2. The necessary distance to become oneself.
Psychological development requires a certain distance. For a child to build their own identity, they must question, challenge, and distance themselves emotionally from their parents – a process called individuation.
What appears to the child as a discovery of self is often experienced as rejection by the mother. Yet, very often, love remains intact; the child is simply seeking to define their identity. When this separation is accompanied by guilt or resistance, the distance often widens further.
3. Pain relief where safety is guaranteed
Children often confide in the person they trust most and who will never leave them. Because the mother embodies unconditional acceptance, she becomes the safest refuge for expressing emotions they cannot manage elsewhere.
This is why a child can be kind to the outside world and harsh with their mother. This is neither fair nor healthy, but understanding that this behavior reflects an internal conflict in the child rather than a questioning of the mother's worth can prevent this suffering from being turned against them.
4. When a mother disappears behind her role.
Some mothers, driven by love, gradually fade into the background. They exist only as caregivers, providers of problems and other resources – never resting, never asking for anything, never requesting anything. Their suffering remains buried; their desires are reported; they rarely set boundaries.
The implicit message children receive is that their mother has no needs of her own. And when a mother doesn't show self-respect, children struggle to learn it. This isn't about blaming, but about recognizing that being yourself is also a valuable lesson.
5. The Burden of an Unpayable Emotional Debt
When love is perceived as excessive or based on sacrifice, some children experience a sense of debt that they feel unable to repay. To escape the weight of this guilt, they minimize what they received: "It wasn't much," or "It was simply their responsibility."
In doing so, love shifts from a freely given bond to an obligation. And when love becomes a constraint, rejection can persist, not from a lack of affection, but under the pressure of a feeling of indebtedness.
6. A Self-Centered Culture:
Modern society places great importance on immediacy, personal fulfillment, and individual comfort. In this context, relationships that require patience, perseverance, and long-term commitment are often relegated to the background.
Maternal love—steady, predictable, and discreet—struggles to compete in a world that values novelty and constant stimulation. This doesn't mean it's worthless, but simply that it's often overlooked.
7. The unexpressed injuries were transmitted forward.
An elderly woman is embraced by her adult son in the garden.
Many mothers were once daughters who felt invisible, devalued, or emotionally neglected. Having become mothers, they may unconsciously try to heal these past wounds by giving more than is reasonable, hoping to receive from their children what they themselves never had.
When a woman's identity becomes entirely linked to motherhood