Follow
Share
Read More
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
1 2 3 4
Hi all,

I was overwhelmed by the thoughtful, caring, and kind responses to my question, and I am so grateful to each and every one of you who took the time from your busy days to respond. Having so many folks willing to help a complete stranger with a vexing issue was a profoundly humbling experience.

There was a lot to unpack in terms of the variety of answers and advice everyone offered. I wrote a letter - in fact, rewrite followed rewrite followed rewrite, until I had a result I was comfortable with. There was no nastiness, no name-calling, no laundry list of brutality or specific actions and deeds referenced. My mother knows what she did. I also wished her comfort in her days and peace in her heart and mind; and regretted that we never had the loving mother/daughter bond others share.

I thought a great deal about all the advice you had shared, and many of you mentioned forgiveness. So I offered her that, but only after I expressed to her how much damage her abuse had caused - because I needed her to know that. (And maybe it was time for me to be a little selfish for a change.) I needed her to know what her abuse cost me throughout my life; relationships that I could never trust, years and years of therapy, the loss of potential and self-esteem that plagued me for so long. And then I wrote that I forgave her for that, but that I would never forget.

Please know that I went into this never expecting anything in return from her. Not acknowledgement, not acceptance, not understanding, and most certainly not an apology. So there will be no more hurt from her to me.

There seemed to be two schools of thought on whether or not to send the letter, and for days I vacillated, wondering what would help me the most. In the end, I sent it.

I feel a great sense of freedom and relief, having in essence severed ties with her for good. I will not see or speak to her again, and I am fine with that.

As an aside, I should have made clear in my original post is that my mother was actually diagnosed with NPD by a psychiatrist (who wasn't looking for that, but hit on it during a comprehensive mental exam a few years back). I agree that lay people probably shouldn't bandy terms like that freely about, as one person suggested, but in my mother's case, it was a valid medical diagnosis.

To all of you who shared your experiences that were so much like mine, please know that I stand with you and feel your pain. It takes courage and a certain amount of grace to share the brutality of abuse with the world at large. And to all of you that took the time to help a stranger, I am deeply and humbly grateful for your generosity.

Harrysmom
Helpful Answer (13)
Report
Kmjfree Apr 2022
I did not respond to your original post but I thought about it a lot and I’m so glad you found some peace. I think one day I will send a letter to my mom too. Many hugs!
(1)
Report
See 2 more replies
I was in a similar situation, and chose not to have "the talk" with my mom about how her abuse impacted my life. She passed away 2 years ago, and I am very happy about the path I chose. Once she died, I established a real connection with her that is not fettered with the past. I truly believe she is freed from all that drove her to her earthly actions. She is freed from them and so am I. I talk to her all the time now, with a free and open heart, knowing we are both different people now.
Hope this helps....
Helpful Answer (7)
Report
Pepperpup Apr 2022
This reply is so helpful to me right now! I am still caring for my mother and I still harbor some resentment for how she treated me while I was growing up. I've chosen to forgive her and embrace our new relationship as friends. This has worked very well. And I know that when she passes she will have an entirely new perspective on who she is and who I am and then it won't matter anymore. God is Good. And I'm so happy to hear that you found a good healthy way to deal with your mom.
(1)
Report
She knows, probably buried it deep within to live with it. I wouldn't send her anything but a get well note. You think it may bring closure but what if your note haunts you in the future? Sounds like you have been through enough where she is concerned. Not sure where you stand on God, but in my opinion, nobody gets away with anything. You can pretend all you want in life but in death it will be shown to you. Take the higher road it will free you in time. Reliving your past only holds you back. Prayers for your healing. Take care
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
Countrymouse Apr 2022
Too late. She's posted it.
(0)
Report
A total waste of time. Grow up and keep going without looking at the past. She will never get it and you will be consumed by guilt.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Oh, I understand this feeling all too well.

It wasn't physical abuse for me, but certainly emotional/psychological.

The best advice I have on that - as someone who has accepted that my mother will move on from this life without ever acknowledging or apologizing for such things - is that, cliche as it sounds, forgiveness is truly a gift that you give yourself.

Her treatment of you is something she has to live with, even if only for a short time. You, however, have the choice to let it go. Hard as that sounds to do - it still remains within your power.

And remember - everything is a communication. If deep down, on some twisted level, her ambitions to torment you were based upon the reaction it elicited, your not responding to them in the traditional way still sends her a message. And that message is, you have healed yourself, and risen above.

I hope that helps you. I have nothing but empathy for those feelings, believe me.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report
bundleofjoy May 2022
i love your answer :).

and this:
“And that message is, you have healed yourself, and risen above.”

:)

i wish it for us all :).

warm hug from me, erzoolie :).
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
It's incredible that this subject has been kept going in for so long. A borderline daughter who does't want to allow her so called "narcissistic" mother to die in peace without first taking revenge for events that she claims, occurred many decades ago. I don't blame the disturbed daughter for keeping this frivolous discussion for so long. The enabler "expert advisors" are the responsible ones.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I've been wondering what happened when the letter arrived.

You're in the room as one of a team nursing a dying woman in her last hours. A letter arrives for her. It's your patient's right to receive it, but if she can't open the letter or hold it or see well enough to read, it's your job - with her permission - to open it for her and read it to her.

Would you?
Helpful Answer (1)
Report
Isthisrealyreal May 2022
That's a really good question.

Things like this are challenging when you are not the life long target and haven't experienced abuse by a parent.
(0)
Report
My suggestion is to take the high road. Start a big fire in a fireplace or fire pit or grill. Take your letter and read it out loud. Throw it in the fire and watch it burn. Consider this a ritual of letting go of the hurt, letting go of the anger, letting go of the years of torment....and move on. That is your closure.

She is not worthy of any more effort than that.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Your feelings are not wrong.

It’s ultimately pointless to attempt to hold a severely mentally ill person responsible for their behaviour. They are incapable of accepting any responsibility. There is no satisfaction to be had.

I have thought for decades of giving my mother the laundry list on her death bed of her acts of extreme abuse and neglect. There’s no point. Any trivial thing now, she screams, “Shut up! You’re lying. You’re a liar! I never said that, I never did that.” Her mental illnesses (NPD and borderline) make her incapable of dealing psychologically with the repercussions of her behaviour. I pity her.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

1 2 3 4
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter