Motherless Daughters (28 page)

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Authors: Hope Edelman

BOOK: Motherless Daughters
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Younger siblings often benefit from strong relationships with their older brothers and sisters after a loss, a bond that’s often gratefully acknowledged during adulthood even if it wasn’t always appreciated during childhood. A 1983 study of seven adolescents who’d lost a parent to death between the ages of seven and ten and a half found that the four children who coped best were all deeply involved with an older sibling. Thirty-two-year-old Kim says her brother, now forty-two, helped her develop self-esteem and feelings of worthiness after her mother died when she was two. “I always tell people I’d be a pile of mush without my big brother,” she says, with a laugh. “Even when I was a little kid, he took me everywhere with him. When he was sixteen and playing in bands, going through a real wild stage, he still brought me with him. Think about it: Who would want
a six-year-old sister tagging along? But he let me, and that always helped me feel like there was someplace I belonged.”
There are, however, some serious risks involved when one sibling views another as a replacement, rather than a substitute, for the lost parent. An older sister or brother may become the object of a younger sibling’s displaced anger toward the mother, and those feelings, if not reconciled, can turn into resentment and deep hatred. The younger sibling may feel angry and resentful when the older one leaves to pursue a life beyond the family. An older sibling may develop an exaggerated illusion of power over a younger one and refuse to let her separate. Or a younger sister may shift her expectations for total support from her mother to a sibling who just as forcefully rejects that role.
“When I was in high school, I turned to my sister, who was five years older than me,” remembers thirty-two-year-old Roberta, who was fifteen when her mother died. “And she told me, ‘No, I’m not going to take on your problems.’ She made it very clear to me that no matter how much pain I was in, she was not willing to take it on. And I was amazed. I was totally insulted. Just stunned that she would be what I thought was that selfish. I’d always thought she had so many answers. To this day, she tells me, ‘No. Go to a shrink. I don’t have any answers.’ Which basically isn’t bad advice, but it was hurtful to hear that first time.” Roberta does admit, however, that her sister’s resistance to taking on the mother role allowed her to remain a sister. Although the two are not particularly close today, Roberta says she has a clear idea of what their sibling relationship does and does not entail.
When an older sister tries to become a mother replacement for a younger sister, the two may become enmeshed in the developmental struggles—including adolescent separation and rebellion—that typically occur in mother-daughter relationships. But an older sister usually is ill-equipped to handle these changes, and the younger sister may suffer developmental confusion if she begins the process and then discovers it can’t progress very far.
Mary Jo, forty-three, was eight years old and the youngest of three sisters when her mother died. She was virtually raised by her older sister Patty, who was thirteen when she took over the family’s
cooking and cleaning, and became Mary Jo’s primary day-to-day caretaker. “I went to Patty when I started menstruating, and for those type of things,” Mary Jo recalls. “She really became a mother to me, which had advantages to me at the time but serious drawbacks to her. She’d been severely depressed all her life, and that, combined with her sense of ‘I’m the oldest female in the house now, and I have to take on the responsibility,’ was not a good mix.”
Mary Jo grew up identifying with Patty, who in turn overidentified with their mother. Six years ago, when she reached the same age their mother had been when she was diagnosed with cancer, Patty attempted suicide. Mary Jo visited her in the hospital and pleaded with her to get help. A few months later, Patty overdosed again. She died that day.
Mary Jo is now in therapy working through this loss and sorting through her Good Mother/Bad Mother issues—which she has with her
sister. “
Patty really tried to make my life better when I was a kid, but she was all fucked up herself, and some of those things came out in negative and controlling ways,” she explains. “We were close in such a love-hate kind of way. I’m working hard to remember and integrate those times when she was wonderful to me, but I can also see how a lot of my negative patterns come from her, and from the way she controlled my emotional life because of the power I felt she had over me.”
In an ideal situation, a motherless daughter with older siblings places most of her dependency needs on an available father and draws added—but not total—security from one or more siblings, if she has them. Middle children who can take on small, additional amounts of responsibility, yet still have other family members they can rely on when they need to regress during times of stress, may fare the best. They can gain a sense of competence but also have the family foundation they need to feel emotionally secure. Thirty-two-year-old Samantha, who at age twelve was the second of five children when her mother died, had a father she could rely on, a younger sister who relied on her, and an older sister to whom she brought her questions and concerns about her body, her friends, and boys. The three oldest girls in her family were close before their mother died, and today they live in neighboring towns and talk several times a week.
My sisters and I used to wake up on the weekends, make breakfast for the family, and then climb back into bed and talk for two or three hours, about anything. We’d do it sometimes at night, too. So I’ve always gone to my sisters with my problems. Sometimes to my friends, but my sisters are usually first. If one of us doesn’t know the answer to a question, we try to figure it out together, or we ask around. The oldest one has an incredible amount of knowledge about the human body, and she’s our resource. She’s married and has three children, and is very matter-of-fact about pregnancy and childbirth. She’ll be sort of an authority figure to me, if I get married and have children.
Samantha says that she’d like to become a mother one day but is in no hurry. After mothering her youngest sister for almost twenty years, she wants a rest before she starts again. Many motherless women who’ve cared for younger siblings express the same opinion. “I already raised three children,” they say. “Now I want to devote some time to myself.”
Of course, it’s a different experience to raise a child whose birth you’ve planned and prepared for, and to do it as an adult. Nonetheless, women who raised younger siblings and later had children of their own often find that their previous experience helped prepare them for some of motherhood’s demands. Thirty-six-year-old Bridget, who took care of her two younger brothers from the time she was twelve until she left home for college, says that being a mother to her son felt like a natural role for her to assume. She never worried that she’d be a bad mother. “The nurturing part isn’t difficult at all,” she explains. “But I didn’t raise my brothers when they were very young, so in some areas my experience is evident, while in others I’m pretty clueless.”
Bridget has no contact with her father or stepmother, and all of her grandparents have died. But her brothers, she says, have stepped in to give her son the kind of unconditional yet distanced love that she once received from her grandparents. “My brothers don’t know how to deal with babies, so at first they were like, ‘Oh, he’s very cute and sweet, and we love him,’” she says. “But now Alex is four, and he’ll get on the phone and talk with them about someone at school who’s being a bully,
and he’ll ask what he should do. My brothers really have to put their thinking caps on. I’m always thrilled to see them all interacting like that. That’s when I have a sense that even though my mother is gone and I had to raise my brothers, the three of us are definitely a family.”
Birth Order
We’re not usually aware of the influence that birth order has on us, but our sibling position spawns a set of internalized roles and ideas that affect how we see the world. According to the psychologists Margaret M. Hoopes, Ph.D., and James M. Harper, Ph.D., the death of a parent changes the signals about sibling role assignments that a child received at birth. A middle child accustomed to relying on others may suddenly have to become the caretaker if an older sibling is unavailable or defects from the family. A younger child used to being babied may need to take on more responsibility for herself than she ever had to before.
Sibling roles can go haywire when a father remarries and stepsiblings enter the constellation. If, for example, a stepfamily joins two oldest children under the same roof, they often go head-to-head in competition for the slot of leader of the new sibling group. When sibling positions duplicate, confusion and conflict are typical states until a new pecking order emerges.
The following characteristics, drawn from personal interviews, survey data,
7
and published psychological research, are common birth-order responses for daughters in families that lose a mother.
 
AN OLDEST CHILD
• May gain quick maturity and responsibility if she takes control of the family, but exercising power at an early age can make her overly controlling as an adult.
• May develop patterns of service to others and become a highly empathetic and compassionate woman.
• Often leaves home quickly to escape responsibility and then feels guilty, or stays home for longer than otherwise planned and sacrifices an identity of her own.
• Feels disconnected from her early childhood if she has no one to tell her about those years, but serves as a family historian who can tell younger siblings about theirs.
• May have more trouble separating from her absent mother than her brothers or sisters do. In a 1989 Amherst College study of students of both sexes and all birth orders, first-born daughters reported the highest level of involvement with their mothers and the least separate sense of self.
• Is least afraid to lose her father. Only one out of ten oldest daughters with a father still alive says she fears his death “a lot,” compared to one out of four youngest daughters. This may be because oldest daughters were often closer to autonomy and less dependent on their parents when their mothers died.
A MIDDLE CHILD
• Is both an older and younger sister, and may feel confused about which role offers her more security in the family. In her normal need to regress after the loss of a parent, she may identify more strongly with the role of younger sister and turn to an older sibling to care for her. Or, if an older brother or sister is unavailable as a family caretaker, she may have to adopt that role for younger siblings and resent it as “not her job.”
• May feel overlooked or excluded, and leave home earlier than the other siblings to differentiate and develop an identity of her own.
• Is least likely to find a mother substitute—44 percent of the middle children surveyed said they’d never had one.
A YOUNGEST CHILD
• Is often perceived as the “baby” of the family and shielded from the facts of a mother’s illness or death, leading to confusion or resentment toward other family members. She may
grow up distrusting those who told her less than the truth, or expecting authority figures to withhold information from her again.
• May find that her loss is either overdramatized or minimized as family members try to cope with their own grief. “Poor little Jenny had it the worst” shifts their focus off themselves and onto her; “Jenny had it easiest because she remembers Mom the least” allows them to avoid confronting a child’s pain.
• May feel angry about having had the least time in an intact family, and have a particularly difficult time with holidays and family celebrations.
• Finds that her models for development are suddenly unhealthy or absent when older siblings zoom through adolescence or young adulthood to take on extra responsibility, act out, or vanish from the family.
• Is the most likely to be “Daddy’s little girl” and has the hardest time when he falls ill or dies. Of all the women surveyed who said they feared the death of their fathers “a lot,” the largest group—50 percent—were youngest children.
• May perceive herself as most profoundly affected in the long term. Forty-eight percent of the youngest children surveyed for this book said the loss of their mothers was “the single most determining event” of their lives, compared with only 27 percent, 22 percent, and 23 percent of oldest, middle, and only children, respectively. In addition, half of the adult women who said they couldn’t identify any positive result of their early loss were youngest children.
AN ONLY CHILD
• Usually has received more attention from her mother than other children. Therefore, in effect, she loses more.
• Is typically more adept at dealing with adults, which can aid her in a search for mother substitutes.
• Learns about heterosexual relationships only through observing her parents, and loses that primary model when her mother dies. If she doesn’t have a stepmother, or if her parents’ marriage
was conflicted, she may feel uncertain about how adult women relate to men.
• Has a difficult time accepting a stepmother, because she’s used to having her father to herself.
• Is more egocentric than other children. Her primary concern after a loss is herself—“What’s to become of
me
?”—which can lead to a nearly obsessive fear of losing her father, too.
• Feels the impulse to become “perfect” so that her father will not abandon her as her mother did.
• Learns how to behave toward a parent by observing the other parent, rather than by observing a brother or sister. Therefore, after her mother dies or leaves she behaves toward her father as her mother did, which can cause role confusion.
A DAUGHTER IN A LARGE FAMILY (FIVE OR MORE CHILDREN)
• May have been cared for by older siblings long before the loss, because a mother’s attention was divided between so many children. If a daughter’s emotions are already partially invested in an alternate mother-figure, she could have less difficulty adjusting to the change in family routine when her mother dies.
• May see a natural leader/teacher emerge from her siblings, who can become a surrogate mother for younger ones. This is usually, though not always, the oldest or second-oldest daughter living at home.
• If she’s that older daughter, may feel exploited and angry for having to care for several younger siblings.
• May depend on a sibling cluster for support. For example, a family of seven children often naturally divides into two separate groups based on age. Siblings then turn to their subsystem, rather than the family as a whole, after a mother dies. Because a sibling usually has the hardest time accepting the next younger one, affinities often form between a first and third child, say, or a third and a fifth.
• Must compete with her other siblings for parental affection more than ever in a single-parent home. Each child may not
receive enough attention to compensate adequately for what was lost.
• Might, if she’s a younger child, get sent to live with an older sibling or other relative after a mother dies, and then feels insignificant, isolated from the rest of the family, or guilty for being a burden.
• Can draw her sense of emotional security from the group, because of its size (which increases the chance of finding an ally) and varied makeup (allowing for the presence of both peers and parent-figures). On the other hand, large families often face challenges such as economic hardship that make members feel continually insecure. When a parent dies, an insecure system—no matter what its size—has trouble unifying.
• Is often raised differently than her much-older or much-younger siblings, because parents’ outlook and techniques change over time. A first child’s mother, though the same woman, might have parented quite differently the ninth time around. Likewise, an older daughter may have had her mother present at her wedding and the birth of her first child, while the youngest may not yet have graduated from grade school. These two sisters have different secondary losses, which means they have different mourning patterns and needs.

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