"...so I can only imagine that they were an even more amazing set of parents to my mother and her siblings." It's common knowledge that the relationships people have with their grandchildren are completely different than those they had with their own children when they were young. I would balk at stories of MomMom being on the warpath because I could not imagine my sweet, chunky, salt-and-pepper-haired Italian MomMom with the singsong voice being a tyrant. (Ironic because I threw "Italian" in there...) But as I got older I started to get it, obviously. And now that I have "grown up" conversations with my aunts, I learned that MomMom wasn't always sweet and may not have always spoken in a singsong voice. Well, okay. There's a rumor that my own mother was a bit of a troublemaker, and everyone knows that my youngest aunt was a hell of a troublemaker - to this day she claims that she learned it all from my mother. (Yeah, that's still very, very hard for me to believe.)
Anyway, my mother isn't the "sharing" type.* Her personal feelings are usually pretty closed off, unless you get her mad as hell and then the whole neighborhood learns just how she's feeling. Getting my mother to open up is like pulling teeth. I want to know the intimate details of her relationship with her mother growing up because, dammit, maybe it would give me some insight as to how to deal with her in her role as a mother of two adults and the grandmother of my nephew.
And the light bulb just went off over my head.
My aunts will open up to me. They don't sugar coat anything. My first plan of attack has been laid out for me and I didn't even see it until just now. (I knew there was a reason I decided to write this all out.) They know my mother better than I ever will, and they haven't built up walls as tough as the ones my mother surrounds herself with.
Maybe I can prod my youngest aunt a bit while we're at the beach this weekend....
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PopPop & MomMom, 1974, Ma, 1974 (?), and me, 2012 |