All about my mother; clearing my head.
Jun. 1st, 2004 12:51 amLet me take stock of my life: I'm 24 in twelve days, I went to a fairly prestigious high school, then to a fairly prestigious college, and now I work in retail. My home life consists of listening to my mother bitch about the fact that I work in retail, listening to my father rail about anything and everything while doing nothing, and me wishing for the day I can get out of here. My social life consists of being tolerated by an embarrassing small circle of people, almost none of which I feel I can open up to. And fuck the platitudes and the health comments. And the "you're doing better than X, who's a quadriplegic". I am so goddamned tired of hearing that shit it isn't even funny. I'm not a leper or a quadriplegic, but that doesn't change the fact that my right now is awful. Amazingly awful.
A couple of weeks ago my mother, while doing the previously mentioned bitching to me (the usual shouting, complaining, "why didn't you"s) she basically told me to "make a change by September" or else. The "or else" I figured to be a threat to kick me out of the house. Because there's nothing else she can do to me at this point. I don't ask the parental units for any money, nor do I even ask them for compensation when I purchase something for them. So she can't hold that over my head. The "threat" itself is ridiculous: one, we have enough family around that I could just move in with someone, and two, I don't want to be here. She's made it so that living in the house I've grown up in has become toxic for me. When discussing this all with an aunt of mine I mentioned who I had in mind to move in with, the aunt whose husband recently passed away and whose children would soon be moving out of the house and into college. She then told me that said aunt had inquired to her about me possibly moving in. Eureka! Problem solved. The only thing that worried me was my mother's reaction. You see, even though I'd heard her little September speech, I still didn't really think she meant to kick me out. Because, honestly, what would that prove? Was that meant to punish me? because she hasn't exactly gone out of her way to make me feel welcome since I've come back from school. Or was it meant to help me? How is telling me to leave supposed to get me started on whatever the hell she wants to get me started on (my life, maybe)? especially since she must know I'd just move in with another family member? Things don't add up.
It wasn't until I was talking to my confidant aunt tonight that things really hit home. I'd just returned from great-grandmother/housesitting and my aunt (as she promised) told me how broaching the subject of me moving in with my other aunt to my mother went. Apparently my mother was all "oh, well that's nice, because she has to be out of here by September". In a not-pleasant way. So she was serious. And here I was worried that she'd be upset that I wanted to move in with Auntie A. Foolish me.
Having analyzed the situation so far, all I can think of is that my mother is embarrassed of me. My living in her house, wearing the same clothes to work (dress code) every day, my lack of complaining vocally about how shitty my job is, it sickens her. She wants to be able to tell her pals that the daughter who was the only person from her grade to get into a specialized high school and then went on to an Ivy-League college is now in graduate school/medical school/law school. The whole Radioshack thing doesn't fit into her equation. That's all I've come up with, that she just wants to be able to go on with her day without seeing me and being reminded what a colossal failure I've turned out to be. I've explained my nursing school plan to her, and she doesn't accept it. I don't know what she wants me to do, whether she wants me to work or go back to school, and every time I try to broach the topic she berates me about what I didn't do in the past. She doesn't support me with what I'm doing now, and she doesn't make me feel like any actions I'm taking are of any significance. Any little milestones I achieve, that give me a little bit of warmth (health insurance! yay! vacation time! yay! a position of more importance! yay!) she belittles. There's no fucking winning with her, and just being around her saps my energy. There's so much tip-toeing around subjects that I think will start her off.
And, to be completely honest, that's how it is with most other members of my social support system. So I walk around feeling like shit and they walk around making me feel like shit...no winning. There's just nothing.
How hard is it for people to put their pride aside and just, you know, come with the love and support? Hells, it's never unconditional, but at least try to show you care. None of them have tried looking for a job lately. They think "oh, you went to Brown, you should have no problem finding a job". Yeah, take a look around. That guy serving you your Frappuccino? He probably went to Yale. It's tough out there. But you wouldn't know. The person you work with regaled you with the tale of their daughter's $70G position, and, heck, they only went to City College. Surely the Brown grad can find the same.
Stick it up your ass. And *you* try walking up and down to hospitals, handing out your resume and not hearing back. Or trolling online posting and posting and hearing nothing. Then come back to me with an assessment. "If you really tried looking for a job you'd find one" my fucking ass.
In conclusion: fuck this house, fuck this family, and fuck ... just fuck.
A couple of weeks ago my mother, while doing the previously mentioned bitching to me (the usual shouting, complaining, "why didn't you"s) she basically told me to "make a change by September" or else. The "or else" I figured to be a threat to kick me out of the house. Because there's nothing else she can do to me at this point. I don't ask the parental units for any money, nor do I even ask them for compensation when I purchase something for them. So she can't hold that over my head. The "threat" itself is ridiculous: one, we have enough family around that I could just move in with someone, and two, I don't want to be here. She's made it so that living in the house I've grown up in has become toxic for me. When discussing this all with an aunt of mine I mentioned who I had in mind to move in with, the aunt whose husband recently passed away and whose children would soon be moving out of the house and into college. She then told me that said aunt had inquired to her about me possibly moving in. Eureka! Problem solved. The only thing that worried me was my mother's reaction. You see, even though I'd heard her little September speech, I still didn't really think she meant to kick me out. Because, honestly, what would that prove? Was that meant to punish me? because she hasn't exactly gone out of her way to make me feel welcome since I've come back from school. Or was it meant to help me? How is telling me to leave supposed to get me started on whatever the hell she wants to get me started on (my life, maybe)? especially since she must know I'd just move in with another family member? Things don't add up.
It wasn't until I was talking to my confidant aunt tonight that things really hit home. I'd just returned from great-grandmother/housesitting and my aunt (as she promised) told me how broaching the subject of me moving in with my other aunt to my mother went. Apparently my mother was all "oh, well that's nice, because she has to be out of here by September". In a not-pleasant way. So she was serious. And here I was worried that she'd be upset that I wanted to move in with Auntie A. Foolish me.
Having analyzed the situation so far, all I can think of is that my mother is embarrassed of me. My living in her house, wearing the same clothes to work (dress code) every day, my lack of complaining vocally about how shitty my job is, it sickens her. She wants to be able to tell her pals that the daughter who was the only person from her grade to get into a specialized high school and then went on to an Ivy-League college is now in graduate school/medical school/law school. The whole Radioshack thing doesn't fit into her equation. That's all I've come up with, that she just wants to be able to go on with her day without seeing me and being reminded what a colossal failure I've turned out to be. I've explained my nursing school plan to her, and she doesn't accept it. I don't know what she wants me to do, whether she wants me to work or go back to school, and every time I try to broach the topic she berates me about what I didn't do in the past. She doesn't support me with what I'm doing now, and she doesn't make me feel like any actions I'm taking are of any significance. Any little milestones I achieve, that give me a little bit of warmth (health insurance! yay! vacation time! yay! a position of more importance! yay!) she belittles. There's no fucking winning with her, and just being around her saps my energy. There's so much tip-toeing around subjects that I think will start her off.
And, to be completely honest, that's how it is with most other members of my social support system. So I walk around feeling like shit and they walk around making me feel like shit...no winning. There's just nothing.
How hard is it for people to put their pride aside and just, you know, come with the love and support? Hells, it's never unconditional, but at least try to show you care. None of them have tried looking for a job lately. They think "oh, you went to Brown, you should have no problem finding a job". Yeah, take a look around. That guy serving you your Frappuccino? He probably went to Yale. It's tough out there. But you wouldn't know. The person you work with regaled you with the tale of their daughter's $70G position, and, heck, they only went to City College. Surely the Brown grad can find the same.
Stick it up your ass. And *you* try walking up and down to hospitals, handing out your resume and not hearing back. Or trolling online posting and posting and hearing nothing. Then come back to me with an assessment. "If you really tried looking for a job you'd find one" my fucking ass.
In conclusion: fuck this house, fuck this family, and fuck ... just fuck.