www.MothersOfAdultChildren.com
Sometimes I am baffled about what action to take, or not take, when it comes to addressing issues with my loved ones. Even when I feel totally justified about being upset, one guideline I follow is to resist the urge to act impulsively. I let some time pass so that my wounds can start healing before I say something I might later regret.
Then I think through the likely consequences of bringing up
a difficult issue, and, if I realize that doing so will hurt or cause
defensiveness, I wait until I’m certain that this is a risk worth taking.
Meanwhile, I remind myself that seldom, if ever, do my dear family members
intend any harm, and I stay open to messages that may offer me direction.
About a month ago, my young adult grandson Kevin did
something that I found very hurtful. His action, or, rather, inaction, was part
of a larger pattern not unusual for 21 year-olds, especially males, but it cut
me to the core, especially since I have gone way above and beyond to make his
senior year in college extra special.
At first, nothing but retribution seemed satisfying: I
wanted to hurt him as he had hurt me, and I nurtured fantasies of not speaking
to him and of withdrawing financial support. I fanned the fire of righteous
indignation by compiling a list of all I’d done for him in recent months and
how little he had done for me. Before long, I had dragged into my speech
everything but the kitchen sink, and I was searching for a way to include that.
As the weeks wore on, my rage softened to hurt, and the hurt
was tempered by my remembering that Kevin had a few things on his mind besides
his grandma, including taking final exams, saying goodbye to long-time friends
and preparing to leave the college cocoon to step into the glaring lights of
Real Life. I became increasingly glad I had waited. And then, today, I received
the message that helped me let this hurt go, in two haiku poems my precious
brother-in-law Bob Mieger wrote during the past year, after he knew he was
dying of glioblastoma, the most aggressive type of brain cancer.
CELEBRATE
Time’s short – let’s
party!
Choose the best of
each moment
Love myself and you.
Find what’s important
Let go of everything
else
And set yourself
free.
Brother Bob with granddaughter Molly, Seattle, 2011.