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Mark Sichel, Burning Moms in the Town Square?

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Burning mommy

As many will be aware, I have been hard at work on my research about family estrangement. As a part of my research I do what every good researcher does ... I trawl Google looking for other writers, books, people who share the interest. As such I was pretty stoked when I found an article in Psychology Today, tagged estrangement. The article was doubly interesting to me as it was written by Mark Sichel, a psychologist who has written one of the very few books available about family estrangement, Healing from Family Rifts. I clicked the link, and up popped the article, Once a Parent, Always a Parent: One Mother’s Resignation by Literary Defamation: Children are off limits when writing about personal experiences.

My social worker 'spidey' senses tingling, heart sinking, I began reading.

The Reader's Digest version of the article is, writer, Julie Myerson is accused of writing about her children, thusly denying them both respect and privacy.  She is accused of betraying love, intimacy and motherhood by various rabidly angry critics and Mark Sichel, rather than taking a more objective, principled high road, throws a few more sticks on Myerson's pyre in the town square. He states that Ms Myerson, "resigned from her job as Jake’s mother", after asking her 17 year old son to leave the family home for his drug abuse and chaotic behavior. A strategy known to many parents as "tough love".

Mr Sichel might have chosen to explore the historical context of tough love, and how various people have experienced this parenting strategy as both powerfully positive and also horribly horrific. He may have wanted to look at the sorts of advice parents are given from family, friends and so called 'experts' about how to manage an 'out of control child'. He might have looked at how very often mothers are blamed for children being 'out of control' and how it also very often left to mothers to sort out how to 'manage' those 'out of control' children. He may have chosen to look at the social constructions of motherhood, mother blame and 'good enough' parenting as presented by psychologist Donald Winnicott. He may have wanted to acknowledge that Myerson is hooped either way she fights the fight: Allow her son to remain in the family home, exposing the larger family to the chaos of a drug abusing teen - or ask him to leave ... either way, she will be criticized as a mother, as a woman.

Sichel criticizes Myserson's decision as an abdication of parenthood and frames it in the context of Myerson's estrangement from her own father. There is a suggestion here that Myserson has somehow failed to 'learn the lesson' inherent in her own experience of parental estrangement . Sichel however, does not go on to explore the very frequent pattern of inter-generational family estrangement, or to consider how Myserson may have been profoundly shaped by her experiences. There is little of compassion in Sichel's criticisms of Myerson, a quality I consider as primary and central to the family estrangement discourse.

Sichel points out that Myerson may have used her son's period of abstinence 'as a stepping-stone to repairing the rift
between Jake and his family
' and seems to freeze this possibility as a one off opportunity, now missed - due to the fact Myerson broke the Golden Rule, Thou Shalt Not Write About Thy Children. It should be said that even after a fairly vigorous search for this literary 'rule' I have seen no evidence of it. The world is full of books, blogs, magazine articles of people writing about their kids. It is not until we see mothers, speaking of their experiences of parenting in less than glowing terms, that the 'mommy police' come out of the woodwork. [see my recent post, Bad Mommy]. Had Sichel included even a brief mention of this phenomena, I'd have been appeased. But no.

"Julie chose to publicly expose her child’s drug problems and the related behavioral problems caused by the drug abuse.  Now that, in my opinion, is off limits, indecent and obscene." So says Sichel. "Any parent with respect for their child and human decency, love and kindness would not be critical of their child in their writing and publicly humiliate them for their own glorification

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AKAFiona 5 pts

Thanks very much for reading and your comments, whatkindofmom :) I couldn't agree with you more - we aren't seeing much critical reflection around motherhood - and we sure don't spend much time openly discussing family estrangement either.

Best of luck with your estrangement issues; estrangement can be a hard ol' row to hoe! If you are interested, you might want to check out my research blog, E-Stranged [http://estrangedfamilies.wordpress.com/] - feel free to visit and start a chat.

Cheers,

Fiona

whatkindofmom 5 pts

Great article Fiona..

I too have been struggling with estrangement.. particularly estrangement for non typical reasons.. ie.. estrangement when an adult child just says "I am done with you".. will not return a phone call, an email or a text and refuses to tell you what you have done?  These are children who have decided to have nothing further to do with their parents, but not because of abuse or alcohol, not because of drugs or disagreement of lifestyle, but simply ... because ... maybe because someone else's family is cooler, maybe because a gf or bf says your parents are weird.. who knows?  but good for you to consider a mother for a change!  you sure don't see much of that going on in the news lately!

Thank you!