Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    A Daughter Reveals: 12 Things I'm Too Stubborn to Tell My Mother

    Photo: Courtesy of Leigh NewmanPhoto: Courtesy of Leigh NewmanBy Leigh Newman

    1.
    Regarding the broken Art Deco hand mirror in the bathroom: I broke it. I apologize. There were only two of us living in our house, you and me. Who did I think I was fooling with that ghost story?

    2. I too now say "you're plucking my nerves" to my children, especially when they are having water-splashing contests in the kitchen-right next to my cell phone.

    RELATED: How to Train Your Mother

    3. Remember the bag of plums? I was 7. You were 35. You bet me a bag of plums that you could make the green traffic light. You made the light; I cried and then refused to buy you the plums. Then, for the next 32 years, I still refused to buy you the plums. Well, I owe you the plums. Further, I had a tendency as a child and young person to remain entrenched in ridiculous, no-win positions. This is not a happy way to live. You tried to tell me. I didn't listen.

    4. About the drinking. It's behind us. Please, please forgive yourself.

    RELATED: Mothers and Daughters: Are You Overstepping Your Boundaries?

    5. The dog. I promised I would walk the dog. Over and over again, I promised I would walk the dog. I meant it at the time-but I didn't do it. You worked 60 hours a week to support us. I understand now why you had to give the dog away.

    6. I secretly loved it when you hung your head out the car window and shouted "to thine own self be true!" in front of all the other kids on the playground. Shakespeare is the voice of life.

    RELATED: Back to School Gifts Students Will Love

    7. The wisest thing you ever did was to ignore me when I stayed out late as a teenager and came home smelling like Camel Lights, boys and very berry wine coolers. Like yourself, I am a bit of a rule breaker-but when there are no rules, it takes the fun out of self-destruction.

    8. Your hair is blond. (Clearly, it is not blond.) But I now understand why I should go along with your little white lies, because I am getting older too, and I know why we all need them. By the way, my bottom is toned.

    RELATED: Mothers & Daughters: The Learning Curve

    9. As for Madame Butterfly, to this day, I am ashamed. You bought me tickets to the most moving opera in the world. We went. We watched. We wept. The bell rang for intermission. You swept us off to dinner in the exquisite restaurant at Lincoln Center. I objected on the grounds it was too touristy. I felt it was akin to a bus ride in Paris. I was a fool! Worse, I was pretentious. That whole period-1991 to 1998-I was so afraid of being a country bumpkin that I was a big fat boob.

    10. You made me be friends with "Barbara Bourbot" because she didn't have any friends. You made me into a kinder person.

    RELATED: Great Advice From Moms

    11. Your purple-and-white-striped tube top, the one you used to wear while sunbathing in the front yard while I cringed...I would like it now, if you don't want it anymore-please? I realize you want to give me the lovely things you never got as a child. But it reminds me of you more than a strand of pearls or a silver comb-and-brush set. I can't help it.

    12. When you wonder out loud if life would have been easier if you had stayed with my father, or if you should have had a second child because it's too hard to be a single mom of an only daughter-it's too much work; there's too little outside perspective; there's too much intimacy, so much so that our thoughts and glances and combined history tell us more than words will ever be capable of-you are probably right. It would have been easier. We would have fought less. We would have ended up as different people. Which would have been the greatest loss of my life. I like who we are, together and separately, and most of all when we are laughing side by side at old episodes of I Love Lucy, eating potato chips late at night.

    RELATED: 12 Things I Wish I Could Tell My Mother

    More from O, The Oprah Magazine:

    Like O, The Oprah Magazine on Facebook

     

    21 comments

    • ILoveFriday  •  9 months ago
      Thank you for sharing, I really enjoyed reading this.

      Happy Friday!!~!!
    • Shari Stein  •  9 months ago
      This is a beautiful letter to your mother.
      I've often wondered how much my mom knew about/how she felt about my transgressions. This letter really gets to the heart of a mother/daughter relationship. I can relate to both the tension and love (it's evident there's much more of the latter) you express. Thanks for making me think and recall!
    • Niko-chan  •  9 months ago
      #12 I can so relate to. I remember having the talk with my mother over what she thought if she and dad did get back together. It was something I wanted to ask her when I was a kid, and later in my teen years. We had a nice long talk of all that had happen before and after the divorce, how she felt, and how I felt. It made me understand how strong of a woman she is, and how to accept the fact that my parents are better off being friends than married. It was hard to accept it when I was a kid, but as I grew up I realized how strong our family became later in the years.

      No matter what, my parents placed me and my brother first on this priority list, that's where the love comes from. She taught me a whole lot, and gave me woman advice for me to remember when I meet someone and get married.

      On the side note, we love watching "I Love Lucy" and would sit on the bed watching our favorite episode (even with my grandmother). Good times I say.
    • Sweets  •  9 months ago
      This made me smile and a bit teary eyed. As a new mom to my own baby girl, I would like to say these things and more to my mom. Thanks for thhe great read.
    • iza  •  9 months ago
      what lovely things to say about your mom..
    • songbird, Shani, Shanzi, ...  •  9 months ago
      Doug S....Why is it always about single moms? If you're any mom~ especially a single mom~ you'd know.
    • CarlN  •  9 months ago
      Mom, I admit it. I DID pee in your steam iron.
    • Boodica  •  9 months ago
      This gives me hope that someday my 15-year-old son will evolve into the kind, considerate, generous and honest person I've tried to raise him to be.

      Right now, I really need that hope.

      Thank you!
    • JacquelineR  •  9 months ago
      This is one of the sweetest things I've read in a long time. Thank you for sharing.
    • shelby  •  9 months ago
      Beautifully written! Glad I read it.
    • LJmommy  •  9 months ago
      This is beautiful.
      And Doug- it's about single moms a lot because of what she says in #12. There is an intimacy there that creates a powerful and dynamic relationship. Especially with a single mom and an only child.
    • Doug S  •  9 months ago
      Why is this kind of stuff always about single moms?
    • Krystal Worley  •  9 months ago
      LOVE this article!!! :)
    • SMG  •  9 months ago
      This is a beautiful list.
    • RationalGirl  •  9 months ago
      Awww, this made me almost cry. I'm a single mom to an only son, and #12 has bothered me alot.
    • Selena  •  9 months ago
      I'm sry BOBBOB but I have to disagree with you on a note because "teens" only disrespect their 'elders' because they've been taught to do so....If they're taught correctly and get enough, but not too much, attention and love then they'll be exactly (maybe more) what their parents want from them
    • maggiemoo  •  9 months ago
      I'm glad I'm not the only one who loved this article!! I must admit, it was not what I thought it was going to be from reading the title, and I'm glad of that!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 months ago
      U should tell yer ma all of this. Especially number 4.
    • gandy  •  9 months ago
      Yes, there is a wonderful relationship after those tough teenage years. You are so close that the strong dependent bond has to break apart alittle so your child can seperate from you and become their own person. You as a parent just want to hold on tight and protect them and the turbulant teen years also give you the chance to seperate. There is always love and an adult relationship with your grown child has a special magic and closeness
    • amanda Curry  •  9 months ago
      I absolutely love it.

    Join us on Pinterest

    DAILY SHOT VIDEO

    We apologize. An error has occurred. Please try again.