Ah you got back in, Hops! Well done on your re-entry to the online world lol.
Thank you, both. I'm staying on my own path but the similarities between her and my mum are blowing my brain; it does make me wonder how much of this is genetic and if I just got lucky that particular gene isn't too strong in me.
I cancelled a get together we had planned; I won't go through all the details but it had been arranged so that I could spend time with the kids, lots of calls back and forth due to school holiday dates, access visits with their dad, hospital appointments (them and us) and so on, plus the distance to travel and so on. So has taken quite some time to arrange, finally got it all organised and was then told oh actually, child one has this on that day, child two has so and so, etc. This is exactly the sort of thing my mum would do. So I've cancelled that altogether.
Contacted all the kids last night separately, just day to day chat, how was school, do you still have to sit next to that annoying girl, have you started thinking about Easter yet, those sort of everyday questions. Woke up this morning to very nice message from my sis with some links to things she thought I might like (summer clothes etc). She rarely contacts me and if she does it's usually because she wants something and never considers anything I might like/want (in the form of sending links) and again, this is exactly what my mum would do - she's not the centre of attention (because I've contacted the kids independently) and more importantly, not in control, so its a charm offensive to get me back to asking her how the kids are instead of asking them myself.
I've realised I've made the same excuses for her that I always did for my mum - she had an abusive childhood, she doesn't have support, there's not a lot of money. But all of those apply to me, too, and I've worked my bits and pieces off to try to break the cycle and stop all of that affecting my son as well. So it's kids only from now on.
I was thinking yesterday about trying to shift my mindset away from 'dealing with my problems', and to think more about people who inspire me. Ordinary people, not famous ones, but people I've known who've done something really good with their situations - started a business with their redundancy money, moved abroad to give their kids a better life, someone I know who's battled addiction for years is working as an addiction counsellor now. And I realised that I still keep focusing on people who don't inspire me. I focus on people who frustrate me because they don't work to solve their own problems. Isn't that silly? Anyway, it was just another thing I noticed. Something else to move the mind in a different direction.