Mean Mothers: Overcoming the Legacy of Hurt

Mean Mothers: Overcoming the Legacy of Hurt

Selected Book Details

  • Hardcover
  • Author: Peg Streep
  • Publisher: William Morrow
  • Release Date: October 2009
  • ISBN-10: 0061651362
  • ISBN-13: 9780061651366
  • List Price: $24.99

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Summaries and Customer Reviews provided by Amazon

Summary

An exploration of the darker side of maternal behavior drawn from scientific research, psychology, and the real-life experiences of adult daughters, Mean Mothers sheds light on one of the last cultural taboos: what happens when a woman doesn't or can't love her daughter.

Mean Mothers reveals the multigenerational thread that often runs through these stories—many unloving mothers are the daughters of unloving or hypercritical women—and explores what happens to a daughter's sense of self and to her relationships when her mother is emotionally absent or even cruel. But Mean Mothers is also a narrative of hope, recounting how daughters can get past the legacy of hurt to become whole within and to become loving mothers to the next generation of daughters. The personal stories of unloved daughters and sons and those of the author herself, are both unflinching and moving, and bring this most difficult of subjects to life.

Mean Mothers isn't just a book for daughters who've had difficult or impossible relationships with their mothers. By exposing the myths of motherhood that prevent us from talking about the women for whom mothering a daughter is fraught with ambivalence, tension, or even jealousy, Mean Mothers also casts a different light on the extraordinary influence mothers have over their female children as well as the psychological complexity and emotional depth of the mother-daughter relationship.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating: Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0

Insightful, Profound, Healing and Hopeful

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

This book spoke to me like no other. For the first time, I felt my story had been told and I'd been heard.

You don't have to have had a Mean Mother to appreciate the findings in this book. Peg Streep
presents a balanced look at the issue with stories from women whose experiences share a common
thread, yet are unique to the individual, while backing up her findings with the science that helps
explain this phenomenon. And there's hope.

I am the product of a mean mother. I am now caring for her in her old age. I have also
raised two of my own daughters in a most loving environment. I can now look at my
childhood and know that my success as a parent is, in part, due to the pain that I suffered
and vowed not to repeat.

My hope is that this book will open up dialogues among society, and women in particular, that will
help us understand, accept and heal the wounds so many have suffered. This is one book that
will be kept as a reference for the healing hug and empowerment I never got from my mother.

Good book on a tough topic

Rating: Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5

Streep tackles a topic that many people have trouble accepting: the notion that some mothers just are not loving, caring people. Some are emotionally distant. Some are just plain mean.

What does a daughter do when she realizes her mother doesn't like her? It seems to be the psychological equivalent of getting a dog you don't want and leaving the dog in the yard. Some women move past the experience while others seem to be stuck.

I suspect the phenomenon is more common than many people realize. When I was in college, several of my friends had mean mothers. It was hard to watch their interaction.

Streep handles this sensitive topic well. She describes her own experience just enough to show that she's been there, without forcing the reader to get caught up in the author's life. She tells stories of women who have been through this experience. Some were able to "divorce" their mothers but others took care of their moms as they aged.

What's missing is more about how women grow past this experience of having lived with a mom who didn't want them. She talks about the experience of becoming a mother, but I wonder how many women with "mean moms" opted not to have children. Since the topic is such a taboo, I wonder if psychotherapists tend to be judgmental as well.

Overall, though, the book is well written. The author deserves credit for handling this topic. I think many readers wll relate to her examples.