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This is a question Helicopter Parents

Back when young ScaryDuck worked in the Dole office rather than simply queuing in it, he had to deal with a claimant brought in by his mum. She did all the talking. He was 40 years old.

Have you had to deal with over-protective parents? Get your Dad to tell us all about it.

(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 15:13)
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Have a pearoast from the last time this question was asked...
My parents seperated when I was about 4 or 5. I went with my mum and she moved back to a remote island off the west coast of scotland where her family lived. She didnt work and was skint. We lived in a mobile home/caravan thing which was a good 5 miles from the nearest other kids. My mum doesnt drive. I spent years there, just me and my mum, playing on my own. I never had ANY friends as I never socialised at all after school.
My parents got back together and returned to the mainland. I was looking forward to being near other kids, but they moved into a farmhouse in the middle of no-where and again I had to make do with my own company. All the years there, I can remember 2 occasions where other kids came to see me and I never went to see other kids at their houses. Any kind of after-school activity or club was not allowed.
Eventually, they moved to a house in a small village, a house which overlooked a football pitch and large play park. Loads of other kids playing all day, woopee. Except my mum wouldnt let me go out for any length of time in case I was abducted. I had to "check in" with her every 15 minutes whenever I went out anywhere. This basically tied me to a very tight circle around the house. All the other kids could play around the village all day (this was 20 years ago so parenting was generally quite relaxed regarding kids being outside, and the village was a great place for kids to grow up) and regarded me as some kind of freak as I had to keep running home. Bullying ensued.
My mum didnt seem to think it strange that I was a total outcast and spent all my time in my room watching the other kids have fun. Becoming a teenager made no difference, I had to tell her exactly where I was going, who I would be with, and when I would be home. She usually over-ruled and gave me a much earlier time to be home by, and she called the police a couple of times when I was late by 10 minutes or so, and would be in real tears of anguish, certain I had been kidnapped, molested and murdered.

Going to a party? no chance.
Staying over at a friends house? no chance.
Joining the cub-scouts? no chance.

Due to her rediculous over-protectiveness I grew up as a total social reject with no confidence and a complete inability to make friends. Now Im 31 years old, Im still shy, quiet and uncomfortable in crowds.
She has an alzheimers-like wasting brain disease and can barely remember the names of any other family members but she still asks where I am and when I will be back every day. She will probably be dead by the end of the year and I cant say im too bothered to be very honest. I love her, but I think her over-protectiveness ruined the formative stages of my life.
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 17:25, 8 replies)
Jesus!
I genuinely feel for you mate. :-(
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 17:59, closed)
that sucks.
my mum was never that bad, but I can see where you're coming from. I still love her, she's my mum, but sometimes i don't like her for the fuck ups she left me with.

But don't be like that for the rest of your life matey, get out there in social situations and try to deal with this stuff. It WILL be hard work at first cos you're trying to teach yourself to behave in a scary new way, but it gets easier with practice, trust me.
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 18:11, closed)
I would add to this...
...don't let the bad bits cloud what's left of your time with your mother as you'll end up hating yourself for doing so.

She made mistakes, there's no denying that, but she did so because she loved you and was worried about you.
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 20:17, closed)
Honda
Accord
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 18:17, closed)
my mum
was never quite that bad but she was also ridiculously protective of me, and I grew up to be a complete social misfit.

Took me years to build up any confidence, and I spent years being angry at her - until I had kids of my own and realised how much you will do to protect them. I even wanted to throttle a 5 year old lad at my daughters school because he held her hand on the way back from the toilet!
(, Thu 10 Sep 2009, 22:59, closed)
Crikey
It can be fair cathartic this site eh!? Hang in there mate, yer a long time dead as Kaol once said to me on here, so get out there and make it happen.
(, Fri 11 Sep 2009, 3:02, closed)
I'm sorry,
but advice from Kaol? Hahahahahahahahahahah.
(, Fri 11 Sep 2009, 15:55, closed)
Harshness.
But hey, I'm not massively comfortable in crowds and don't make new friends easily. I grew up fairly socially, n'such.

Might not be totally her, y'know? The shitness of the kids around you might have had some effect, etc.

Just saying.... try not to hold onto the grudge. Can be a bit soul-destroying long term.
(, Sat 12 Sep 2009, 7:36, closed)

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