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My mother is 85 and she is verbally and emotionally abusive to me. I give her so much support whenever she calls me, I am there to listen to her endless dramas. I take her to dinner, I buy her things that she wants and I listen to her every day when she wants to talk about her health, money, other people (she gossips a lot) or when she wants to put down my other brothers and sisters. She does not respect me. When I let her know how I feel about things that she has issues about, she hangs up the phone on me and then calls me back like nothing happened. I feel that she just wants me to be at her beckon call for whenever she wants to vent. I asked her to see a therapist, but she does not want to spend money on one. Our relationship is very bad, and I am really starting to resent her and not want to talk to her.
She has been difficult her whole life and all my brothers and sisters just tolerate her or stopped talking to her altogether.


She has always been abusive, but she has these demands as if I have to jump whenever she wants to talk. I work and I have a son. She thinks she is always right and never wrong. I have really tried to hold it together and be the dutiful daughter, but I cannot do it anymore. She has no respect for what I say or how I feel. She cuts the conversation by hanging up the phone on me. She must have done this hundreds of times and I just keep saying "oh she is just mad" and I keep tolerating it and she keeps doing it. My feelings have dwindled for her, and I am now backing off. Please advise. None of my sisters want to hear what I have to say either and they do not want to hear about her, nor do they want to take care of her. I have asked my 2 sisters to pitch in and they have ignored my request.

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Block. Her. Number. You have a son. You have a life. You have your own mental and physical health to take care of.

You're done. Your mother is an adult. She can figure out stuff for herself without you.
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Maybe thinking about your relationship with your Mother may help. Reflect on some of your conversations or visits.

Is it an equal arrangement? You both swap & share news, talk about current or past events as you both wish? Taking turns, letting the other speak?

Or are you acting as a 'listening post' for Mother?

This can happen. The balance can get skewed for various reasons.

I am wondering;

- Does Mother show much interest in your issues?
(Has she become somewhat self-absorbed in her own world?)

- Can she hear well?
(if she cannot hear you well, hear your questions or replies it can become a 'monologue' rather than a 'dialogue').

- Is she bored? Likes a bit of drama. Maybe control & divide siblings for something to do.

Firm boundaries are needed. Cut short any strays into areas not 'safe'. Eg topics becoming rants or complaints about siblings. "Right, Mom. I hear you have an issue with X. Better to talk directly to X about that".

Having a purpose to your call/visit can be useful.

Call to discuss an upcoming appointment. "Ok that's sorted, talk soon, bye".

Another option is shorter or less calls/visits.
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Just looked at your profile.

Lady, you are a New Yorker! Not trying to stereotype but I absolutely love the ‘direct’ approach that New Yorkers have.

Some people find them rude. I don’t! They know how to speak their minds.

You have it in you to tell it like it is. Don’t give that power away. Speak frankly to your mom. She either gets it or she won’t. If she doesn’t. That’s okay too. You do not have to agree with her desires in life. You don’t even have to meet her halfway. Stand on your own. Let your sisters worry about themselves.

If you need therapy to gain a fresh perspective, that’s not a bad idea either.

All the best to you!
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Momma was doing this to me. We would be having a conversation about something and I would reply back with an honest answer. If she didn't like what I was saying she would hang up on me. I wouldn't call her back. Wait on her to call me. Could be two weeks. One time it was a month. She would act like everything was fine and why I have not called her. I don't let her get away with it and still don't. I call her out on it every time. For the past year or so I have backed off even more. I call her about once every two weeks and we don't drive over to see her but twice a year. What she does now when I call her if she doesn't like what I am saying she says my coffee is ready. She has already had her coffee because she has been up for two hrs. That is the first thing she does is go to the bathroom and make coffee. I call her out on that too. Just playing games like usual.
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Linda, I still don’t think you really get it. You say “through meditation, prayers and therapy I guess I will be OK”. If if not OK, you will turn into an even flatter doormat.

You are unlikely to be OK unless you stand up to your mother, and stop tolerating her rudeness. If she wants a servant, she should be checking into a facility where people are paid to put up with it.
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lealonnie1 Dec 2022
I agree. Even with dementia present, I refused to tolerate my mother's nasty behavior towards me. And, even with dementia present, she knew what it meant when I told her I was leaving her presence and would return when she was in a 'better mood', or hanging up the phone to speak to her another time when she was in a 'better mood.' She learned in short order that if she ticked me off, I'd leave her presence.
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Have you considered the idea that perhaps you have a mentally ill mother and always have?

Yes, find yourself a therapist for support. But also, watch a wonderful old movie called Now, Voyager (Bette Davis, Claude Rains, Paul Henreid) and consider the damage that mentally ill folks can inflict. And how to right the ship
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You can't control others' behavior -- only yours.

She doesn't sound too infirm, so I'd say you should continue to step away, and if she calls, be too busy to jump through her hoops or even talk beyond ensuring she's OK.

People like your mom zoom in on the weakest person to aim their venom. She knows it gets to you, and you keep coming back for more.

A very wise therapist once told me "don't let the sharks see you bleed." Your mom is a shark, so you need to learn how to not let her see you bleed. Become a stronger person through will or therapy, but set a good example for your child on how not to be a doormat.
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lindas12 Dec 2022
Thank you for your reply! All these actions from my mother are the opposite of love. I guess I had a hard time realizing this and only learning now how painful this is but through meditation, prayers and therapy I guess I will be ok. xo
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When you allow your mother to hang up on you without calling her out on it, you're telling her it's okay and you accept that behavior. When she calls you back like nothing happened, and you don't mention your hurt feelings, it reinforces that you don't mind she hung up on you. It's like saying, Keep doing it mom, I don't mind! Go for it!

Let her know that the next time she hangs up on you, you won't be speaking to her for a week. Period. It's not okay to be hung up on; it's disrespectful and you will no longer tolerate it, mother.

Then stick to your guns. Let her know you mean business. That you respect yourself enough to NOT tolerate such behavior from anyone, let alone a woman who calls herself mother and who's supposed to love you and treat you with respect.

Don't chalk off rotten behavior as 'just being mad' and let it go. Call her out on it and stop bad behavior in its tracks, as you would with a misbehaving toddler. You'll likely find she STOPS it in short order if she wants to maintain a relationship with you. If not, then you won't speak to her anymore, one week at a time.

Good luck.
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lindas12 Dec 2022
Thank you for this! :)
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Why are you the only one of your siblings who do for her? How’d all this get dumped on you? Mother seems to think you’re her punching bag, and evidently so do your siblings.

Yes, back away. Stop doing so much and stop trying to make her happy. Limit her calls. When she asks why you aren’t around as much, be honest. That she is so negative and nothing you do for her makes her happy, and you figured she just wants to be left alone.
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