I’ve seen this a few different ways in various places on the Internet, but this is the original, unedited version. I may disagree with just a couple of things in it, but overall it pretty much sums up how I feel about my mom’s “mean mom” status as well as my own.
I had the meanest mother in the whole world. While other kids ate candy for breakfast, I had to have cereal, eggs or toast. When others had cokes and candy for lunch, I had to eat a sandwich. As you can guess, my supper was different than the other kids’ also.
But at least, I wasn’t alone in my sufferings. My sister and two brothers had the same mean mother as I did.
My mother insisted upon knowing where we were at all times. You’d think we were on a chain gang. She had to know who our friends were and where we were going. She insisted if we said we’d be gone an hour, that we be gone one hour or less–not one hour and one minute. I am nearly ashamed to admit it, but she actually struck us. Not once, but each time we had a mind of our own and did as we pleased. That poor belt was used more on our seats than it was to hold up Daddy’s pants. Can you imagine someone actually hitting a child just because he disobeyed? Now you can begin to see how mean she really was.
We had to wear clean clothes and take a bath. The other kids always wore their clothes for days. We reached the height of insults because she made our clothes herself, just to save money. Why, oh why, did we have to have a mother who made us feel different from our friends?
The worst is yet to come. We had to be in bed by nine each night and up at eight the next morning. We couldn’t sleep till noon like our friends. So while they slept-my mother actually had the nerve to break the child-labor law. She made us work. We had to wash dishes, make beds, learn to cook and all sorts of cruel things. I believe she laid awake at night thinking up mean things to do to us.
She always insisted upon us telling the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, even if it killed us- and it nearly did.
By the time we were teen-agers, she was much wiser, and our life became even more unbearable. None of this tooting the horn of a car for us to come running. She embarrassed us to no end by making our dates and friends come to the door to get us. If I spent the night with a girlfriend, can you imagine she checked on me to see if I were really there. I never had the chance to elope to Mexico. That is if I’d had a boyfriend to elope with. I forgot to mention, while my friends were dating at the mature age of 12 and 13, my old fashioned mother refused to let me date until the age of 15 and 16. Fifteen, that is, if you dated only to go to a school function. And that was maybe twice a year.
Through the years, things didn’t improve a bit. We could not lie in bed, “sick” like our friends did, and miss school. If our friends had a toe ache, a hang nail or serious ailment, they could stay home from school. Our marks in school had to be up to par. Our friends’ report cards had beautiful colors on them, black for passing, red for failing. My mother being as different as she was, would settle for nothing less than ugly black marks.
As the years rolled by, first one and then the other of us was put to shame. We were graduated from high school. With our mother behind us, talking, hitting and demanding respect, none of us was allowed the pleasure of being a drop-out.
My mother was a complete failure as a mother. Out of four children, a couple of us attained some higher education. None of us have ever been arrested, divorced or beaten his mate. Each of my brothers served his time in the service of this country. And whom do we have to blame for the terrible way we turned out? You’re right, our mean mother. Look at the things we missed. We never got to march in a protest parade, nor to take part in a riot, burn draft cards, and a million and one other things that our friends did. She forced us to grow up into God-fearing, educated, honest adults.
Using this as a background, I am trying to raise my three children. I stand a little taller and I am filled with pride when my children call me mean. Because, you see, I thank God, He gave me the meanest mother in the whole world.
(Copyright© 1967 by Bobbie Pingaro)





Wow. I guess this explains the trend… You see, I was raised by a “mean mommy”…and my mother was raised by one too…and you know what?To listen to the stories, I hear that even my grandmother was raised by a “Mean Mom!” I’ll remember this in the next few hours when one of my six kids decides to remind me that I’m mean and ruining their fun and their life.
We come from a very long history of mothers who “ruin” their kids life by insisting upon lovingly administered restrictions and encouragement – all for the betterment of the children. My brother and I miraculously (despite how “mean” we thought Mom was) turned out to be college graduates with advanced degrees and are married to our same spouses, are tax-paying, law-abiding citizens.
It’s what we were raised to do…Mom always said, if you wind up in trouble with the law, – DON’T call your mother! You’re just going to get a lecture from me then I’ll hang up the phone and leave you there! (That was a strong deterrent to choosing to do or say something even with the most remote potential of trouble. We absolutely knew that we’d be in a world of trouble if we did something to make trouble find us! So we never did.)
My Mom also insisted we go to college. Said we didn’t have to go, but if we chose not to – we couldn’t live at home. We’d have to find some kind of minimum wage paying job and roomates somewhere, or we could take the free room & board that Mom and Dad would pay for if we went to college and stayed there. Guess what, that was a STRONG incentive to take education seriously. She made it abundantly clear that we’d have no out clause with her for failure. I could go on and on, but all this to say, thanks for starting this blog…I love my own Mean mom so much and I hope I can be one just like her!
I imagine it has to be very gratifying to get to that point in your life where your children recognize that you did everything that you did because you truly wanted them to succeed and be happy, productive individuals. I have a feeling that I have a long way to go before I reach that point!
But I also hope that my mom found out long ago that I feel that way about her.
I never made you eat eggs