ChatterBank5 mins ago
is it wrong to hate your mother?.....
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...is it wrong for me to hate* my mother?...I have finally realised after 37 years that she really isn't a very nice person....
*..I know hate is a very stong word, and I do not use it lightly....
*..I know hate is a very stong word, and I do not use it lightly....
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't consider it any more wrong than hating anyone else ~ it is obviously personal to you & you have your reasons.
I don't think you should have to like anybody. I do take what Ray & dotty have said on board ~ if you think your mum is wonderful then of course losing them is incredibly painful. It takes two people to make a relationship..if she isn't a nice person then don' t fret about it..just live your life as you see fit :o)
I don't think you should have to like anybody. I do take what Ray & dotty have said on board ~ if you think your mum is wonderful then of course losing them is incredibly painful. It takes two people to make a relationship..if she isn't a nice person then don' t fret about it..just live your life as you see fit :o)
The greatest myth in the world is that parents and children have "unconditional love." Once you are past your early teens, you will have developed a distinct and unique personality which may very well be at odds with that of your mother or father. There is no "rule" governing it, it is what it is. So don't feel guilty.
I don't know why people always say "there is a very fine line between love and hate". What does this mean? How do you know there is a fine line between love and hate? I can think of several people that I hate, and the thought of ever coming remotely close to loving them is just totally untenable. So where does the fine line come in?
I spent a long time hating my mother for allowing my father to beat the living daylights out of me on a pretty much daily basis and thought she was a monstrous person. I then bothered to go and really have the whole thing out with her properly and whilst I still think she was 100% wrong and misguided and to blame a lot for what happened to me when I was a kid, I don't now hate her, as I would be depriving myself of the opportunity to have a realtionship with my mother that is based in the here and now and not 40 years ago.Things have improved dramatically between us and although it'll probably never be the way it should be between a parent and child it's better than hating her, so if you can discuss, forgive and move on then I'd say do so, but if what's happened is unforgiveable then don't beat yourself up about it, some people are not nice and it's an accident of nature who you're related to, you don't have to love or like them.
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No, you are not wrong. Only you can know what has caused the barriers between you. RedHelen is right though - you must come to terms with your feelings and guilt before she passes away - so that you then don't spend the next 20 - 30 years living in regret.
A Friend of the family regularly berated her mother and did so in a public platform by writing a sort of biography of her earlier life and stating that she "hated" her mother and calling her for everything and blaming her for most of her problems. When her mother died suddenly - she went to pieces and was equally publicly overraught, which surprised me as the depth of her feelings were strong to say the least.
A Friend of the family regularly berated her mother and did so in a public platform by writing a sort of biography of her earlier life and stating that she "hated" her mother and calling her for everything and blaming her for most of her problems. When her mother died suddenly - she went to pieces and was equally publicly overraught, which surprised me as the depth of her feelings were strong to say the least.
Someone once said to me 'You can love your Mother but it doesn't mean you have to like her' Some of us have Mothers we really like and are friends with and some of us have Mothers who we love but actually don't like very much or are unable to be friends with. That's actually OK as long as you accept it as such.
people don't generally say "theres a fine line between love and hate" - this is obviously come from another phrase and has got mixed up.
love and hate are two extremes of emotion, at either end of the scale - the opposites.
people say you can have a love/hate relationship - yes, but it is still love/hate, it is still the two very different emotions side by side.
you can love and dislike, or hate and quite like, but it will not be too much of an extreme feeling - theres is no line
love and hate are two extremes of emotion, at either end of the scale - the opposites.
people say you can have a love/hate relationship - yes, but it is still love/hate, it is still the two very different emotions side by side.
you can love and dislike, or hate and quite like, but it will not be too much of an extreme feeling - theres is no line
People do use the phrase and I guess if it doesn't resonate with you then you haven't experienced the fine line! I honestly think love and hate are two sides of the same coin if u want to put it like that... They are both passionate emotions that come from the heart.
Lots of good points on this thread. Agree that the bottom line is to reconcile your feelings whatever they are so you don't end up eaten up by hate or guilt etc.
Lots of good points on this thread. Agree that the bottom line is to reconcile your feelings whatever they are so you don't end up eaten up by hate or guilt etc.