kiaraenjoyer
New Member
Hello, I need advice on my current situation.
My mother and I recently got into an argument over my issues with school, and I am unsure how to talk to her afterwards (I never get angry or argue with anyone). We have had some tension between for a while due to communication issues. She wishes for me to tell her my issues, but when I do, she says something to the affect of "you need to just get over it" or "you need to grow up and be a responsible adult". When I tell her I don't feel listened to, she claims I o
nly hear what I want to, but from my perspective, I only remember hurtful things rather than anything helpful.
For some context, the day before I had expressed my frustration with how boring my assignments were and my lack of motivation to do them, and as I was going to bed she came in my room and said "If you're not going to do your work, you might as well drop out." and left. I didn't sleep because I was so upset and crying.
I didn't fall asleep until much later and ended up missing my classes for the day. I thought it might just have been because my grandmother, who has dementia of some sort, had a very awful excrement-related incident earlier that day, her migraine was particularly bad, and my laptop decided to not turn on suddenly (all stressful things), but when I woke up she was complaining how I have no reason to be upset and stay in bed all day.
I've tried expressing to her multiple times just how much I struggle with doing things that are "easy", but as previously mentioned, she doesn't seem to understand just how difficult it truly is and thinks it is simply an excuse. I truly wish I was making my struggles up, but unfortunately, I am not.
Around August or September of 2023, I brought up that I was 99.9% likely to be autistic, but she only told me "No, that's not possible, you're not disabled." despite me struggling with basic daily tasks, struggling extremely hard with school, not being able to navigate "basic" social interaction/communication without struggling greatly for my entire life, and her criticizing me for these traits.
When she was informed my half-sister was recently diagnosed with ADHD, her response was that she couldn't be because "she's just lazy".
I believe she has a mix of internalized ableism and narrow-mindedness going on, as she doesn't want to call herself disabled despite having multiple chronic illnesses that often leave her bedridden.
Everyone else in my life I have told has responded along the lines of "I thought you were diagnosed already?" so I truly don't understand why she is so resistant to accept this.
I don't really feel the need to pursue a official diagnosis as every random ND person I come across asking me if I've been diagnosed is good enough for me, I'm starting to think it might truly be the only way to get her to understand.
I'd also like to note that the only reason I am currently in college is because she pressured me into going, that I wpuld be giving up if I didn't do so NOW, immediately, even after I expressed I wasn't ready many times and reminding her of my trauma with school, which she seems to conveniently forget every time I bring it up.
As soon as I started classes, I remembered the reason I had struggled with school so much; the assignments were way too boring and felt pointless, as I had already learned the materials contained within and found no value in doing it 5 times over. I just wouldn't do assignments I didnt care for, and unfortunately am still doing this. When I expressed to her how frustrated I was having to do the same things I'd done multiple times and how pointless it felt since I just wanted to paint, not write a bunch of fluff, her response was "Everyone has to do this, you think they're happy about it?" and when I simply couldn't understand why we had to, she just talked about how "that's the way things are, there's nothing we can do about it" (my least favorite phrase)
She keeps pushing for me to see a new therapist (stopped seeing my old one due to insurance changes) but I havent told her the reason i haven't is because talk therapy doesn't help me much, given the autism in my brain will not shut up about how to resolve my problems and a therapist trying to do that for me is kinda redundant. I have a referral letter from my doctor for formal diagnosis, but I have not told my mom due to her resistance and I feel a immense amount of shame and guilt over having my doctor write it despite them just saying "Yeah, sure" when I asked (I like my doctor, they are not dismissive if this seems so).
The issue is, upon my self-research of local organizations and support groups, they are all either for children or parents of children. Not very helpful.
She also seems to think just because I will be 20 this year, I need to have my entire life figured out and know exactly what I am doing. She always makes disparaging comments about "why aren't you guys like that" when she sees stories about children who graduate early or even on murder shows where they go "Person always knew they wanted be a nurse, it was their passion. It's so tragic they got murder died before they could become one"
Up until now, I've neglected to mention my sister, but she is very supportive of me and tries to communicate my needs to our mom, but it seems to have varying success. My sister has had her own behavioral issues in the past, but I feel my mom never was as critical to her as she is to me for these problems.
When she has tried to tell mom my struggles are not an excuse, she still somehow doesn't get it but blames me slightly less. It's at least some reprieve.
Sorry for the super long rant, but point is:
Do you have any advice on how to make her listen at all? My current method is explaining exactly what's going on with my mental state and trying to make it understandable to her, but that doesn't seem to be working.
I just feel very betrayed by my own mother not listening to what I'm saying.
My mother and I recently got into an argument over my issues with school, and I am unsure how to talk to her afterwards (I never get angry or argue with anyone). We have had some tension between for a while due to communication issues. She wishes for me to tell her my issues, but when I do, she says something to the affect of "you need to just get over it" or "you need to grow up and be a responsible adult". When I tell her I don't feel listened to, she claims I o
nly hear what I want to, but from my perspective, I only remember hurtful things rather than anything helpful.
For some context, the day before I had expressed my frustration with how boring my assignments were and my lack of motivation to do them, and as I was going to bed she came in my room and said "If you're not going to do your work, you might as well drop out." and left. I didn't sleep because I was so upset and crying.
I didn't fall asleep until much later and ended up missing my classes for the day. I thought it might just have been because my grandmother, who has dementia of some sort, had a very awful excrement-related incident earlier that day, her migraine was particularly bad, and my laptop decided to not turn on suddenly (all stressful things), but when I woke up she was complaining how I have no reason to be upset and stay in bed all day.
I've tried expressing to her multiple times just how much I struggle with doing things that are "easy", but as previously mentioned, she doesn't seem to understand just how difficult it truly is and thinks it is simply an excuse. I truly wish I was making my struggles up, but unfortunately, I am not.
Around August or September of 2023, I brought up that I was 99.9% likely to be autistic, but she only told me "No, that's not possible, you're not disabled." despite me struggling with basic daily tasks, struggling extremely hard with school, not being able to navigate "basic" social interaction/communication without struggling greatly for my entire life, and her criticizing me for these traits.
When she was informed my half-sister was recently diagnosed with ADHD, her response was that she couldn't be because "she's just lazy".
I believe she has a mix of internalized ableism and narrow-mindedness going on, as she doesn't want to call herself disabled despite having multiple chronic illnesses that often leave her bedridden.
Everyone else in my life I have told has responded along the lines of "I thought you were diagnosed already?" so I truly don't understand why she is so resistant to accept this.
I don't really feel the need to pursue a official diagnosis as every random ND person I come across asking me if I've been diagnosed is good enough for me, I'm starting to think it might truly be the only way to get her to understand.
I'd also like to note that the only reason I am currently in college is because she pressured me into going, that I wpuld be giving up if I didn't do so NOW, immediately, even after I expressed I wasn't ready many times and reminding her of my trauma with school, which she seems to conveniently forget every time I bring it up.
As soon as I started classes, I remembered the reason I had struggled with school so much; the assignments were way too boring and felt pointless, as I had already learned the materials contained within and found no value in doing it 5 times over. I just wouldn't do assignments I didnt care for, and unfortunately am still doing this. When I expressed to her how frustrated I was having to do the same things I'd done multiple times and how pointless it felt since I just wanted to paint, not write a bunch of fluff, her response was "Everyone has to do this, you think they're happy about it?" and when I simply couldn't understand why we had to, she just talked about how "that's the way things are, there's nothing we can do about it" (my least favorite phrase)
She keeps pushing for me to see a new therapist (stopped seeing my old one due to insurance changes) but I havent told her the reason i haven't is because talk therapy doesn't help me much, given the autism in my brain will not shut up about how to resolve my problems and a therapist trying to do that for me is kinda redundant. I have a referral letter from my doctor for formal diagnosis, but I have not told my mom due to her resistance and I feel a immense amount of shame and guilt over having my doctor write it despite them just saying "Yeah, sure" when I asked (I like my doctor, they are not dismissive if this seems so).
The issue is, upon my self-research of local organizations and support groups, they are all either for children or parents of children. Not very helpful.
She also seems to think just because I will be 20 this year, I need to have my entire life figured out and know exactly what I am doing. She always makes disparaging comments about "why aren't you guys like that" when she sees stories about children who graduate early or even on murder shows where they go "Person always knew they wanted be a nurse, it was their passion. It's so tragic they got murder died before they could become one"
Up until now, I've neglected to mention my sister, but she is very supportive of me and tries to communicate my needs to our mom, but it seems to have varying success. My sister has had her own behavioral issues in the past, but I feel my mom never was as critical to her as she is to me for these problems.
When she has tried to tell mom my struggles are not an excuse, she still somehow doesn't get it but blames me slightly less. It's at least some reprieve.
Sorry for the super long rant, but point is:
Do you have any advice on how to make her listen at all? My current method is explaining exactly what's going on with my mental state and trying to make it understandable to her, but that doesn't seem to be working.
I just feel very betrayed by my own mother not listening to what I'm saying.