Onedia in the Ozarks

Archive for the ‘Relationships’ Category

May 8th, 2011 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

Mothers’ Day Viewed Through Tears

Mothers’ Day and Valentine’s Days are the two holidays that seem to generate all types of sentimental rhetoric, poems, songs, it goes on and on.  With no wish to diminish Mothers’ Day for anyone and no intention to address the overly romanticized VDAY…I would like drama e1304869237489 Mothers Day Viewed Through Tearsto comment about Mothers’ day for the folks who find it painfully awkward.

These are the people who stand in front of the card racks looking at the sentimental cards thinking, “NO Way , will I send that lie to her” or simply passing them by for something more truthful.  They turn to the humorous or the bland and simple , “Wishing you the best on this day” and ultimately grab the one that represents the closest to the truth or at least the smallest lie. Some succumb to the lie hoping it will somehow become truth.

These are the people who grew up walking on eggshells and living in emotional mine fields.  Their lives were not simply ordinary with the occasional bump or rough spot.  These are the people whose roller coaster childhoods and youth hit rough spots weekly if not daily.  The rough spots may have come with physical pain, bruises and breaks while others had the hidden injuries and emotional bruising of deliberate verbal and emotional abuse. Others with no less emotional pain suffered because of a mother’s mental illness or substance abuse.

These are the people who experienced a warped version of mother-love that was more about the mother’s needs than the children.  These are people whose mother demanded center stage and was jealous of her children and their accomplishment while using their accomplishments to feed her own ego and need for attention and affirmation.  These are people whose mothers threw more tantrums than they did.

These are the people who wanted to love their mothers and found reasons (excuses) for the erratic, scary, and painful episodes.  These are the people who only knew something different if they saw it on television or glimpsed it in the home of a friend or family member.

These are the people who had to consider each word or act for the possible responses.  Neutral was good, positive was better, but negative was always hanging over like a dark cloud waiting to strike like summer lightening.  There were no small events.  A broken glass was a crisis, a forgotten chore was a diatribe, a poor grade or some minor infraction was a personal embarrassment for their mothers.  A misspoken word or unguarded expression ignited an angry outburst.  These are the people who understood that their Mother’s wishes, ideas, plans, preferences, and requirements took precedence.

These are the people who cling to the good moments when their mothers were thoughtful, helpful, supportive, and generous.  These are the people who endured the overly dramatic and uncomfortable demonstrations of affection or  the cold-shoulder or the expositions of “I have done so much for you and you ………..” or the anger and mean words, or the manipulations and exaggerations.

These are the people who observed one charming and delightful person who appeared before strangers and others outside the family and disappeared once inside the car or house.  Worse, the same person would suddenly turn  on them in front of their friends and humiliate them.

These are the people who tried to be good children.  They wanted a harmonious relationship with their mother. They learned to conceal their own personality and to blend into the background.  They learned to not draw attention to themselves. They learned to do what it takes to “keep Mom happy” which meant keeping secrets, not disagreeing, doing what she wanted, going where she wanted, saying the right things, figuring out the right gifts, complimenting her, and accomplishing things that would reflect positively on her and that she could boast about.

These are the people whose relationships with other members of their family suffered because of their mothers. These are the people whose primary role  model for being reasonable, stable, compassionate human beings failed them.  They had to actively seek those role models in others.  These are the people whose fathers even though loving and kind somehow failed them because they could not successfully intercede and protect his children.

These are the people who fight their feelings of guilt because they do not “just forget the other stuff” and love their mother because “they are supposed to love their mother“.  These are the people who would be praised for not keeping such a person as a friend  but are expected  to maintain a toxic relationship with their mother.  These are the people who are told to love someone they do not like.

These are the people who grow up fearing they will be this type of person.  These are people who either shy away from relationships or fly into the arms of anyone who shows affection or offers the hand of friendship only to be disappointed by many of these relationships. These are the people whose friends may never know about their home lives or not believe them when they try to share. After all they only see the charming woman who gives them wonderful food and chats with them.

These are the people who feel guilty for every relationship that does not work.  These are the people who worry and who fear what may happen next.  These are the people who expect something bad to happen just when things are going great.  These are the people who fear happiness will suddenly be taken away from them.

These are the people who spend their time as parents figuring out how to be the kind of parent they wanted. These are the people who agonize when they feel they failed their own children. These are people who often become better parents than they imagine.  These are people whose children get a glimpse into their parent’s childhoods and cherish their parents the more for it.

These are the people who may have a relationship with their mother only because they are determined to do so or because they have been able to willfully forgive and continue to forgive. These are the people whose mother continues to manipulate, berate, and abuse them even as adults.  These are the people who do not  want to spend the day with their mother even though they may just to keep the peace in the family.

They may be the people who could no longer play the game. These are the people who may have finally taken control of their lives. They may have finally severed all connections with their mother.  They may have had to move thousands of miles away or they may simply be on the other side of town. Their mother may have turned against them and even seeks retribution for what she considers betrayal.  They may be cut off from other members of the family.

For each of these people who struggled to become a good parent, wife, husband, sister, brother, child, friend, human being we should rejoice and celebrate their determination, courage, and stamina.  We should be thankful for the  strength of the human spirit to overcome nurture with nature.

If you have or had a kind and wonderful Mother who eased your way in life then consider yourself fortunate and blessed.

If you are a kind and wonderful Mother who nurtures your children with unconditional love and with firm but gentle lessons thank you and bless you.

 

 

note: on Father’s day this article could be appropriate as well.

April 14th, 2010 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

Ten Evaluation Criteria For Successfully Selecting A Life Partner

The author is fully qualified to expound verbosely on this subject.  She conducted extensive research using the methodology and protocols established for the  smart women who make bad choices in men Graduate Program of Matrimonial Disaster. This program includes testing marriage with one or more unsuitable partners who fail to adhere to one or more of the established protocols.

The author also traveled half way around the world to find a spouse who meets all the criteria AND participated in a civil ceremony performed by a duly elected United States territorial official followed in less than ninety days by a religious rite officiated by one male and one female ordained minister in a state of the United States.  Finally, the author received full endorsement from the final approval authority, the then seven-year-old daughter who also performed the duties of  Maid-of-Honor.

Based on this rigorous research the author attests to the validity of the following:

  1. Choose someone who will be your best friend in ten years.
  2. Choose someone who is the right age for you 1.
  3. Choose someone whose values you share.
  4. Choose someone with whom you can play.
  5. Choose someone who is willing to listen and to change behavior when needed.
  6. Choose someone who will not lie to you.
  7. Choose someone whom you will enjoy holding hands with and kissing when you are too tired or just uninterested in sex.
  8. Choose someone who will want your dreams as much as his/her own.
  9. Choose someone who shares some of your interests.
  10. Choose someone whose personal habits do not annoy you2.

There is one last essential secret that you  must apply for these criteria to work flawlessly.  Your intended spouse must apply these same criteria to you!

  1. You will need to ask to get more on this
  2. After all can you really live 30 years with someone who expels intestinal gas and then rates the power of the vapor trail

April 9th, 2010 by Onedia Hayes Sylvest

Sometimes The “Trite” is True

In the 1960s and 1970s many books, films, and TV employed a recurring theme that was either done as an overused dramatic device or a hardly humorous comedy line. The cliché was “it is all my (insert appropriate parent) fault“. Viewers rolled their eyes, laughed, shook their heads solemnly, nodded, or just sat there waiting for the next line to be delivered and the plot to thicken.  However, for many families who may even have laughed there was too much truth in the script for comfort.  They may even have made jokes in their families or quietly complained to each other.

Later, the much used phrase “dysfunctional family” became popular as both serious storyline or comedic themes. Same thing happened.  Some family members made jokes or quietly complained amongst themselves. The sad reality is that the jokes were true and so were the serious themes.  I am not specifically writing about the horrendous levels that you may immediately imagine.

I am writing about the mentally and emotionally charged environments created by one or more parent or even a sibling in a home environment.  I am writing about families that tread carefully and speak cautiously in their homes never knowing when there might be an emotional outburst that is either inappropriate or out of proportion to the circumstance. In two-year-olds we name them tantrums.  I am writing about families who live with a person whose response to everything is colored by the need to be overly dramatic, to be adored, to be perpetually right, and for whom love is more about self than about others.

These people emotionally control the family.  If he or she is unhappy or angry then the entire family is as well. No one is excluded from the tantrums and pouts unless an ally is drafted.  The family energy is spent keeping one individual from becoming upset.  Everything is a drama and nothing is discussed at a normal decibel level and never ever in rational, reasonable discourse.  Any disagreement is deigned criticism of  ”poor little me who has always been abused and ill-treated”. The family lives in low-grade terror even though they may never be  physically touched in anger or punishment.

Some families attempt to find reasons or excuses for their loved one’s behavior.  Blaming their poor control and manipulative narcissism on an event or life circumstances.  These people are perpetually ailing with frequent trips to the doctor or emergency room. They need medicine; they are in pain; they must be catered to.  They are proud parents when their children’s behavior and achievements are deemed to reflect positively on the parent. However, if the child does ANYTHING that may embarrass the parent then the child is unfairly and unduly berated for having embarrassed or humiliated the parent.

This is not to say that love is not displayed.  However, it may be displayed in excess or in ways that are satisfying to the parent more than to the children.  Once again, not to the extremes of anything abusive, simply embarrassing and demanding.  The child who hates being tickled is tickled and the child who doesn’t want to be kissed in public is given several kisses with a big show attached.

Meanwhile the children grow up hoping they will not be like the dramatic parent. They grow up wondering how families are supposed to behave.  They have little idea how relationships are supposed to work and the little may be from books, film, and TV.  They live in fear for their own mental stability. They may feel anxious and uncertain.  They may doubt themselves. They even grow up feeling protective and responsible for taking care of the parent who mentally torments them.

Think about it.  How many of these children grow up and have happy and stable relationships?  How many find parenting easy with few second-thoughts about their actions or decisions?  How many of these people grow up to live their lives without the need to examine their own self-worth and their own psychological stability?

Even as adults these children must continue to deal with the drama parent.  Some do so by being the sibling who is there helping and quietly enduring. Another may get-the-hell-out-of-Dodge and with distance find some levels of peace and control of their lives. Others may float someplace in between. There are many options.  But the one thing most of these grown-ups probably seek is having some portion of their lives operate with a  reasonable predictability and minimal drama.

You may not know people from this type of family situation. You may know people who experienced this but who never share that with anyone. You may be someone with a drama parent. 1 It is a type of psychological abuse that is often unrecognized by ordinary people even those living it.  People who live with it often color it with a different lens or shrug it off, endure it or even deny it.  The situation is insidious and destructive. It does not end without enormous strength of character and ultimately the innate need to protect oneself and one’s own family. Because often the only real solution is to simply walk away.


  1. This is dedicated to the spouses who don’t leave and the children who choose happiness.

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