A.K. asks from Schenectady, NY on April 17, 2011
My Mil Is Seriously Irking Me
My son has cerebral palsy. His left arm is much stronger than his right and because of weakness in his right arm and nerves in his brain not working as well, he doesn't use his right arm very much. My MIL is currently visiting, she was also here a few weeks ago for a couple days. Last time she was here she started referring to his right arm as "his bad arm". That really really bothered me. He does not have a "bad arm" - he has a strong arm and a not so strong arm that he is working on strengthening. In fact, for a year and a half I've been working in therapy with him to strengthen his arm, and he's made a lot of progress. I don't appreciate her saying he has a "bad arm" - it really hurts my feelings. There is nothing 'wrong' or 'bad' with his arm! Last time she was here when she started saying that I very politely and seriously told her that he does not have a bad arm - I explained to her what is going on with him and that I didn't like the term bad arm.
Now, she's back, and she's doing it again. She put his shirt on tonight and told me "I did the bad arm first". I have never told her to put one arm into the shirt before the other, because there is no reason to do that. She's taken it upon herself to make rules for how he needs to be dressed and to say over and over again that he has a bad arm. I think I might throw something at her head soon.
So What Happened?™
Thank you to the supportive comments. I don't usually get up in arms over things like this - being the parent of a special needs child, this comes with the territory. When a woman in my local mom group started spreading awful rumors about my son "missing half his brain", I didn't let it get to me. Is it hurtful? Sure. She's never experienced the utter devastation and heartbreak that comes and turns your life upside down when a group of doctors and nurses and therapists lead you into a private office to tell you your child may not live, and if he does, can expect to sit in a stroller for his entire life. I think I do pretty well, without taking "chill pills", having to deal with that for the last year and a half. With that, my skin has certainly toughened up. While I still can't understand why anyone would knowingly and willingly attack a child (even verbally), especially a special needs child, I can understand that some people simply have bad hearts and maybe can't help themselves. However, I draw the line with family. I try to look the other way when my MIL uses the word "retarded" to describe people, because it may not have been inappropriate in her day - heck, in her day they just shipped all the special children off to orphanages! No harm there. But, she is my mil and my sons grandmother and as a person who cares for our family and can see the pain we've gone through, and can see how well our son had done, I absolutely expect her to be more considerate of my wishes for her not to use certain phrases that I deem hurtful. It's not impossible for her to learn to leave those terms out of her vocabulary - she isn't senile.
And while I know that different generations have different ideas of what's acceptable and not acceptable, it comes back to her being able to understand my request, and her choice to respect that request or not.
As far as my husband... he very clearly lays down the law when it comes to his mom crossing lines. I haven't told him about this issue yet because I'm trying to spare her a chewing out. If she doesn't listen to me though, it would not be difficult to have my husband speak to her.
Thank you again for the understanding and support. A tiny awful part of me wishes every mother could be a special needs mother, so everyone could experience what I've experienced and be compassionate and understanding. The bigger better part of me wishes that pain on absolutely no one... and tries to be the better person when others tell me how to feel.
Featured Answers
S.R. answers from Detroit on April 17, 2011
Maybe you could ask her to refer to his right arm and his left arm if she
needs to make refer his to arms for any reason. Hope things get better!
5 moms found this helpful
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G.T. answers from Modesto on April 17, 2011
Trust me, when you get older you are going to have a bad eye, bad knee, bad shoulder, etc.
You might pull her aside and tell her that "psychologically speaking" we are not using the term "bad" arm because our hope is that one day his not so strong arm might be perfectly fine, please try not to call it "bad" in front of him because we don't want him growing up thinking part of his body is "bad".
I think you are overreacting to her term of "bad" tho. jmo
13 moms found this helpful
F.H. answers from Phoenix on April 17, 2011
My step daughter is retarded. So when I say this to you, its coming from experience. Your mil is not used to being around him. And although you told her you didn't like her saying "bad arm", did you give her another term to use for it? In the big picture of things, this to me really isn't a big deal. it sounds like she is helpful (she's trying to help dress him) and she obviously likes to visit. I would say that if this is your MIL complaint, it really isn't a big one. figure out something else she can say when referring to his "bad arm" and tell her and simply remind her when she forgets. good luck.
10 moms found this helpful
S.B. answers from Redding on April 17, 2011
I don't think your MIL meant anything by it.
By putting one arm in the shirt first, she was probably just trying to be gentle. Another thing is that many people who are older will say "bad arm" or "bad leg" when one gets garfed up, scraped up....broken. It's not to say that one arm or leg is better than the other or one is less adequate.
I'd bet money that she doesn't mean it that way. I think that to say she's making rules for how he needs to be dressed is a bit of a stretch.
Just my opinion.
You are very sensitive to this and you have every right to be. I just honestly don't think your MIL is trying to do something wrong or to upset you.
I wish you the best.
9 moms found this helpful
L.L. answers from Rochester on April 17, 2011
It sounds like your mother-in-law is stressing you out (and I don't blame you) but try to look at it from her perspective. She isn't sure how to handle his condition..."bad arm" doesn't mean anything so terrible...you just really need to explain to her that you don't want to refer to it that way.
Also, with the dressing thing...I don't think she was trying to make up rules for him, she was probably doing it the best and safest way she knew possible. In all my experience in nursing, when dressing people who have had strokes and are essentially paralyzed on one side, we dress the "bad" side first. It's more comfortable to ease that side on, and then stretch on the side that has more muscle. I'm sure she was just doing what she thought was best, and wanted your approval on how she was dressing him.
It sounds like maybe she is very unsure, and wants to do the right thing, but knows how you feel about her. I don't know. I understand your frustration, and it just sounds like the two of you need to have a serious talk. Encourage her to open up. Remember, this is also her grandchild...and she probably is a little overwhelmed, too.
I CANNOT believe someone is suggesting you THREATEN your MIL with not seeing your children for SIX MONTHS if she slips up and says "his bad arm"...yeesh!!! I'm sure it's just habit, not her being spiteful...I mean, is she or is she not loving, caring, and there trying to help you? Please don't attack this woman. If you want her to change, encourage her to change.
8 moms found this helpful
T.V. answers from San Francisco on April 17, 2011
Your "tiny awful part" wishing every mother could have a special needs child to me, is much worse then your child's grandmother using a term to describe his disability.
I'm glad you want to "spare" your husband's mother a "chewing out", because it seems to me that she loves her grandson, her son and you, and her reference to his problem as his "bad arm" is purely how things were referred to in her era (as well as many others), versus what you deem as politically correct or what you want to hear.
No matter how much you would like it to be different, there IS something "wrong" with his arm and it's because he has cerebral palsy. Don't make an enemy of your husband's mother, she might turn out to be one of your son's greatest supporters.
Blessings....
8 moms found this helpful
P.M. answers from Portland on April 17, 2011
I can sure understand your wish to have people recognize your son as good, and to talk about him in positive terms, especially when he can hear their comments.
And I hope you'll put on a different hat for a minute and try looking at this uncomfortable situation from another angle. Different people have more-developed and less-developed areas in their brains. There are areas for recognizing faces, names, words, sounds, smells, etc. Some of us have astounding verbal areas, or amazing mathematical areas, or motor skills that allow superior athletic abilities. But I'll bet ALL of us have "bad" areas in our brains, too. As in, not so "good" and serviceable as other areas. I have a terrible time recognizing faces and remembering names.
My thoughtful and kind husband (who actually writes for a living) uses at least a billion automatic phrases like "bad arm," and occasionally seriously shocks others or embarrasses himself. He mispronounces words and people's names, even after being corrected dozens of times. It seems to be a legitimate handicap. He apparently can't help it, and people who know him and love him accept that about him.
So, if it were my husband calling your son's arm "bad," would there be any purpose in your being hurt by it? No, and that would actually reveal that it is YOUR issue, not his. That makes it your responsibility to make peace with the fact that some people will not use the terms you find most positive for your son's condition. It also makes it your responsibility to teach your son not to be too easily offended or wounded by other people's choice of words (even if they choose those words deliberately). Why should he be hurt if he doesn't have to be?
Some of the greatest thinkers in human history have taught that offense lies not in what is said, but rather in how the listener thinks about it. Nobody can insult me if I refuse to be insulted. What freedom!
6 moms found this helpful
M.P. answers from Portland on April 18, 2011
Even tho your son is less than perfect, your mil, his grandmother, still loves him. She comes to visit. She helps with dressing. She isn't asking him to do something or not do something that comes naturally to him. Can you still love your mil even tho she's unable to remember to not use the word bad without requiring that she stop using the word?
Bad is just a word. Apparently it has a negative connotation to you. To your mil, it may just mean that arm works less well than the other arm. It's a statement of condition and is not negative at all. You can choose how you feel about what she says.
Some grandmothers would be ostracizing a special needs child. I urge you to look at the positive aspects of your mil's involvement so that the negative one(s) take on less importance.
5 moms found this helpful
S.R. answers from Detroit on April 17, 2011
Maybe you could ask her to refer to his right arm and his left arm if she
needs to make refer his to arms for any reason. Hope things get better!
5 moms found this helpful
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