I don’t handle emotional losses well. I never have. And every time I face another loss of someone or something very important to me, I’m a mass of confused emotions.
Tonight, I’m dreading the coming loss of my dearly loved dog, Lucy. Everyone has experienced such loss at one time or another, but even this sort of loss leaves me feeling helpless and scared.
I know why I feel this way, though — and it all starts with my mother.
I loved my mother and she loved me. That’s such a fundamental statement for a human to make that it seems a bit hollow. Everybody loves his or her mother. Every mother love her child. On some archetypal level, that’s true. But it wasn’t always so simple for me.
My mother left my family when I was 5 years old. The truth of what really happened is far more complicated, but as I grew up, all I could really internalize is that my mother abandoned me. I was too numb to what I felt to ask the real questions that swirled inside my child mind.
Did my mother not love me? Was I not good enough for her to want me? What was wrong with me?

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Life cycles sometimes bring us back to places where we’ve been
NOTEBOOK: Why do so many libertarians need One True Way?
If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off
Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory
ObamaCare must fail in long term, but conservatives can’t stop it now
Evil and idiocy stripping away veneer of western civilization
Sometimes we don’t really notice perfect match ’til it’s far too late