More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Dr. Terri Orbuch

GET UPDATES FROM Dr. Terri Orbuch
 

6 Ways to Strengthen Your Bond with Your Mother

Posted: 05/02/11 07:36 AM ET

Mother's Day is a day to honor and celebrate moms. But not all adult children feel compelled to do this! I have had more than one client rant about feeling obligated to honor their mothers simply because of cultural peer pressure.

I remember Viktor, a successful businessman in his late 40s, who was working through old resentments from childhood, particularly toward his mother, who often made him feel guilty then and even now. During one therapy session he told me, "My mother still expects a phone call and a card on Mother's Day -- after all these years! I go through the motions, but frankly, the ritual feels forced."

Whether your mother was more like June Cleaver or Mommy Dearest, chances are she played a critical role in who you became. And this is what I told to Viktor. Your mother is the reason you are here -- talking, laughing, crying, feeling, loving, excelling and learning. You don't have to be her best friend, but as you grow older and so does she, there are some simple ways to strengthen your bond with her that have benefits for both of you.

For those of us whose mothers are still alive, there are times when the relationship can be filled with conflict, anger or disappointment. So, whether you want to maintain your connection with your mother or need to repair it, here are some tips on how to improve that relationship with your mom.

Embrace what's positive.

In any relationship there are going to be ups and downs. Instead of focusing on what your mother does wrong (from your perspective) or the struggles you have with her, shift your attention to all that she does right and what's good about your relationship. This year, make a list of what you love about your mother and read those qualities to her, or write them in a card. Your true feelings are as good, if not better, than any card from Hallmark.

Respect your differences.

Each of you was born and raised in a different time with distinct values and ways of living. You probably don't agree on everything, even the important things in life. That's OK. But you can learn to acknowledge and respect her thoughts and feelings. There are many people who have been angry with their mother for years. Those are wasted years, and life is too short. This year, resolve to let the differences slide off your back. She never picks up the phone because she doesn't want you to spend the money? Fine. Tell her you like it when she calls you. She chastises you for divorcing? It's OK. Tell her you value her opinion. You're not going to change her, so accept her. Once you do, some of her annoying quirks will seem funny to you, and you'll feel as though you relieved a pressure valve.

Share your real self.

As adults, we don't spend much time talking to our mother about important topics in life. Think to yourself: Does she know my personal goals and fears in life? Strengthen your relationship by opening up new lines of communication between you and your mother. Too often we make small talk with our mothers. Try asking her for a piece of advice. Or tell her about something that has been stressing you out at work. Deepening the conversation with your mother is a way to share your real self. You might even discover that she is not only older than you, but wiser in some ways.

Get to know her.

Do you know what your mother's days are like? Who are her best friends? How does she feel about the events unfolding in the world? What does she love to do? What keeps her awake at night? These are the kinds of questions we forget to ask our mothers. You may have gotten into a superficial pattern of chatter with your mom that goes both ways -- you don't really share your inner life with her, nor she with you. Break the pattern! Many people discover new and interesting aspects of their parents at the very end of their life -- when they're dying and suddenly become very open. Don't wait till then. Start deepening your knowledge of her and your bond now.

Do something new.

I had a client who took her mother for her first pedicure, at age 75. This Mother's Day, resolve to make a date (it doesn't have to be on Mother's Day) to do something new with her. Go see a movie. Take her on a scenic car ride. Read the same book and discuss it. Go bowling. As in marriages, one of the best ways to strengthen bonds between people is to get out of the relationship rut by gently knocking them off balance. When you do this with your mother, you might be surprised by how changed the quality of the conversation is, or how differently she responds to you.

Set boundaries.

Respect each other's privacy. Limits in what you share with your mother (and what she tells you) are fine. Always remember that even when you try your hardest, there is still the possibility that she will be disappointed or you will not meet her expectations. These are the realities of any relationship. By setting boundaries, you are protecting yourself and the relationship. Telling your mother, "This is what I can do for you, and this is what I can't" will help set realistic expectations and hopefully increase her respect for you and your behaviors.

She may be Mom, but your relationship still takes work. If things have been difficult or problematic, don't expect change to occur overnight. Keep working at it, because the rewards are well worth the effort.

 

Follow Dr. Terri Orbuch on Twitter: www.twitter.com/drterrilovedr

Mother's Day is a day to honor and celebrate moms. But not all adult children feel compelled to do this! I have had more than one client rant about feeling obligated to honor their mothers simply beca...
Mother's Day is a day to honor and celebrate moms. But not all adult children feel compelled to do this! I have had more than one client rant about feeling obligated to honor their mothers simply beca...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 21
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
01:22 PM on 05/03/2011
Good article. Adult children and their aging parents are a package deal. Once we become adults it is our responsibility to see deeper into who our parents were/are and make adjustments. The way we repspond to our parents is not that dissimilar to how we respond to authority figures at work. In my book "Don't Bring it to Work" these is a model to follow where it is possible to track the behavior patterns that were handed from generation to generation. These will give clues as to why our moms behaved in either distant or overly close ways with us so we can talk with them in new and more helpful ways. Once this most primal realtionship is tended to the rest of our relationships become so, so much easier.
Sylvia Lafair author "GUTSY: How Women Leaders make Change"
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Majestry
09:42 AM on 05/03/2011
As far as I'm concerned, I will never see or speak to my mother ever again. She could be living on the street and I could be worth millions of dollars and she wouldn't see one cent of assistance from me. The horrible and unspeakable things that she did to me as a child were criminal and unforgivable. The fact that she intentionally and maliciously went to great lengths to try to ruin my life and my future is more than enough for me to say that I hope she has a slow and painful demise.
07:11 PM on 05/03/2011
Sorry to hear that! But healthy of you to recognize an abusive relationship and rid yourself of it. I would hope your mother could change for the sake of her loss.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
cinemaven
Mom, wife, social & political activist, writer...
09:35 PM on 05/02/2011
Excellent article

My dad and I had an amazing relationship.. he was one of my best friends and biggest influences but my mom and I were oil and water. We just didn't understand each other. We were so different in the way we thought about everything until one day, our relationship was reborn... I had a child. When I looked at him, I realize that my mom had these same feelings for me. I'd never doubted she loved me but it never occurred to me that she could like me. As a new mom, I was blown away by how present she was in our lives and we began to talk. I learned about her childhood and found out she was so proud of my education but jealous and insecure because she had felt I looked down on her (not true).

Sometimes, both the mom and child have to grow up in order to have a good relationship. My mom died much too young so I'm glad I was able to have 10 years of a positive relationship with her and then, I was blessed to have the best mom by proxy in the world.. my amazing mom-in-law. She passed a few years ago but I still have my aunt who acts as a surrogate for me... when she's gone, it'll be up to me to be the mom of our family.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Dr. Terri Orbuch
12:16 PM on 05/05/2011
Thanks so much for sharing your story. Many people have told me that they experience a very different kind of relationship with their mother, once they have a child. Feeling fortunate for what you did have with your mother is a wonderful perspective. Happy mother's day to you too.
photo
french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
08:20 PM on 05/02/2011
Good article, I need some advice like this - with specifics, too! Can't do the movies/drives bit, since I don't drive, and Mother's Day isn't something either of us cares for. (My brother tended to make a fuss of Mother's Day and never remember Mum's birthday, which left her most unimpressed.) She's coming home from hospital after a minor stroke, and I have mixed feelings about it - I've enjoyed having the house to myself, I admit, although it has been a bit lonely in some ways, too. Mind you Mum understands that, we're both essentially loners!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:29 PM on 05/02/2011
I think I'll give some of the above suggestions a try. I've never really had a great relationship with my mom and from what I can remember I was mostly raised by relatives. She's always been overly critical of me for things I have no control over and non-existent when I do things well that matter to me. So if a maternal relationship is based solely on biological ties...is it worth the efforts?
05:50 PM on 05/02/2011
I'd have to find mine to give you a real answer, but as far as maternal figures... the grandmother and aunt who raised me (I was bounced between houses) and made a point of reminding me daily that I was a burden... Not worth it, I'm happier now that I've cut ties with most of my blood family.

For me, Chosen family is what matter. Those who I have in my life because of mutual affection and respect.
photo
french queen13
my beloved is mine and I am his
08:21 PM on 05/02/2011
I go for the idea (and name) of the "Chosen family" too. My sister and mother are the only blood-kin for me; otherwise it's my SAS (Spirit Adopted Sisters) for me. :)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:55 PM on 05/02/2011
Wow, I feel incredibly fortunate to have a warm, loving, and absoutely wonderful mother. I am thankful for her (and my dad) every day. While my opinions about certain social and religious issues have become vastly different from theirs, I will always remain respectful of the sacrifices they made to take care of me and my brother and sister. I am not lucky enough to be a parent myself, but I do appreciate how hard of a job it must be. I love spoiling my mom every now and then, just as she did us kids. My heart breaks for those who had mothers who didn't provide the warmth and love tradionally associated with moms. But, for me, my parents are the most important people in the world and I am thrilled to do anything I can for them and to learn as much as possible from them while we still have time together in this world.
01:25 PM on 05/02/2011
For the people who have tense relationships with their moms, this could really be good advice, but when you are dealing with a mom who has no clue what it means to be a loving mother, it is very difficult to swallow the instructions above.

"Embrace what's positive" I can honestly say there is anything positive about her.

"Respect your differences" When my mother doesn't reciprocate, respecting her is difficult.

"Share your real self" Did that for many years, it got me a mother who played mental mind games and gave me every reason not to trust her.

"Get to know her" I've gotten to know enough that having her in my life is not worth it. She is one of the most selfish and ignorant people I know.

"Do something new" After 48 years of having tried so many different ways to either be a part of her life or include her in mine, doing something new isn't the answer. It is just one more adventure is setting myself up for failure and hurt.

"Set boundaries" That I have done, she stays out of my world and I do my best to stay out of hers and now we finally have a little peace.

I know this piece was meant to be entirely helpful and my comments would come off as very bitter, forgive me for that, but every family is unique in what they experience and the solutions for what would create a happier family vary widely.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoraHuffposter
Liberal socialist
02:45 PM on 05/02/2011
They are not bitter at all but very realistic and grounded. Some people have relationships that cannot be described as unsalvageable. That is assuming they were relationships and not merely biological ties. Counsellors and therapists are too stuck in the business of repairing and mending relationships, even when all evidence points to the detrimental effects on one party. Cutting out toxicity out of one's life is the only remedy in some cases. Even if the person cut out is a mother (or a child).
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
NoraHuffposter
Liberal socialist
02:46 PM on 05/02/2011
......meant "salvageable"
photo
OldTart
Let it begin with me...
08:56 AM on 05/02/2011
As a mother of five daughters who has lived long enough to lose her own mother, I'd add this important thing: open your eyes to your mother as the individual she is, and not a mere function. That is, before she is mother, wife, friend, aunt, daughter, employee, she is a person, had dreams of what her life would be, had interests she may have sacrificed, bears knowledge of the family history. I know only too sadly that once gone it is too late to ask the questions you never asked, to affirm Mom as the individual she is/was. Get to know her, really know her. She is so much more than your mother and there is a lot to mine for goodies in that, and peace of mind when she is no longer here. And temper any criticism with the knowledge that, if you are a parent, your children will treat you as you treat your mother, in all likelihood, so set an example and reap the rewards. None of us is perfect, but all of us can love each other from the heart, imperfections and all.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Dr. Terri Orbuch
03:09 PM on 05/02/2011
Thanks for your thoughtful comments. Really getting to know her is so important. Also, we definitely model and observe how our mother treats and communicates with other people (and her mother), and so will our children!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gemzenith
08:48 AM on 05/02/2011
I respect my mother, but we will never have a deep bond.She has no friends, and the only thing that keeps her up is sleep apnea.When I called to to inform her that one of her siblings back home had passed away and asked if she would be returning for the funeral, she told me no, they are dead and they won't miss me.She doesn't like displays of emotion, and would prefer not to talk about anything stressful or distressing.So now that she is in her 70's and I will be tuning 50 the best we can do is a truce of sorts, politely maintained.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bracken
09:58 AM on 05/02/2011
Yes. "Strengthening the bond" presumes that there IS a bond to begin with.