My Mum Hasn’t Spoken to Me for a Week—All Because I Calmly Told Her I Won’t Be Attending the Family …

My mother hasnt spoken to me for a week. All because I told her, calmly, that I wouldnt be coming to the family gatherings for Christmas or New Year this year. I explained myself, without drama: I just couldnt go through the same thing again, year after year. From the moment I said itabsolute silence.

Christmas in my family has never been peaceful. December has always meant tension for as long as I can remember. It begins days in advancethe phone calls dividing up costs, squabbles over who will buy the turkey, wholl sort out the wine, whose house itll be at. Theres always someone who isnt pulling their weight. My mother usually organises everything, but with control and constant complaints. If anyone suggests something new, she takes offence. If someone cant contribute as much money as the others, its whispered about.

Wed arrive hours early to help, but every bit of help was paired with criticism. Why was I dressed like that, why had I lost weight, why had I gained it, why was I still single, why would I want to change jobs, why wasnt I thinking about having children. All this, before wed even sat at the table. Ive never liked alcohol, never drank it, but theyd pour me some and insist. When Id refuse, the comments would starthow dull I was, that something must be wrong with me, that Id never find anyone with that attitude.

Then dinner finished, and the awkward bit arrived. The same relatives whod gossiped about each other all year would link arms for a photo, forcing smiles, clinking glasses with empty toasts like, family is everything, while barbed remarks floated through the air. There was always a row before midnight. Sometimes about money, sometimes about inheritance, sometimes old grudges tumble out with the gin. I watched cousins go months without speaking after Christmas.

New Years Eve was no better. More spending, more stress. New outfits because its tradition, wild grocery shops, mountains of food ending up in the bin. Id drag myself home, hollowed out, guilty, wondering why I forced myself to keep a tradition that only left me emotionally drained.

This year, when Mum started on about the gatherings, I said I wouldnt be coming. Told her honestlyI never felt at ease there, didnt have spare pounds to waste, just wanted to spend a few days quietly at home. I didnt say I didnt feel loved. I said it was a personal choice. She looked at me, said nothing, and changed the subject. Since then, no calls, no texts, no replies to my messages.

I know to her it feels like betrayal. To me, its a boundary. Im not arguing, Im not disowning my family, Im not causing a scene. I just decided not to go. But the silence feels like punishment. It hurts, because shes my mother, but Im exhausted from feeling like being a good daughter always comes at the cost of my own peace.

I dont know if Im giving up. I dont know how long this silence will last. All I know is that, for the first time, Im imagining a Christmas without arguments, without pointless spending, without fake smiles. Or would you tell me I ought to go, just for the sake of being on good terms with my mother?

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My Mum Hasn’t Spoken to Me for a Week—All Because I Calmly Told Her I Won’t Be Attending the Family …
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