NickyCW, you don’t mention your age or state in life (married/single, with kids or not), so forgive me if I state the obvious or the irrelevant…
I understand my mother SO much better now that I am grown and a wife and mother myself. Motherhood requires CONSTANT sacrifices, giving up what you’d rather be doing at any given moment to take care of truly helpless little ones and amazingly oblivious older ones. (The only time I get to do what I want to do is after the kids are asleep. So I stay up late, I lack sufficient sleep, I get irritable and easily overwhelmed, but I try to control myself and not take it out anyone.) Parenting takes incredible emotional resources, coping skills, maybe respite help from relatives and babysitters, and good parenting scripts from our own childhood if we are to do a decent (never perfect, that’s impossible) just a decent job parenting our own children. All the love in the world can’t necessarily make up for those if any of those are lacking.
Children do amazingly stupid, annoying, irritating things over and over and over again; they just don’t know any better. They can be rude and disrespectful and completely ungrateful for all your efforts on their part. For example, I had a rotten, rotten, rotten day on Monday homeschooling my eight-year-old and my six-year-old, with my eleven-year-old, three-year-old and one-year-old underfoot to add to the chaos. On the 20th or 30th irritation or frustration from childish irresponsibility or backtalk or pushing the limits, I broke down in tears, crying and yelling that their behavior was making my job as a mommy very difficult, ( I tried to be specific, this action, this speech, was making my job as a mommy harder) and they should take better care of me, and I deserve better. (I don’t expect perfection, just an effort on their part.) I COMPLETELY understand why some parents occasionally snap and lose it. When you’re in the middle of a downward spiral of rage and frustration, it’s REALLY hard to step back, take a breath, and (a) be clear to your kids what behavior on their part (not THEM, but their behavior) is bothering you and (b) plan/execute the plan to change your expectations and actions and their expectations and actions to make the situation better right now and prevent it in the future.
Now add to this mix the effect of personalities, the mother’s and the kids’. I like things neat and orderly. I like the living room to be clutter-free, toys in the separate playroom. Again, I don’t expect perfection, just an effort on my kids’ part. The Xth time in a row I clean up and come back to find a mess five minutes later, I might get understandably upset. Also, I like to focus on only one thing at a time. If I am doing paperwork, making dinner, or even changing a poopy diaper, and the other kids interrupt with complaints, questions, requests for assistance (always RIGHT NOW, mind you), I find it irritating and physically stressful. Call it a mental handicap if you will, but I can only do one thing at a time, it’s just how my brain is wired, and it must be accommodated. The kids have to learn to wait a minute and take turns. Now for the kids’ personalities: some kids are eager to please you (and easy to please them), a joy to parent, but they can still do childishly irresponsible or irritating things; these are usually easily forgiven because I can see that she cares and is really trying. Other kids are less eager-to-please. I try to use Dr. Dobson’s positive descriptions – high-energy and strong-willed – but you can read between the lines and hear difficult-to-please, easily frustrated, stubborn, willful, etc. These kids are a lot harder to parent and a lot harder to forgive because they seem not to care and not to even try to please you. Some personalities and some combinations of personalities are particularly volatile and likely to lead to conflict. Can that fact of life make things easier to forgive?
My sister Suzy remembers (and throws in my Mom’s face during arguments) every instance of injustice and mistreatment at my mother’s hands, but never remembers the behavior on her (Suzy’s) part that provoked the punishments or corrections. Back to our original poster, could you check your memories with your brother/father/mother? What if, instead of confronting your mother with HER behavior, which could feel like an attack and not get a good reaction, what if you asked her about YOUR behavior, which she could perhaps be more objective and calmer talking about. Ask her what kind of child you were, if there’s anything you could have done differently to have a happier, more peaceful home life, if she enjoyed or found it difficult to be a mother. Take all her memories as biased in her favor, add all your memories as biased in your favor, and probably the truth is somewhere in the middle. Maybe it will be easier to forgive then.
Hoping I don’t get remembered as a bad mother

,
Christine