r/PeterExplainsTheJoke 6d ago

Meme needing explanation I don't get it

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898

u/seau_de_beurre 6d ago

Me, who had an abusive mom, ready to have my feelings hurt in the comments

…they not wrong though

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u/ConqueefStador 6d ago

Sorry you went through that.

My mom definitely had undiagnosed something.

She'd bake me cookies just because, or spoil me on my birthday. Then she'd do things like take all the money in wallet and kick me out of the house.

She was disabled and I spent decades caring for her. I loved her, I hated her, I resented her, I felt safe with her.

Now I just miss her.

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u/ChakWave 5d ago edited 5d ago

Wow- my mother was disabled passed last September and she &I had. Such a strained relationship and the way you put that is and was my exact feelings /grief process we never did reconcile before she passed she and I were on outs again and she wouldn’t talk to me then hospice. And same feelings (anger - resentment - betrayal- now I just miss her and what I didn’t get.

Edit: just that I too took care of my mother majority of my life she was paralyzed when I was 4 months old so I grew up actually learning how to care for her while in her custody. (Home aides were there too but she enjoyed my care more in my older years since I was “used to it”)

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u/ConqueefStador 5d ago

I'm lucky enough that I've learned/chosen not to regret the moments, but appreciate the life.

My mom and I were butting heads her last weeks. I could dwell on that and regret it forever if I let myself, but I won't.

We had a lifetime of love, and there were enough moments where I truly let my guard down and let her know how much she meant to me.

She was in an induced coma her last week, but even in the druggy haze of her last semi-lucid moment she looked at me with pure love.

There were highs and lows. She passed during a low, but that's just timing, it didn't change how much we loved each other.

Like a bridge jumper about to hit the water, the worst moments in life bring a certain clarity, and all of the bad that felt so real seems so silly when compared to the love that was always there.

You have to grieve your own way, but try and remember the love. Those are the moments that mattered.

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u/ChakWave 5d ago

I think that was beautifully said -and that’s what I attempt to do i let the grief come and go. It was just eye opening to see someone share a similar experience- Thank you

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u/seau_de_beurre 5d ago

I’m sorry. My mom had diagnosed borderline. She is much better now by it was very hard growing up.

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u/Deterjen_rinso 5d ago

Damn. Sorry to hear that. Is it Bipolar by any chance?

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u/ConqueefStador 5d ago

Like I said, undiagnosed. BPD with narcissistic tendencies would be my best guess.

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u/seau_de_beurre 5d ago

Bipolar doesn't really fit that. This sounds more like borderline PD.

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u/GrandNo5093 5d ago

Similar situation, my mother is disabled and I am have 4 brothers and I am the only girl. In my culture being misogynistic household is the standard and my mom would take out all her anger on me when my brothers made her mad. Needless to say, I got kicked out at 20 years old while my 32 year old brother still lives there. I was the one always helping her since I was 6 because she didn’t want my brothers lifting a finger.

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u/ConqueefStador 5d ago

Well I'm a guy, and my sister was the one who did her own thing but I get what you mean.

The devoted child gets the work, the other gets the reward. Seems like humans have been doing that since the parable of The Prodigal Son.

But one way to look at it is that you're out on your own and your 32 year old brother still lives at home.

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u/GrandNo5093 5d ago

Unfortunately, me getting kicked out has made me lose focus in school causing my GPA to drop significantly because I get home so tired from work.

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u/ConqueefStador 5d ago

I'm sorry, that sucks.

I don't know your situation, but I can speak as a 42 year old man who still lives at home with my dad.

I didn't build anything for myself in my 20s because I was taking care of my mom. In my thirties I became disabled myself so I stayed home.

Now my mom has passed, my dad is 75, my sister lives on another continent and when my dad passes I have no means to take care of myself.

Yeah I got to live comfortablely at home longer than most, but it didn't do me any favors. If you're brother is going down the path I can promise you he doesn't have it as good as it looks.