When Adult Children Fight, a Mother's Heart Breaks
Filed under: Siblings, Opinions, Relationships
When my older son Alex was a child, he did everything before he knew how and without considering if it would work. He walked and fell, rode a bike and crashed. He tried to be a grown-up his way. He crashed, he burned, he learned.
When my younger son Nicolas was a child, he didn't do anything until he knew he could do it without fail. He waited until he was 16 months old to walk, and one day, he stood up and ran. He read when he could understand complete sentences. After many difficult bike riding lessons with his father, he couldn't do more than one or two pedals before falling. Then one day when his father was facing the other way, Nicolas took off down the street.
Alex is an anarchist. He is a hater of leaders and laws, a college graduate and now a writer who envisions a government as slim as a piece of paper. He despises anything that enforce rules on the masses -- traffic signs, tax laws, social norms and customs.
Nicolas, on the other hand, was a military history major, now a police-academy aspirant and law-abiding citizen with one moving violation that he erased through traffic school.
At one time, these were my happy little boys, my sons who played together all day on the weekends, slept in the same room for years. In that small bedroom, they had an enormous Lego town, a town that stayed together through two moves, only dismantled when Nicolas was a sophomore in high school. When they played with the town, Alex took charge, taking the role of the main character; Nicholas was everyone else.
They both went to the same college, called each other frequently, hiked together, laughed together. But when Nicolas began to become the man he is, their ideologies started to pull them apart.
Nicolas could no longer go to the rallies, the protests, the angry mob scenes at the United States Army base in Tacoma. He couldn't listen to Alex's wild tales of anarchist revelry. He began to despise all that Alex stood for, and their drives home from Washington State began to get ugly, full of silences or harsh words. When Alex found out that Nicolas was applying to police departments for work, he felt his brother was attacking his principles.
Our last meal together, all of us sitting around the table of our new home, was as unpleasant as could be.
"Could you just stop?" Nicolas yelled, putting down his fork. "I can't listen to this propaganda anymore. You're just lazy. You just don't want to work."
"And you're doing this cop crap to spite me," Alex shouted back. "You don't really want to be a pig, do you?"
"You think my choice is about you?" Nicolas said. "How narcissistic can you get?"
Finally, after more emotional punching, Nicolas pushed away from the table. Alex followed him in to the kitchen, words flying like missiles, despite my attempts to break up the fight. I eventually managed to quell that argument, but throughout their visit here, the fight erupted again and again, ending with a tense, silent ride up to the Northwest and a standoff that lasted for months.
I have a photo on my desk of my two curly-headed boys, Nicolas hugging Alex, Alex's arm pulling him close. Both are smiling big-toothed smiles. But these two little boys are gone. And the little brother doesn't want to be the tag-along anymore. He's his own man, with his own values and his own life, and what he wants is his brother to accept him. Alex fights back, wanting his ideas to be heard and honored. Seeing that the past is slipping away, big brother grasps for the memories of what was.
I also want to cling to that long-ago brother relationship because it was magical. Somehow, I thought back then, I did something right with these two.
The fighting. This is the part of parenting that we don't think about when children are in diapers. Here is when children become adults, and adults don't always agree and then happily eat peanut butter-and-jelly sandwiches together. Young adults learn how to individuate, and that's what I'm watching now.
It's possible that these two will never come back to one another. The fight could be the axe that splits their relationship wide open, forever irreparable. I close my eyes and breathe in hard when I think of them forever at opposite sides. Siblings are the closest relationships in time and age and place. Siblings know each other in ways no one else can, and to see my boys approach an end to this connection is more than I can bear.
Though it's possible things may never be repaired, and their eroding relationship is painful for all three of us, I have faith that buried beneath the hurt and anger is that hug, those smiles, those two boys in the photo taken so long ago.
Jessica Barksdale Inclan is a novelist who teaches literature and creative writing for Diablo Valley College. Visit her at Red Room to read about her work, including her supernatural romance novel Being with Him, now available in paperback.
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Let him stick around for a bit. Don't worry, his habit is totally normal!
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ReaderComments (Page 1 of 17)
10-29-2010 @ 11:07AM
Alicia said...You can take some comfort in the fact that you raised two intelligent, strong men willing to fight for their beliefs.
I hope they learn that those beliefs don't need to keep them apart, though, and that they can learn to be friends around them.
Reply
11-01-2010 @ 3:13PM
Tootsiechick said...I totally can relate to the mother of two sons. I can't really say that my boys ever had a defining moment that made the separation. I know they were still close as late as when the younger son had his two kids. But at this point in life it breaks my heart that they don't have anything in common and don't really have a close relationship! I've tried over the years to talk to my older son and encourage him to make an effort. Because I know my younger son would love to have some kind of relationship with his older brother. As you said it rips my heart out when I think of them never being close ever again! If anyone has any idea's I love to hear them!
11-01-2010 @ 5:47PM
vickie said...woderful answer...I have two grown sons...they are 6 years apart...alittle different ...but brothers....always....Alex is the one full of life looking for bigger and better things and not afraid......nicolas on the other hand ,since he was young is careful ,scared,afraid of new things...he wants to be a cop to control his on fears......I side with alex....go forth and prosper....they may never see eachothers views, but make peace for mom......
11-01-2010 @ 6:38PM
Michele said...Why would you "side" with either child? Neither is right or wrong, they are just being themselves. It's just too bad they can't agree to disagree....life is short and one day silence becomes forever.
11-01-2010 @ 7:14PM
joblo said...Where's the father in all this?
11-01-2010 @ 7:24PM
lisa said...Same boat here. I wish my boys were still friends. I really miss those younger days.
11-01-2010 @ 8:42PM
Ann said...Maybe your sons should talk to my son, because I know he would want one more day with them just to hold them close and tell them how much he loves them and misses them both since God called them home.
11-01-2010 @ 8:56PM
Susan said...All of life has it's stages...and this is no different. There will come a day when they will long for the comforts of the familiarity they once experienced with one another.
Sometimes, we create issues and riffs so we can distance ourselves from one another and truly break away without the pain of separation anxiety. This too, will pass.
From a Grandma who knows.
11-01-2010 @ 9:06PM
debbie said...Wow, I do feel a little better because I'm not the only one who is going through this. My two boys will never be friends and will never have a relationship. I think this is sad, but I'm done with all the conflict and unpleasantness. If I could go back in time, I would have had puppies and never any children.
11-01-2010 @ 11:27PM
researchingmama said...Homeschool! And when your children fight, deal with the one "fighting back" first. People will hurt your children their whole lives. Good parents teach how to deal w/ disappointments and hurts. Remember, you won't always be there to right the wrongs. And our world is very unfair. Unforgiveness comes from bitterness. So prevent the bitterness while they are young. Teach them that hurting people hurt other people, "Be not overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good" (Proverbs) etc. Life is short! Love!
11-02-2010 @ 1:01AM
Mark said...When I was growing up, my older brother never got a window seat in the car. If my younger brother had sat next to me, there would have been road kill. As we have moved through life, there are certain conflicts that always remain--control issues, different outlooks, child rearing, etc. The truth is that family is the most important, and as they move through their 20s, they begin to see the family as more important, in that it becomes the connection to all that was and all that will be. Sometimes it is only " hi, how are you?" and sometimes it is meaningful discussions on life, and sometimes it is only to reminisce about the "Lego town," and argue about the time you stole my things.
11-02-2010 @ 5:08AM
Amanda said...Well, it could be worse. I lost my son to the bitch relatives, headed up by MOM, the vindictive psychopath, when he was 6 and 3/4. Because of their undue influence, the SW's and a psychologist got together and decided not to GIVE US REUNIFICATION SERVICES. I got an apology at the last minute, but my little boy was lost forever to his adoption by my fat sister, Cindy the fat pig!! Now he's grown, with a blonde bimbo gf, in the next state over, and I once again tried to kill myself.
11-02-2010 @ 6:28AM
Sunday said...This problem's solution is not complicated. They must agree to disagree. It is possible!!!!! Perhaps that is all that you (their Mom) has yet to teach them? No need to agree or side with either of them.
10-29-2010 @ 1:06PM
Louisa Bacio said...Still going through the young sibling rivalry right now. But at 3 & 7, they are VERY different. I can see them having different personalities as adults. I'm an only child, but I've seen my parents have disagreements with their siblings. The good news is that it usually only lasts for a few years ;-)
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11-01-2010 @ 3:54PM
Simzee said...If someone does'nt like who you are......STAY AWAY !!!!! (family included) People who do not like you are too much of a problem.
11-01-2010 @ 6:16PM
Kurt said...The thing the mother should worry about is what her older son might do! Sounds from what she wrote he may have serious psychological problems, and if he is as bad as she indicated in hating laws, etc. he will probably hurt many people some day.
11-01-2010 @ 8:31PM
Alicia said...You can dislike authority and still be moral. Many libertarians and anarchists are intelligent and reasonable human beings who just believe government does more harm than good. That doesn't mean they're going to slaughter innocent people.
Some do of course, but saying that all anarchists kill innocent civilians is like saying all anti-choicers kill abortion providers. It's not true and it's a grossly ignorant claim.
10-29-2010 @ 6:09PM
Peggy said...I have 2 adult sons (mid 40's) who haven't spoken or seen each other for nine years. This started with their 2 wives not being compatable with each other.
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11-01-2010 @ 4:07PM
Paul said...They had 2 wives each?
11-02-2010 @ 9:34AM
jean said...same here, two son;s neither will allow the other to see his brother or they will leave with their kids.
i say let them go, neither has ever worked and wants to stay the stay at home mom.
money will bring them back, i wouldn't want them back under those conditions.