RageMeister

 

 

My Mother and Her Words

August 27, 2004

My mother was not the best kind of mother to have. She was German, born and raised there by her mother, Maria who I called Oma.  Oma was very angry and violent and went to church often, no doubt to confess her sins and be absolved. Her affect on MY mother was tragic and this was passed to my siblings and me.

I only know what I know. I cannot speak for anyone else and can only illustrate what type of mother I had, by describing some childhood events that stick in my mind:

►    A drunken Army doctor at Fort Hood improperly delivered me more than a half century ago. As a result, my mother hemorrhaged and nearly died.  She never faulted the doctor, only me. She blamed me “for nearly killing her”. To her, I committed attempted murder at the moment I was born.

When I was older I tried to talk to her about it. But she always had the same response, “I tried to kill her”. Just a couple months before she died, I brought up the subject and after all that time, more than 44 years later, she cried when she described how, as a new-borne I premeditatedly tried to kill her. While sitting on the sofa and sobbing, she asked me, “How could you do that to me?” I had no answer.

I am certain I did not try to murder my mother at the moment of my birth or at any time in my life.

►    My mother said repeatedly throughout my childhood, she wished I was never born. She would say it at the dinner table, in the living room, out of the blue; it was "I wish you were never born”. She said it with venom and conviction. I believed her.

This didn’t make me fell good, as you can imagine. At times I wished I was never born.

►    She repeatedly called me stupid for every mistake in word or deed. Stupid. It was the four letter word of my youth.  She said it every day. It got old and comfortable. Stupid me.

I don’t like the word stupid.

►    When I was six and in the first grade a neighborhood girl about 13 years old named Nancy sexually molested me. She would lead me to a single car garage across the street from where we lived and do sexual things to me. My mother knew because she saw me being lead away and I told her about what Nancy did to me. She responded with silence and indifference.

This made me afraid and alone; I had no one to help me. 

Later, when I was older and wanted to talk about the sexual abuse, she blamed me for it. She said I must have done something to make Nancy molest me. When I was young I believed this.

About five months before her death, I tried to bring up Nancy but she did as she always did, just stared at me in silence. For her it was okay for her son to know as much about the female anatomy at six as most men do at 26.

I still have intense anger at my mother but not Nancy. My mother molested me with her indifference and blame.

►    My mother never conversed with me while I was a child. It was yelling about this and yelling about that. I believe she got perverse satisfaction in yelling and making threats.

I still get stomach aches when people yell at each other.

►    Mom used ridicule at home and in public. For example while in an NCO Club, a place to eat and visit, I would dunk my French fries in mustard, not ketchup like everyone else. One evening she pointed this out to everyone in the club, saying what I did was the stupidest and weirdest thing she ever saw. She laughed at me and others did too.  

Want to know something? I still dunk my fries in mustard!

►    Mom would rarely be awake before we went to school. She never made a brown bag lunch, ever. I did made them for my siblings and me. When she was awake, she stayed in her bedroom, reading and yelling. I do remember a few times when she put out some cold cereal and milk as breakfast but that was when I was about 8 years old. And it was for just a few months, and stopped when we moved to another city.

I don’t particularly care for brown bag lunches to this day though I do like some dry cereals.

►    Her mother, my Oma, was, as I said, mean and angry. She liked to see turmoil and tension and create it when there wasn’t any.  One evening while babysitting us, she got my brother and me to fight and then punished both of us by beating us with her fists and slapping with her open hands. I told my mother about this and she said I was lying.

Mom rarely believed what I had to say.

One day, after dad arrived home and he pushed the buzzer at the street so we could let him into the apartment building. My brother and I raced to open the door for him and Oma immediately began yell at and beat us. Mom came out of the kitchen to see what was going on and Oma stopped. Later, mom assured me that in the future Oma would not beat us, she would.

In reality, she rarely did so.

►    We were living in Europe when Kennedy was assassinated. There were about 8-hours difference so it was about 9:30 pm. The family was at a bowling alley on-base but I was outside watching soldiers running and jeeps racing by. I asked what was going on, and a soldier said President Kennedy was shot and killed. I ran in and told my parents. My mother responded by yelling, “Don’t be stupid. Stop lying, the President hasn’t been shot!”

I insisted that he had and after a couple minutes of making a spectacle of myself, the guy at the snack bar turned on the radio. The news of Kennedy’s death came in clear. Everyone left for home. 

As we were walking up to our apartment, we stopped to talk to a neighbor. She was crying. By now, so was I. When mom noticed I was crying, she turned around, slapped me and told me that I had nothing to cry about. She told me I wasn’t sad.

I learned emotions were forbidden at home, at least when mom was around. 

►    If she could, mom would see the negative in everything. When I was about to take the GRE, Graduate Record Exam she said, “Why bother, you’ll fail it anyway.” The GRE was very important and my place in Graduate School was assured if I passed. Fortunately,  I passed the exam and with a good score too. She turned away as I told her about my score; I could see she was annoyed. 

I sometimes think of that moment and do so fondly too!

►    My mother did not show affection toward me. She might have before age five but I have few memories of that time. She never once said she loved me. Never.

I don’t remember her kissing me either or showing any tenderness. She never tucked me into bed at night, never read to me or do anything that would be normal mother-son bonding. However, one summer afternoon, when I was 35, she blurted out she loved me and apologized for never saying it before. I told her it was too late.

I think of that moment with little emotion. 

My mother did good things and bad. I remember the bad more than the good because they were traumatic and stick in my memory. 

It was very difficult to admit to myself that my mother was a child abuser who had lasting negative effects on me. Because she is dead, I cannot discuss it with her, but I suppose I never could. If she were alive today things wouldn’t be any different. She would live in her world and me in mine.

Every child deserves a mother's love and nurturing. Knowing that my mother felt I did not deserve that makes me sad and angry.

 

Copyright 2003 - 2012   Jim Pierce