Horrible Mothers

Breach of a Sacred Trust

Nonfiction, Family & Relationships, Family Relationships, Parent & Adult Child, Parenting, Health & Well Being, Self Help
Cover of the book Horrible Mothers by Alice Thie Vieira, AuthorHouse
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Author: Alice Thie Vieira ISBN: 9781449014407
Publisher: AuthorHouse Publication: August 25, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse Language: English
Author: Alice Thie Vieira
ISBN: 9781449014407
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Publication: August 25, 2009
Imprint: AuthorHouse
Language: English

This seemingly simple but truly complex question True or false: My mother was a good woman. This item has appeared in one form or another on countless psychological inventories over the years. The culturally-prescribed answer is, of course, True. Even the people most abused by their mothers tend to rise to defend "Mom." The rationale varies: She was basically good; She was never cut out to have children; She simply had no idea how to be there for me"; Perhaps if she hadnt had me; Maybe it was I who turned her into a bad mother?

As early as 1954 in his work with abused children, psychoanalyst Ronald Fairbairn observed that a child acknowledging to herself or anyone else that she had a bad mother or that her mother was a bad woman was tantamount to admitting that the child was, by association, a bad person--and so it becomes an act of self-preservation to hold that one's mopther is good, never mind allevidence to the contrary.

In Horrible Mothers, pshychotherapistAlice Thie Vieira takes us into the world of individuals who have endured devastating damage at the hands of society's most sacrosanst icon: the Mother.

Vieira does so with four chief aims:

  1. to label abuse so as to be able to acknowledge it;

  2. to recognize that the sanctification of motherhood is aburden that society has foisted upon them;

  3. to help mothers understand how their mothering may have hurt their children;

  4. to help victims of horrible mothering grasp the unfairness of what was done to them, to comprehend how it affected their lives, and acknowledge what they have endured so as to break free from unhealthy attachments to their inadequate mothers, and thus move forward and better realize their potentiality.

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This seemingly simple but truly complex question True or false: My mother was a good woman. This item has appeared in one form or another on countless psychological inventories over the years. The culturally-prescribed answer is, of course, True. Even the people most abused by their mothers tend to rise to defend "Mom." The rationale varies: She was basically good; She was never cut out to have children; She simply had no idea how to be there for me"; Perhaps if she hadnt had me; Maybe it was I who turned her into a bad mother?

As early as 1954 in his work with abused children, psychoanalyst Ronald Fairbairn observed that a child acknowledging to herself or anyone else that she had a bad mother or that her mother was a bad woman was tantamount to admitting that the child was, by association, a bad person--and so it becomes an act of self-preservation to hold that one's mopther is good, never mind allevidence to the contrary.

In Horrible Mothers, pshychotherapistAlice Thie Vieira takes us into the world of individuals who have endured devastating damage at the hands of society's most sacrosanst icon: the Mother.

Vieira does so with four chief aims:

  1. to label abuse so as to be able to acknowledge it;

  2. to recognize that the sanctification of motherhood is aburden that society has foisted upon them;

  3. to help mothers understand how their mothering may have hurt their children;

  4. to help victims of horrible mothering grasp the unfairness of what was done to them, to comprehend how it affected their lives, and acknowledge what they have endured so as to break free from unhealthy attachments to their inadequate mothers, and thus move forward and better realize their potentiality.

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