Honolulu Star-Advertiser

Wednesday, May 1, 2024 74° Today's Paper


Mom enables dependency in 20-something son

Christie Wilson

If I were a member of the Justice League, my superpower would be rendering those around me helpless.

This power seems to affect only the male members of the family, by the way.

The Boy — newly 23 and proudly living on his own without parental support — phoned the other day to ask how to make a medical appointment. (He could call his mother but not the doctor’s office, apparently.) Then my husband, thrusting some documents my way, claimed he was befuddled by having to write a check to cover a parking ticket. (Funny, he didn’t have any trouble paying his monthly golf club dues.)

Yes, it’s true that for all my son’s life I have overseen the family’s medical and dental welfare, making sure everyone was properly vaccinated and scheduling checkups on a regular basis. And, yes, I’ve always written the checks to pay the bills. But, people. Really?

These are only the latest instances in which I have been called on to handle routine matters such as filling out forms, checking store hours or calling in prescriptions — matters any competent adult should be able to tackle on their own without supervision or instruction.

After three decades together as a family unit, it’s finally got me wondering: Am I an enabler? Am I guilty of being not just a helicopter parent, but a helicopter spouse? Has my take-charge, get-’er-done approach to life sapped the initiative out of my loved ones and conditioned them to shirk basic responsibilities?

Or maybe they just gave up because I’m too impatient or too critical when they do try to do things on their own.

I hope I’m not that person. But I think I might be.

I want to be more like the woman whose husband I recently overheard querying a salesclerk at Target: “Excuse me, do you have mandoline slicers? My wife told me to buy one, and I have no idea what that is.”

I wish I had the confidence to send my husband on a domestic quest and expect that he would be able to figure it out, seeking help from strangers if necessary. (I once asked for a Crock-Pot for Christmas and got an electric skillet instead. Not that it wasn’t a perfectly fine electric skillet, but as a result I now do all the gift buying for myself. See?!?)

Or maybe I’m the one who’s been conditioned, and it’s been a man-scam all along.

Consider: Husband puts red shirt in with the light-colored wash.

My reaction: “Just let me do it. I’ll handle the laundry from now on.”

Consider: Boy announces he’s hungry and opens the fridge. Despite my grocery run earlier in the day, he mopes away empty-handed, saying he’s not hungry anymore.

My reaction: “Hold on, sweetie, I’ll make you something.”

(Apparently my superpowers include inducing refrigerator blindness — that is, the inability to see food that is in front of you unless is it assembled in its finished state, like a sandwich.)

And do I fall for it?

Every time.


“She Speaks” is a weekly column by the women writers of the Honolulu Star-Advertiser. Reach Christie Wilson at cwilson@staradvertiser.com.


3 responses to “Mom enables dependency in 20-something son”

  1. DannoBoy says:

    Great column Christine.

    In instances of “helping” others get something done, the central question is this: ‘Is the problem that they can’t do it themselves or won’t do it themselves?”

    In the latter case, doing it for them is “enabling”, and creates angry dependency and resentment all around. Giving assistance is helpful in the former, while also trying to teach more independence and competence on the process.

    So always ask yourself, “Is this mainly a matter of can’t or won’t.”

  2. cojef says:

    That can come to a halt! After over 65 years having spouse boss the kitchen, recently found it an alien environment for me. Yet someone has to do it! Dementia/Alzheimer can be a monkey wrench or the straw that broke the camel’s back!

  3. Cellodad says:

    You may have something here. If after “three decades” your adult spouse still can’t do his own laundry, you probably aren’t going to see major changes. (when our son was about six, we bought a step stool so he could reach the washer and dryer controls. He was also responsible for ironing (with supervision) his Honolulu Boy Choir uniforms. It paid off when he went away to school.)

Leave a Reply