by: Linda Joy Myers
So many women talk about their relationships with their mothersno matter how old they are. For some, their mother, from whom they have supposedly separated long ago, still occupies a central place in the psyche. Shes too close, shes too much. She has advice, is nosy, and interferes. The daughter wants time away, she wants boundaries, and fights for her separation from her mother.
For others, the mother still occupies the psyche, but with a wrenching kind of longinga mother that is biological and even sometimes present, but also a mother who is so self-involved as to be emotionally absent, or literally out of the picture. This kind of mother takes up space and energy as a nagging, missing piece, a ghost. Her image hovers, her memory, or perhaps a dream of how it could have been, should have been, but never is.
Which kind of mother do you have?
My mother was a dream. I realize now, 10 years after her death, that I was always trying to get the dream to come trueto have her be warm and huggy, to have her want to know me, to visit me in my house, to know my children. To know me. It never happened. It left a yearning that I played out with men, it left a hole that I tried to fill in many ways.
When I was little, she left me when I was four years old, and once a year appeared in the landscape of my lifeI lived with her motheronly to disappear too soon and in a flurry of anger at her own mother, without seeming to notice how hard it was for me.
So many peoplemen and womenstruggle with this kind of emptiness, the burn of anger in the pit of the stomach, the unanswered questions that cant be askedwhy are you like this?
Mothers who are neglectful, selfish, and abandoning do not set out to do these things, they are a result of her own problems, her own pain, and maybe even mental illness. It is hard for us as her child to see this fully, or to forgive it.
How to help to heal the Ghost Mother wound:
1. Learn about your mothers lifehow she became the way she isthough talking with relatives, if she wont talk to you directly, or by sitting down and hashing through history shown in photos and family albums.
2. Find adoptive mothers who will nurture you, and friends who understand your story. Learn to mother yourselfthough therapy, through having children of your own. They will teach you.
3. Write your story. Tell your story. Having witnesses to your story is a part of healing. Seeing compassion in the eyes of others shows you that you are worthy of it, and deserve it.
4. Learn to forgive. Work on it. Work on being yourself and having a life you like and enjoy.
5. Learn to surround yourself with who you like, people who love and like you, and beauty that makes you feel part of the web of life.
About The Author
Linda Joy Myers, Ph. D., prize winning author of Becoming Whole: Writing Your Healing Story, is a Marriage and Family therapist and teaches memoir-as-healing workshops in the San Francisco Bay Area and nationally. Lindas work has been praised by reviewers, healers, and radio and television interviewers. You can visit her web site at: www.lindajoymyers.com.
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