Jason Bradshaw grew up in a middle-class home. He was the oldest of
three kids and was the only son. His parents loved each other. But when Jason
was 12, tragedy struck their family. Jason’s father was killed in a car
accident. The family was devastated, and Jason’s mother grieved for several
years.
As Jason got older, his mother poured her life into him. He was the
apple of her eye, and she often saw her husband in him as he got older. “He
looks much like his father,” she thought to herself. His mother doted on Jason,
and sometimes Jason reacted to what felt smothering to him.
Jason’s mother often prevented Jason from doing things that normal boys
of his age do, for fear of him getting hurt or even losing Jason. Gradually,
Jason began to feel controlled and manipulated by his mother. This developed
into a love-hate relationship with his mom. On the one hand, he knew he was now
the male head of the family and wanted to care for his mom, but he hated the
control he felt.
Jason began to date girls as he got older and found that he sometimes
masturbated to relieve the stress and pent-up desires he felt inside. He also
found himself on the internet checking out pornographic pictures. He didn’t
know why he did this. He just thought it was normal for boys his age.
Jason went on to college and kept a distant relationship between him
and his mom. He wanted to respect and care for her, but he wanted to keep his
distance and gain his independence. Jason got engaged after college and things
were great with his new wife. However, over the next several years he found
that there was conflict in his relationship with his wife.
Sometimes he felt the same feelings he felt when he was growing up with
his mother. That feeling of control gave him a sick stomach. He often reacted
to his wife when those feelings swelled up inside, “Stop trying to control me,”
he would say. His wife was surprised at these reactions as she was only trying
to connect emotionally with Jason. She wanted to be a part of his life. Jason
pulled away each time he felt these feelings.
When Jason and his wife visited his mom, his wife noticed that Jason’s
personality often changed when the three of them were together. Jason’s wife
felt like a third wheel. It almost felt like Jason was married to his mother
instead of her. This caused arguments among them and Jason often demonstrated a
very unloving spirit to his wife. Jason would always defend his treatment of
his mother, often at the expense of his wife.
This pattern continued for many years into their marriage. Finally
Jason’s wife decided they needed professional help. Jason reacted negatively to
the idea and felt the only problem they had was his wife kept trying to control
him and she needed to stop. However, reluctantly, Jason agreed to go to
counseling.
Jason, to his surprise, discovered in the counseling that the reason he
reacted to his wife’s “control and manipulation” as he perceived it, was due to
something that happened in his childhood that related to his mother. The
feelings he was feeling were the same feelings he felt when he was a teenager
growing up. In essence, Jason was shocked to discover he was subconsciously
viewing his wife as his mother. As the truth of his situation unfolded, Jason
was able to recognize why he reacted to his wife this way.
Today Jason and his wife are happily married. However, many couples who
have the same symptoms often result in divorce. This same scenario happens when
a father divorces a wife. The mother is often left emotionally bankrupt and she
seeks to meet her emotional needs from her son. However, a son is not made to
emotionally bond with his mother and the pain that is caused within him must be
released through some form of sexual expression. That is one reason Jason
turned to sex to relieve his emotional pain.
Compounded with this is the legitimate need for Jason to have an
emotional connection with a female, but because of his negative perception of
his wife, he often sought that emotional connection through women at his
workplace or in other social settings. He was often seen as a flirt with women
but Jason denied such behavior. This too is rooted in the mother-son bonding
relationship.
There is a crisis in marriage today. Research reveals the Christian
divorce rate is higher than non-believers. There are many reasons for this, but
one of those reasons is rarely spoken about. It has to do with the
inappropriate bonding between a mother and her son during his adolescent years.
Many men never emotionally bond to their wives because of the impact of
being emotionally bonded to their mothers during their adolescent years. The
reason many men are not able to bond with their wives is often due to
mother-son bonding that takes place during adolescence.
Dr Paul Hegstrom explains in his book, Broken Children, Grown Up
Pain, that “a husband without an emotional bond to his wife sees her as
someone who sleeps with him, cleans the house, takes care of the children, and
works—he doesn’t see her as a real, living, emotional person.” As a result, the
husband is often distant emotionally to his wife, but he does not recognize
this in himself. However, his wife definitely knows it. She tries to connect on
an emotional level only to be perceived as trying to control him. This leads to
conflicts in the relationship.
If the father and mother are not bonded to one another, the mother will
often bond to the oldest son. This can happen as a result of an absent father,
either physically or emotionally. If a wife is not getting her emotional needs
met through her husband, she may attempt to draw this from her son.
If the
parenting style is weak in emotional validation, giving words of love, or
shaming of the child, these combinations will eventually surface through
problems in the marital relationship in adulthood.
Resolving an Inner Conflict
When mothers bond with sons during adolescence, the son rebels against this bonding because he is not wired to bond with any female once they get into adolescence without some form of sexual expression. When they should be growing independent from their mother during this time, they find themselves in bondage to their mother’s emotional control. This all happens subconsciously.
When mothers bond with sons during adolescence, the son rebels against this bonding because he is not wired to bond with any female once they get into adolescence without some form of sexual expression. When they should be growing independent from their mother during this time, they find themselves in bondage to their mother’s emotional control. This all happens subconsciously.
Gordon Dalbey, author of Healing the Masculine Soul, explains
that “beyond the basic fact of initial physical dependence upon the mother, the
quality of that bonding experience also influences the son’s later
relationships with women. If the boy’s maternal bond was painful (perhaps his
mother didn’t want to conceive and thus rejected him) or inappropriate (perhaps
she was seductive toward him), the boy may later associate physical bonding to
a woman with pain and anxiety.
He then may become compulsive about sex—either as the freewheeling
playboy who is incapable of commitment, or the demanding husband who fears
being emotionally vulnerable to his wife. Given the biological and emotional
intensity of the mother-son bond, only someone whose intrinsic identity with
the boy exceeds that of the mother can draw him away into individuality and
adult responsibility. Clearly, only the father meets such a requirement.”
If unresolved, the young male will seek to rebel against this bonding
and control they feel subconsciously. They will have a love-hate relationship
toward their mothers during late adolescence. This can lead young males to
masturbate or get into pornography or have premarital sex in their adolescent
years as a means of dealing with the emotional pain of that bonding from the
mother. The male will eventually pull away from the mother as a result of
seeking to become independent from her. This can be traumatic for the mother.
These feelings are often felt subconsciously as the son grows into
adulthood. Often an unconscious vow is made to themselves: “I will never be
controlled by a woman again.” This personal vow can go with them into future
dating and marital relationships. The wife will often feel like their
legitimate input is being viewed as criticism by the husband and he is
resistant to talking with her at an emotional level. The husband will often
shut down or rebel against his wife’s input.
Dalbey explains that “when a boy reaches puberty, filled with the
powerful physical stirrings of his emerging manhood, the father’s role becomes
critical. If at this point Dad doesn’t call the boy out and away from the
mother to bond with his masculine roots among men, those stirrings are
overtaken by his natural bond with the mother, becoming bound up in her and
thus unavailable later to the woman he loves.
"Without the earthly father to call the son out into manhood, the
boy grows up seeking manly identity in women—whose voices seem to call him to
manhood through sexual conquest. Masculinity grows not out of conquering the
woman, but only out of conquering the man—and not another man, as in war, but
oneself.”
Dalbey explains how this can further affect the man’s identity: “Enmeshed
with his mother, he may find that his heart is unavailable to another woman to
walk with him later as a wife in his life calling (Gen. 2:24). Unable to bond
with either a woman in marriage or a man in healthy friendship, he then may
fall prey to homosexual impulses.”
This is why moral failure can happen even among the most mature
Christian men. Despite a commitment to a disciplined Christian life, they have
never resolved their inner toil rooted in mother-son bonding and he eventually
loses the battle. This is actually God’s grace designed to take the male back
to the source of his pain to become healed.
Fear of Dependency
Paul Olsen, declares in his book, Sons and Mothers, “What a man
is frightened of, more than anything else in the vast possibilities of living
experience, is dependency, regression to a state in which he becomes an infant
in the care of his mother—a mother later unconsciously symbolized by almost all
women with whom he comes in contact.”
If the son has had any male to male sexual exposure in his childhood,
this issue is compounded. Subconsciously he will seek to prove his
heterosexuality by bonding to other women outside the marriage. When a dad
abandons a son emotionally and physically, he is left to gain that validation elsewhere,
often through a female or even another man. If the boy has any male-to-male
sexual exposure he will grow into adulthood leaning toward homosexuality or he
will have to prove his heterosexuality to himself by getting his validation
from women.
The popular comedy TV sitcom series Everybody Loves Raymond is
a classic portrayal of two sons who have been doted on by their mother and
conflict consistently arises between the loyalty of the sons at the expense of
their wives. The father is emotionally bankrupt and emotionally abuses the
mother. The mother seeks to get her emotional needs met from Raymond, the
favored son. Many of the situations are quite humorous, but sadly, are
portrayed very accurately as to the depth of the problem.
Ken Nair, author of Discovering the Mind of a Woman, cited a
perfect example of this when counseling a couple and the husband was reacting
to his wife’s treatment of his wife. “I’m thinking of a situation where a wife
said, ‘On Mother’s Day, you made sure that your mother got to sit at the head
of the table and was waited on first.’ He retaliated, ‘Well, it was Mother’s
Day!’ His wife defensively said, ‘I’m a mother! In fact, I’m the mother of your
children. But that doesn’t seem to carry any weight with you!’ He illustrated his
deafness to her spirit by saying, ‘I’m not going to stop loving my mother just
to make you happy!’”
This man always gave deference to his mother’s needs at the expense of
his wife’s. The husband was never emotionally bonded to his, but was still
bonded to his mother. When this happens the husband will pull away from his
wife because he subconsciously views her as his mother who he believes is
trying to control him. Whenever a son’s behavior changes in the presence of the
mother and the wife feels like a third wheel, you can be confident there is a
mother-son bonding issue that exists.
This usually results in the son bonding to other women outside the
marriage in a subconscious attempt to deal with the pain of the mother-son
bonding. He is often a flirt with other women usually unknowingly.
Subconsciously he is meeting an emotional need in himself to prove his manhood
through other women.
John Eldredge shares a very personal account of his discovery of
similar deep rooted issues he described in his book, Wild at Heart. He
discovered what happens when a man cannot offer himself emotionally to his
wife. “If the man refuses to offer himself, then his wife will remain empty and
barren. A violent man destroys with his words; a silent man starves his wife.
‘She’s wilting,’ a friend confessed to me about his new bride. ‘If she’s
wilting then you’re withholding something,’ I said. Actually, it was several
things—his words, his touch, but mostly his delight. There are so many other
ways this plays out in life. A man who leaves his wife with the children and
the bills to go and find another, easier life has denied them his strength. He
has sacrificed them when he should have sacrificed his strength for them.”
The Father Wound
Another reason that we are seeing more moral failure today is due to
the fatherless generation that was ushered in through the baby boomer
generation. Since the 1960s we have seen a steady increase in divorce and
fatherless families. This has created an open wound in both men and women
today.
Bill Clinton’s sexual indiscretions with Monica Lewinsky in the White
House brought shame to him, his family, and the nation. To make matters
worse, he tried to cover it up by lying to the American people on national
television, and later explained it away as “not being sex.” Clinton will
forever be remembered in the history books for his indiscretions. Dalbey
explains:
“The shame from moral failure in men urges men into a variety of
compulsive/addictive behaviors—from drugs and pornography to workaholism and religious
legalism. In hiding his wound, the man eventually fulfills the awful impact of
the Malachi 4:6 curse upon the land, from abortions and sexually transmitted
diseases to crime and domestic violence. He’s left fearful of women,
distrusting of other men, shortsighted in his view of God and, therefore, cut
off from his destiny.
"In a classic example, during the shameful exposure of former
President Clinton’s sexual sins, few political commentators noted that his
father had died when Clinton was in his mother’s womb, and that his several
step-fathers were alcoholic and/or abusive. With such a deep wound in his
masculine soul and the constant negative models at hand to fill it, the boy
could only grow up looking for security in the one constant relationship,
namely, his mother. He thereby learned to seek confirmation of his manhood from
women. But since no woman is capable of doing that, and if he never goes to
Father God with his wound, he’s condemned to the eternally fruitless exercise
of going from one woman to another seeking his manhood.
"The nation has paid dearly for this with a skepticism and even
scorn for his leadership and authority. Certainly Clinton must be held
accountable for his choices and eventually suffer their consequences. But—as
destructive as the father-wound is—there’s not enough brick and mortar to build
enough prisons to hold the men who are acting it out. It’s a deadly epidemic
among us, which hides in the shadow of shame.”
In December 2009 Tiger Woods’ world went from a polished, protected
family-friendly personna to a womanizer, shamed and gossiped about throughout
the tabloid media due to moral failure and infidelity in his marriage. One of
the questions that can often come up when someone like Tiger Woods, who seemingly
had the world by the tail (pardon the pun), is “How could he ever want to go
look outside his marriage with such a beautiful wife?”
Tiger fits the profile of a man deeply affected by mother-son bonding.
Tiger is an only son. His parents divorced after he was an adult, but most
likely the marriage had been weak for many years before the final divorce. It
was well known that Earl Woods was not faithful to his wife.
Dina Parr, Tiger Woods' high school sweetheart, said in an interview
that Tiger would call her crying, upset about his father Earl Woods'
infidelity. Parr said Tiger would call her and say, "'My dad is with
another woman' ... He would be so upset, so I just tried to be there for him
and listen to him.'" Parr went on to say that Tiger loved his father, but
he never really got over the unfaithfulness and that it's interesting that
Tiger is now doing the same thing.
We often saw Tiger and his mother together and the bond between them
must have been very strong. This would have meant Tiger may never have really
bonded with his wife Elin, and probably never dealt with the emotional pain
from the bonding of his mother. This ultimately would have to lead to resolving
the inner conflict in inappropriate ways sexually as he got older. Chances are
that because Tiger never really bonded with his wife Elin during the marriage
he sought to bond with women outside the marriage through sex.
Symptoms of a Nurturing Void
If a son grows up in a family that fails to nurture him in his early
years with appropriate touch, cuddling and affection, that child will grow into
an adult with a greater sexual appetite in the marriage. He will associate sex
with being loved by his spouse because he was never touched growing up. He will
want to be touched and cuddled in the bedroom but will not want to be touched
outside intimate times.
He will find it difficult to give hugs, hold hands or give healthy
affection to his spouse. Sometimes a spouse may wrongly conclude her husband
has a sexual addiction because of his desire for sex. If there is no pattern of
pornography, he does not have a sexual addiction in his life. He has a love and
nurturing problem that he never got as a child. Consequently, he will seek to
have that need met through his spouse. However, she can never adequately
satisfy his need. That's because it's a love need that requires healing from
his heavenly Father. Until that is met in him he will continue to place
pressure upon his wife to meet his sexual needs.
How Men and Women Deal With Pain
When there are emotional unmet needs in a relationship it can lead to a
breach in the marital relationship and the husband and wife learn to cope in
two different ways. Larry Crabb has summarized how both male and female use
unique strategies to avoid the deep pain when a failure in trust happens.
All of us are trapped by addiction to a desire for something less than
God. For many women, that something less is relational control. “I will not be
hurt again and I will not let people I love be hurt. I’ll see to it that what I
fear never happens again.” They therefore live in terror of vulnerably
presenting themselves to anyone and instead become determined managers of
people. Their true femininity remains safely tucked away behind the walls of
relational control.
More common in men is an addiction to non-relational control. “I will
experience deep and consuming satisfaction without ever having to relate
meaningfully with anyone.” They keep things shallow and safe with family and
friends and feel driven to experience a joy they never feel, a joy that only
deep relating can provide. Their commitment is twofold: to never risk revealing
inadequacy by drawing close to people and, without breaking that commitment, to
feel powerful and alive. Power in business and illicit sex are favorite strategies
for reaching that goal.
What You Cover, God Uncovers
When Tiger tried to cover up his sin, he only made the humiliation
factor grow in his situation. If he had been forthright by repenting in the
beginning the level of humiliation would have been less severe.
If you are a believer and you live in compromise, you lose confidence
in the faith dimension of your life. The Bible says we are to confess our sins
one to another. The very act of bringing your struggle into the light brings
healing. My friend Ford Taylor often says "What we cover, God uncovers.
What we uncover, God ‘covers.’" If we try to hide our sin Satan has a
legal right to humiliate us and will do so publicly. The more public a figure
you are, the greater the humiliation. If you choose humility by initiating
repentance, God will cover you by His grace and your restoration will be
quicker.
Why Won’t He Talk to Me?
If the mother-son bonding remains unresolved, the negative behavior becomes
a part of his personality at a subconscious level as he grows older. Until he
is conscious that his behavior is abnormal he lives in a world of independence,
denial and conflict until he understands there is a problem. The wife struggles
with thoughts and feelings like, “Why won’t he talk to me? Why is he so
defensive to my input?”
The way out of this is to come to the knowledge of the truth for the
husband. The scripture says that the truth shall make you free. Men need God to
heal their hearts of the pain in their lives that has been caused by this
bonding and repent of the pain they caused their mates through their behavior.
God will often force us into a crisis in our marriages to deal with the issue.
The husband must deal with both the root and his behavior. He must acknowledge
his failure to love his wife because the spirit behind this issue is an
unloving spirit rooted in the mother-son bonding. He must actually tell himself
“She is not my mother, she is my wife!”
Most men will not begin to change until they can understand the
problem. It is not enough to complain to your partner that something is wrong.
Until the man understands the reason for the problem and the way to fix it, he
will not have the motivation to change. This is important because if our heart
is not healed we will try to solve the problem through performance in order to
relieve the pressure, but the root issue will never be healed. And the
temptation for men is to get their validation as men from their wives or other
women instead of God.
There is another factor at play here as well. If a son grows up under a
mother who is volatile and angry he will grow up fearing a woman’s anger. The
father often withdraws from his wife’s outbursts, often abandoning the son to
her emotional fits. The son grows up fearing confronting any woman for fear of
conflict and possible outbursts, and fears the woman will leave him. By
succumbing to these fears the boy grows up to be a man who abdicates his
strength to the woman. This can open the door to a “Jezebel Spirit” in the
marriage. “Ahab” yields leadership to the woman in the home.
The solution to this is for the man to exercise his true manly strength
through servant leadership. Usually the woman will resist his new strength at
first because she will perceive it to threaten her control over the man. A
godly woman must come to a place of recognition that she actually needs his
strength and will ultimately desire more of this. An ungodly woman, who has
simply replaced his mother in this scenario, will leave him.
A Word to Mothers
If you are a mother and want to know how to avoid falling into the trap
of mother-son bonding, the key is to ask yourself a question as it relates to
the way you relate to your son. “Am I trying to get an emotional need met for
myself by how I relate to my son, or am I trying to help my son grow up into a
mature man?”
Often you will discover whether your relationship is healthy or not by
simply asking this question. A mother must help her son enter into manhood. She
must find ways that he can interact with other men who can help him develop
into a healthy man. The Jewish bar mitzvah is a way the Jewish culture helps a
young man recognize his manhood by his father. It is a rite of passage every
young man needs.
The mother must let go of her son emotionally and encourage the
separation to take place as he enters into his late teen years. If you do this,
you will find your son will develop into an emotionally healthy male. Healthy
relationships with other male figures are needed in the boy’s life to invite
him into manhood.
A Word to Adult Sons
If you are a husband/adult son and recognize that you have been
impacted by mother-son bonding you must make some immediate changes. You have
never effectively “leaved and cleaved” to your wife emotionally. You may or may
not have to speak with your mother about this issue. However, you must begin
to:
Set boundaries with your mother. She must know that your wife is first
priority in your life. This can be a difficult transition for many men because
it will feel like you are betraying your mother, but you are not. You are
cutting one unhealthy bond so you can love and emotionally bond to your wife.
Ask your wife to help you. Ask your wife for input. Tell her to let you
know when she is feeling like a third wheel when in her and your presence. Your
vulnerability will prove to your wife you are serious about changing.
Invite input from your wife. Mother-son bonding creates a “feeling” of
being controlled by your wife when she may simply be trying to connect
emotionally. You will have to consciously say out loud to yourself when you
have internal feelings that you feel controlled, “She is my wife, not my
mother.” Eventually those feelings will dissipate as you love your wife
emotionally.
A Final Word to Men
The enormous increased level of dysfunction in our society due to
absent fathers and broken marriages has ushered in a generation of adults who
carry a lot of brokenness and pain. Men, it is important to recognize the
subtle lie the enemy of our soul tells us. That lie is “I cannot live without
her.” We have elevated a woman’s sexuality to the point of idolatry in our
culture.
The more you have been impacted by the mother-son bonding, the more you
are prone to buy into this lie. Our source of strength cannot be the
fair-haired woman; this can only be met by God if we are going to be Godly men.
Healthy marriage can meet legitimate needs of both partners, but God must be
our source for both spouses.
By Os Hillman
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