myself and how it all turned out. I once read, "your only commitment in this life is to be true to yourself". That's what it all boils down to.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:36PM
hinchcliffe said...An apology does not take away the hurt-I can't remember what I had for breakfast yesterday, yet I can still remember every sarcastic, mean spirited remark my mother made to me
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:43PM
CC said...You set a great example for your kids.
I hope they said "I love you Mom" today, Mothers Day.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:42PM
UCantBSerius said...This was a wonderful, searing, and honest piece and I think the writer was enormously brave. As a mother, I have occasionally experienced rage at my children that has led me to do or say things of which I am deeply ashamed, remorseful and apologetic. I have said mean, sarcastic things to them. I have, yes, even once or twice slapped them. (To be clear, these incidents were few and far between and I have never injured them or said things that would qualify as abusive.) This isn't because I had an mean or abusive mother - I didn't; my mother was wonderful. But my sister has done such things also. I suspect most other women would say the same, if they are honest. We usually can't be honest about this for so many reasons but it is a great relief to know that we (most of us) are not monsters. We cry, we apologize, and then we resolve to do better, and we do our best to be better.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:40PM
Lori said...It's interesting that usually people who haven't experienced the hurt will say, forget it, let it go, etc. But, really no one forgets. The Christians remember, every year the death of their lord, the Jews remember being slaves in Egypt, I'm sure the Muslims have their thing to remember. We all remember every little thing. And, maybe remembering helps to change our attitudes and our decisions.
We can't ever forget the hurts, anymore than we can forget our moments of happiness, but we can grow from the memories...hopefully.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:41PM
sandra manos said...To Nemo:
It is good to seek help and move on, but privately. It is wrong to tar and feather your mother on the internet. That is what I meant.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:45PM
Steve said...Looks like you got back at her!
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:50PM
Fatslob said...Too bad I could not have grown up without a "mother". I would be soooooo much happier now. Wouldn't so many other people as well.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 7:53PM
Aria said...I don't agree that saying you're "sorry" fixes anything really. The damage is already done.
However I can relate to this article and the numerous replies because my mother is a venomous toxic person. She was jealous of me when I was younger. My best friends mother (when I was a young teen) used to tell me "Your mother is jealous of you because you're young and pretty". I remember getting ready to go out on dates or out with friends, and my "momster" used to barge into my room and say "I bet you talk about me to your friends don't you". (Like I'd honestly waste my thoughts while I was out). But I think she would ask that to try and set the "mood" for my night out, in hopes that I'd be depressed. She tried to hand me off to my aunt to have her raise me, and I had never done anything to deserve that. She tried in many ways to trash my self confidence and would often refer to me as a "thing" in my brothers presence.
So fast forward 15 years when my life was going great....good job, wonderful cat, nice townhouse, great boyfriend...and she decides she wants to be "friends". At that point she starts calling me a lot and I fix that by blocking out her phone number temporarily so she can't reach me. I only did that for less than a week, but for that she punishes me by taking me out of her will and giving my brother everything. He already took her house, and also has power of attorney over all her money.
I despise her to this day. I thought she'd be gone by now, but she's 87. GOOD LORD. Take the B already.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:07PM
Jane Tzilvlelis said...You eating the rat poison. No one else. We each get lessons on earth. Your mother gave you the sun, moon, stars, and trees. She gave you your "being." No one else could have done that. This age old problem of the inability to forgive...that is why we are in wars for thousands of years.
Perhaps, your father, created the division between you and your mother by favoring you over her...just a thought here. Many fathers do this. I have learned that life is not a hallmark card, for sure.
5-08-2011 @ 7:56PM
Nancy said...Oh, for God sake. Get over it. Growing up means we didn't get the parents we ordered. My mother never apologized, either. I alwlays did. Your kids find other things to hate about you. Geez.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:07PM
Jane Tzilvlelis said...My story is much more convoluted, and fragmented than the author. If I wrote here, it would stop everyone in their tracks. A senior now, I have learned to live in solitude...counting my blessings for the peace and serenity I am experiencing. Yes, it took me losing my two daughters to do so, but I became a whole woman...learned to love myself unconditionally...after living a life in a tornado.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:32PM
aria said...RE your earlier comment.....My father died when I was 12, long before I blossomed into a young beautiful teen. You're filling in the blanks with your own assumptions. Why are you defending toxic "Mommy Dearest" mothers anyway? Us who had toxic mothers need to unite! DAMM (daughters against malicious mothers).
5-08-2011 @ 8:11PM
martha said...My mother was very strict, very controlling and very religious. She was not very loving. She could have been worse. She is now 85 and I can tell she tries to be better in some ways but is still very controlling and we can just stand our ground with her now. The mother I can't stand is my husbands. I have been married to her son for over 40 years and have had to pull the knife out of my back for all of them. Can't stand her, never will, I just try to stay away from her as much as possible. My husband is welcome to have a relationship with her though.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:34PM
Julia said...Oh My Goodness, My mother was born 1938, she had her first child at 21, MY Brother Chris who died when he turned 21, from alcohol poisoning. My Mom, made a lot of mistakes in her life, Heck she was very young when she married my Dad, and had four children, one after the other. BUT she was smart enough to learn from them. when My Mom aged & got wiser, she began to teach me all about her mistakes in life, which in turn I became street smart....... Although my growing up years were Very dysfunctional, I would NEVER trade them back, Because my up bringing is WHO I am Today, STRONG, CARING, HONEST, Thank you Mom, I Love Your daughter, Julia
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:28PM
Valerie said...what dribble, who cares borrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrring
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:55PM
bEVERLY Beasley said...I am the 5th daughter of seven girls and I have six brithers. My mother was brutal to me. All my sisters were petite, I was "chubby" and was told that I would have t to love who loved me. The guy who loved me also loved to hit me. I was acollege junior when I met him, I got pregnant and so married him.I left him when my child was three. I would never have married him or even fooled with him had I not been told that I was not loveable and would have to settle for an abusive alcoholic, who "loved me." Ladies watch what you say to your daughters, you can really mess with their heads.
Reply
5-08-2011 @ 8:43PM
Ida said...That was so moving and eloquent. She has a point. Raising kids does not come with a manual so mistakes are bound to happen. We need to be the adults and practice saying "I apologize". Thank you for the wake-up call.
Reply