This week, ChloĂ© Thibaud wonders if it’s possible to be a feminist and cut ties with one’s (toxic) motherâŠ
âStop stuffing yourself, youâll end up obese!â, âA 12 in French? With all the books I buy you?â, âYou know if you stay this clumsy⊠no one will ever love you!â Have you ever heard these phrases? In Dear Mother (GlĂ©nat), Alix has everything to be happy â a job she loves, a loving husband, three children â and yet, something is wrong. This something has no name, no face; itâs a shadow that hangs over everything. The shadow of a âmotherâ who isnât really one. âThose words, âyouâre beautiful,â Iâm pretty sure my mother never said them to me,â the heroine confides. âAt least, I donât remember it.â I read this graphic novel by Sophie Adriansen (script) and Mademoiselle Caroline (art and colors) just before Motherâs Day. Deeply moved by the accuracy and realism of this story, I first realized how lucky I am to have a mother who has told me âI love youâ almost every day since I was born. Then I became aware of the number of people around me who have suffered or are still suffering from not being in that situation. âAccording to experts, 20% of the population grew up with a âtoxicâ parent,â we read on the back cover. Sophie Adriansen is one of them; she drew inspiration from her own story to write it. âIt took me a very long time to become aware of this maternal toxicity,â she explains. âI felt like a failure in my mother-daughter relationship. I had to confront this idea that you are necessarily an ungrateful daughter if you question your motherâs point of view, if you donât say âyesâ to everything, if you set limits. I had to feel ready to assert myself with my mother, against my mother, and that took time.â
If it takes time, it’s because the subject is still taboo.
The subtitle of Dear Mom is “Mothers Can Be Toxic Too.” The adverb “can be” is loaded with meaning. “Toxicity is starting to be addressed in marital and professional relationships,” admits Sophie Adriansen, “but the fact that the person supposed to love their child unconditionally from the day they’re born can have questionable behavior, yes, that remains taboo. In the eyes of society, you don’t have the right to resent your mother. To say you resent her is pure ingratitude, because this person gave you life, potentially sacrificed herself. So, not acknowledging this ‘eternal debt,’ saying you refuse to feel indebted, that you choose yourself, that you prioritize your own existence, is extremely frowned upon.” Because she chose to prioritize her own family, Sophie Adriansen faced judgment from those around her. âWhen you donât have that type of mother, you donât believe it exists and you think itâs an exaggeration.â So, how do you know if your mother is truly toxic or just normally annoying? On page 182 of the graphic novel, the author shares a âDo You Have a Toxic Parent?â quiz with fifteen questions such as âDoes your parent sometimes make fun of you? / Do they sometimes criticize you? / Do they sometimes praise you? / Do they sometimes make you feel guilty? / Do you feel like nothing you do is good enough for your parent?â Of course, you might answer âyesâ to some things, but that doesnât mean your mother is jeopardizing your mental health. âAs parents, we can all be toxic at times,â comments Sophie Adriansen. âThe difference with classic conflicts is the permanence, the recurrence, the density of the remarks, the fact that there is no respite or that this respite is an alternation of hot and cold, which results in never knowing where you stand.â I shared this questionnaire in a story on my Instagram account and I received more than fifty testimonials from women (and three men) whose mothers ticked most of the boxes.
Simone
Marie, 50, the eldest of four children, tells me: âWe had a happy childhood because we ‘lacked for nothing’. Except for our mother’s love. I have no photos of myself as a baby in her arms, no memories of her accompanying me to sports… and above all, never any encouragement, never any praise. Always reproaches. Even when I gave her a gift. My whole life was devoted to pleasing her, in vain.â The same goes for Fanny, 34: âZero encouragement, only criticism since childhood. Never good enough, even when I got good grades, always putting down those around me to distance myself. I started my working life with zero self-confidence, always very anxious, and with my main goal being to be perfect and for everyone to like me. I had to endure her phone calls for years, even though she knows I hate them. They lasted an hour and a half, and I had to be her therapist because all she did was complain.â Many women have chosen to cut ties because they felt so suffocated by their mother-daughter relationship. This is the case for Clothilde, 46: âI no longer speak to my mother because it was impossible for me to feel bad every time we talked. My mother always positioned herself as a rival to me. When I was a child, I excelled at school, but she would just tell me ‘that’s normal’ in a curt tone. In my teens, she would tell me repeatedly that I wasn’t ‘feminine’ and that she, at my age, had loads of suitors. At the same time, as soon as I tried a more feminine style, she would forbid it, saying it was vulgar and that I ‘looked like a whore.’ She also neglected me a lot; I spent my childhood sometimes waiting for her for two or three hours after my activities. Her authority was erratic: she would forbid me everything and then let me do whatever I wanted.â Despite the suffering, it can sometimes take decades to realize that this treatment, this control, is not normal. âI spent years thinking her behavior was normal, then excusing it, then telling myself it was my fault she was like that,â confides Jeanne, 28. âI realize now that she really behaves like a stalker. Iâm grieving the mother I thought she wasâshe sold me her myth, stylish daughter, cool and brilliant momâand Iâm grieving the one I should have had. Iâm my own mother now, Iâm taking care of myself. I regret that she let the demons in her head and from her childhood come between us.â
In talking with dozens of women, I quickly realized that their ages varied greatly. Does this mean that this maternal toxicity has nothing to do with belonging to a particular generation? âSince the comic book came out, through messages or at book signings, the illustrator and I mainly see women, but also men, who say, âThe mother in the book is my mother,â and sometimes, âSheâs my father,â but Iâve noticed that it concerns people of all generations!â reports Sophie Adriansen. âIâm 42 years old, and I meet women twenty years younger than me as well as women my motherâs age, which reveals a pattern, a way of functioning that transcends the era. We initially thought there was a generational aspect to it, perhaps linked to the children of May â68 who are reacting to overly strict upbringing or reproducing certain things⊠But no, it concerns women of very diverse ages and backgrounds.â Questioning one’s mother, grandmother, but also one’s sister, best friend, or boss, can seem difficult in a time when we are increasingly called upon to show solidarity with one another. In this sense, would cutting ties with one’s mother be an anti-feminist act? âI would tend to think the opposite,â the author replies. âIf we cut ties because it proves necessary or because we are creating distance, it means we are rejecting the mechanisms of domination at play. Taking back control of one’s life, one’s own path, is rather feminist, isn’t it? Mothers who seek at all costs to exert this domination are reproducing something patriarchal.â Feminist education can even be one of the tools that helps you cope better with a toxic mother, as LĂ©a, 30, explains to me: âAt 26, I had a constant feeling of failure and inferiority, until I met a 50-year-old colleague, single and childless, who said to me, ‘Your mother isn’t very feminist, is she!’ I asked her to explain what feminism was becauseâno jokeâbetween my closed-minded background and my seven years of medical school, my knowledge was limited. It was a revelation to realize that 100% of my pain came from the patriarchy, which my mother also suffers from, along with my father, and which she reproduces on me⊠Feminism allowed me to detach myself from all of that. Today, I want to be as active as possible in activism to flourish and, I hope, help other women do the same.â
If you have questions about your relationship with your mother or someone close to you, I highly recommend reading Dear Mom, which will undoubtedly lead to a greater awareness. âWe don’t have to break things off, but we also don’t have to stubbornly cling to a relationship that hurts us,â concludes Sophie Adriansen. I would add, for those who aren’t victims of toxic parents but witness this kind of relationship, that this book helped me finally put an end to the infamous, and incredibly damaging, âBut still, she’s your motherâŠâ
Simone loves it: ChloĂ© Thibaud’s recommendations.
âFor as long as I can remember, I’ve been careful about my weight.â This is the first sentence of Juliette Lenrouilly’s book, AffamĂ©es (Fayard), and it resonates particularly with today’s episode. In one out of every two testimonies I collected, the women told me about their mothers’ remarks about their weight. What if, whatever our weight, we’re always âtoo fatâ? The journalist conducts an eye-opening investigation âinto the culture of thinnessâ and focuses in particular on the phenomenon ârecently dubbed the âalmond mom.ââ She explains: âIn the world of the âalmond mom,â being thin is paramount, and if you’re hungry, a few almonds should suffice.â I liked the fact that she gives a voice to many witnesses â particularly the women around her (including her mother, by the way) â and it’s a rather judicious read as we approach June, during which, spoiler alert, we’ll inevitably hear about this damn “summer body”!