| | Ed, do you ever get the impression that nobody is listening to you? Your efforts have been great, but I don't think you're going to get anywhere. Despite repeating over and over that neither you nor I think it was immoral for Barbara to lie, and that we would both probably do something under similar circumstances, there's still people lining up to "disagree" and tell us it was a good thing to do. Strawman is the right word.
The funny thing is the kinds of disagreements. MSK, for instance, actually agreed at the significance of the flaw in the relationship. In his words "Barbara's article is a warning against that and a sanction of the fact that it is OK to perceive defects in one's parents that one cannot change and still love them deeply." Later, of course, he denies that their is any defect at all. I won't bother trying to reconcile his contradictions.
Mike E. claims we have to assume their relationship is good, evidently for the reason that Barbara was willing to do something nice on her mother's deathbed. But that ignores the reason she had to act that way. Her mother disapproved of her choice, and Barbara had been unable in the past to convince her that one of the biggest choices in her life was a good one. Instead, her mother died disapproving of her choice (but being deceived into thinking she had abandoned it after all).
Jon asks: "Is it that hard? Perhaps Mother thought it was Nathaniel’s mistake." Was it Nathaniel's choice, and Barbara would have stayed married if given the choice? That's not how I understood the situation. And if that's not the case, doesn't that mean if her mother thought that, that Barbara had not been able to communicate her own role in the decision, and her evaluation of it? It still ends up portraying a flaw in the relationship.
And that's the whole point. This action, whether you think it's wonderful or pointless, is all because there was this huge gap between Barbara's choices and evaluations, and her mother's. Her last act towards her mother on her deathbed had to be deceit because of this problem in the relationship. We've heard plenty of excuses for the flaw in the relationship, and there's reason to be sympathetic to some of those, but it's still a flaw. Instead of being able to experience an openness and trust with her mother on her deathbed, that flaw caused her to have to deceive her mother, and to pretend a major choice in her life was a mistake. Does anyone really think this is the ideal way to part with a loved one? No, I'm not talking about an super-abstract "I made her happy" ideal. I'm talking about a very concrete "I deceived her into thinking my major choices in life were not real". Is that your ideal? Really?
If it's not, than you start to get a hint of what Ed and I have been talking about. You can start to see that this situation did not play out in an ideal manner, and that something caused that lack of ideal. What was it? I've described it as a flaw in the relationship. Maybe you think that's too harsh of a phrase. But this aspect of the relationship was the direct cause of a very non-ideal ending of the relationship. It seems more than justified to refer to something that causes a sub-optimal ending as being a flaw.
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