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Did you ever see your mum cry other than at the death of someone.

(83 Posts)
travelsafar Mon 06-Sept-21 17:00:32

I remember seeing my mum sobbing in her bedroom one morning. I had been outside playing with friends and i came in for something and couldnt find her. As i went to the bottom of the stairs to call her, i heard a strange noise. I crept up the stairs and there she was on the end of her bed sobbing. I didnt know what to do. She must have sensed i was there as she turned round and smiled at me saying' what a silly old mum you've got' I rushed in and hugged her. My mum crying was unheard of. Many years later i knew why, her marriage to my father was coming to an end and she must have felt terribly alone as back in the day you didnt talk about this kind of thing, not like today when there are lots of ways to obtain help and advise. Even thinking about it breaks my heart as she must have been so afraid for the future.

Gingster Mon 13-Sept-21 07:56:26

My mum never cried, - I cry at anything and everything. ?

absent Mon 13-Sept-21 07:45:44

I was very ill just before my twenty-first birthday and admitted to hospital rather late in the day. My parents were told that I had no more than a 25% chance of survival. (No one told me.) I came through surgery and was treated for pleurisy and pneumonia, then it all went pear-shaped again and I had many more hours of surgery and was back in ICU. Both my mother and my father cried when they thought I was asleep.

SueSocks Mon 13-Sept-21 05:03:25

No never, not even when dad died. I reached out to her in the funeral car to be told brusquely, “I’m all right”. Not a single tear, unlike my sister & myself.
As a family, on my mother’s side, crying was really frowned upon, you had to keep a stiff upper lip & keep up appearances.
The first experience of bereavement for my sister & myself was my grandad (or pap as we said in Northampton), I was 19, my sister 14. Sister was crying after the funeral, really inconsolable, mum reprimanded her. Luckily dad had a different attitude, told my sister that it was OK to cry & that he had cried in private.
Very different attitudes in those days from some people.

Brocky Sun 12-Sept-21 14:43:44

Only once I saw my mother crying. She said she ‘could go’ knowing I was alright. She suffered ill health for many years. My husband fetched my parents (150 miles away) to come and see our first house. My mother said she ‘could go’ (expecting her death anytime in the near future) seeing our house she foresaw that I (an only child) had a better future, she had lived in Council property all her life.

MissAdventure Wed 08-Sept-21 18:04:40

flowers
That must be cathartic.
Your poor mum.

Jaxie Wed 08-Sept-21 18:02:17

At the age of 3 in 1946 I remember clinging onto my disabled mother’s skirt as she sobbed whilst getting my father’s toiletries out of the bathroom cabinet. He was ditching my mother, my brother and I to go off with his mistress. He never returned and as a consequence we had a poverty stricken existence. I curse that man for his utter selfishness. There, I’ve got it off my chest.

MissAdventure Wed 08-Sept-21 17:40:17

As a child I never saw my mum cry, but latterly, yes.
The poor soul had plenty to cry about. sad

Iam64 Wed 08-Sept-21 17:25:04

My mum cried when she was sad, bereaved or when reading/watching films. She laughed easily and wasn’t scared to show her feelings. That meant we could.
My heart goes out to posters saw their mothers wee- after being battered by husbands. No words to describe the horror of a mother who knew their husband was abusing her daughter and did nothing, didn’t even shed the tears she so easily shed for herself

Marthjolly1 Wed 08-Sept-21 16:57:55

My mother had a quite a miserable marriage being married to my very selfish adulterous father. But the only time I saw her cry was when my eldest sister became pregnant even though she was in a long term relationship. Mum cried for weeks. What will people think she would cry. The shame was immeasurable being a 'good catholic' family. So sad.

Elusivebutterfly Wed 08-Sept-21 14:29:56

I never saw my mother cry and was quite shocked when my friend told me that my mother had cried at her house when I was 8 years old.
My mother had taken my brother to the GP, thinking he only had something minor, but she was sent to the hospital and he was admitted. On the way home she went to her friend's house (my friend's mother) and cried.

Calendargirl Wed 08-Sept-21 14:07:31

When I was about 8, my dad, who was a busy farmer, had bad lumbago/sciatica. Mum, who always helped out, had to do twice as much. She made a cauldron of tasty soup/stock and left it simmering whilst outside. For some unknown reason, my older sister decided to test the temperature of said soup and stuck a thermometer in! It exploded and all the glass and mercury went into the soup. When Mum came in and saw what had happened, she just sobbed as she threw it away. My sister and I were horrified, we had never seen Mum cry before. She was worn out, anxious about Dad and had so been looking forward to this tasty soup.

We felt so awful, and have never forgotten seeing our stoical, practical mum in tears.

GrammarGrandma Wed 08-Sept-21 12:52:05

Yes. One occasion I remember was when her brother died; I cried too.

GreenGran78 Tue 07-Sept-21 23:48:55

My mum was a terrible worrier, probably because of the war, but I don’t remember her every crying, even when my 22 year old brother was drowned.
I seemed to have inherited her stiff upper lip. I never consciously try not too, but tears never seem to come when there is a crisis, and I have been through quite a few over the years. On the other hand I often have a little weep at a sad film, tv programme, or even a fictional book.
I am seriously weird!

Sawsage2 Tue 07-Sept-21 17:22:53

When I was 9 my dad died of cancer, nursed by mum for months. After he died my mum used to cry, I would say to her 'don't cry I'll fetch you a hankie', then I would cry as well. ?

Kayteetay1 Tue 07-Sept-21 17:11:55

Your post sums it up for me too. My poor mum. I guess that generation handled fear and sadness differently. This is certainly making me take stock and reflect.

Gabrielle56 Tue 07-Sept-21 17:09:51

#TEAR grrr.....

Gabrielle56 Tue 07-Sept-21 17:09:09

Gosh may7! I was thinking mine never cried but you know Kennedy's death was first time saw parents both really cry! We were made to come in from play and we just sat feeling daft! Second and last time dad cried was when our dog Roguey died in 1970 he was nearly 18 and mum and dad's new puppy when they adopted my older sister. I was groomed and raped by a man 10 years older than me but they didn't she'd one year, I was made to leave grammar school and it wa never mentioned. Later in life I think I realised they were just ashamed and embarrassed I'd had to leave the grammar!? Saddos!

NannyG123 Tue 07-Sept-21 16:48:22

Yes. It broke my heart. I came home from work and she was sitting in the kitchen. With a letter in front of her. Her mum had died a few weeks before. And the letter was from her brother. ( sent to another brother)The brother forwarded it. Thought my mum should see it. saying lots of nasty thing about my mum and that she only looked after my nan(her mum) for the last year of nans life. For all the money she made from her mum. None of it true. My mum gave up work to care for her. Her mum lived with us for that time. Whilst this brother who wrote the letter rarely came to see his mum. I hasten to add after the funeral we didn't see him again

Shelbel Tue 07-Sept-21 15:12:59

No. The only emotion she seemed to have was anger or laughing at other people's misfortune. I know it's not nice but it is the truth. My mother was very narcissistic and aggressive. We are no longer in contact

jaylucy Tue 07-Sept-21 15:04:37

I can remember hearing my mum crying in her bedroom after her having an argument with my dad. It probably happened more than once - she commented when one of my friends split up from her husband , that she , at times would have liked to have done the same but she had nowhere to go, so she stayed.
My parents were married for 59 years before my mum passed away unexpectedly after a stroke.
Seeing my dad cry after that and during the funeral was absolutely heartbreaking.

Jillybird Tue 07-Sept-21 14:24:25

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

bobbydog24 Tue 07-Sept-21 14:23:57

I never saw my mum cry until I told her I was pregnant. I was engaged at the time but in 1968 it was frowned upon. Being pregnant before you were married. I married and had my son 7 months later and he was the light of her life and was until the day she died.

JdotJ Tue 07-Sept-21 14:16:13

No, I never did, even when my dad was diagnosed with terminal cancer and died within 6 weeks of diagnosis.
Different generation, been through the war, stoical, stiff upper lip and all that - sad sad

Suze56 Tue 07-Sept-21 13:25:53

I vividly remember coming home from school when I was 6 to find my mum weeping - it was the day of the Aberfan disaster. Apart from that seldom - significant bereavements, loss of beloved pets, the day we reconciled after a two year rift in our relationship and a couple of occasions towards the end of her life when she was quite frail and confused due to vascular dementia.

Lulubelle500 Tue 07-Sept-21 13:15:00

My mother cried so rarely I can remember each time vividly. I remember her reading the account of the Moors murders with her tears spilling onto the newspaper. For the generation of women who saw children killed in the Blitz the idea that anyone would choose to torture and kill a child was incomprehensible