Mommy Friend Son

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Mommy Friend Son
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10/21/20
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“Everything about our relationship is perfect, except for one thing,” says Stephanie Ressler, in the first episode of the new reality show “I Love a Mama’s Boy.”
The Freudian feast for the eyes — premiering Sunday, Oct. 25, on TLC — follows four girlfriends struggling to become the No. 1 woman in their man’s life as they compete for attention with their over-attached mothers.
In one shocking scene, California mom Kelly and her 28-year-old son Matt head to a lingerie store to pick out sexy underwear for his girlfriend, Kim. After helping to select a lace teddy for Kim to delight her baby boy in, Kelly finds a silk robe for her prospective daughter-in-law. Matt then buys two — making sure to not leave his mother out.
“I’m not a therapist or a psychologist, but that’s going to be an issue,” the disgusted saleswoman told the cameras.
While some moms featured on the show are involved in their son’s sex life, others just have a lot of love to give, like the Stamford, Conn.-based mom Liz Micale.
“We’re best friends, but he’s my son, I’m his mother,” Micale told The Post, of her son, Mike Boornazian.
Boornazian’s father passed away when he was in the third grade. “Not having a father, there’s a lot of kids in my situation that could say, ‘My mom couldn’t fill that role,’ ” Boornazian, 26, said. “To be honest, my mom could. Though I missed my father, I never felt like there was anything I was missing.”
“He knows: To this day, no matter what, I’ll drop everything for him,” said Micale, 51, a classroom assistant.
Unlike most mother-son pairs, Micale and Boornazian grab beers together on Friday nights and go zip-lining. They have even gone on cruises with Ressler, Boornazian’s girlfriend of two years, as a trio. “It’s like I’m hanging out with my friends,” said the proud son.
Ressler, also 26, and Boornazian met at their jobs in media. Although she knew Boornazian was close to his mom — he had brought her to work events in the past — she didn’t realize how inseparable they were.
“My mom always said to me, ‘Keep an eye out on how he treats his mother, because that’s how he’s going to treat his future wife,’ ” she said. “He treats his mother like a queen. That was never a red flag.”
After they moved in together, “That’s when it really hit me: ‘Wow, he cannot live without his mom,’ ” Ressler said. She falls asleep to the sound of Boornazian speaking to his mother on the phone and wakes up to her calls in the morning.
On the show, Micale comes over to the couple’s home unannounced, bringing food that she’s cooked. A fan of clean eating, she doesn’t believe Ressler has the culinary skills to keep her son healthy — especially since he’s started working as a model.
In another contentious scene, Micale accompanies the couple to a jewelry store to help Boornazian pick out a gift for his girlfriend’s birthday. Although Ressler has her eyes on engagement rings, the two settle on a pair of expensive diamond earrings.
But after mom balks at the $1,000 price tag, he purchases a less-pricey pair. Of course, Boornazian doesn’t leave the shop without buying a bauble for his mom, too.
“[His mom] is always going to be No. 1,” Ressler said. “And I’m always going to be fighting to be No. 1.”
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I walked into my son’s school a few weeks ago to pick him up. He was sitting with all his friends waiting for me by the door and immediately got up when he saw me coming. Clearly, he didn’t want me coming anywhere near his friends. I got the feeling he didn’t want anyone to know he was with me. I was right.
As he got closer, he whispered, “Mom, why do you have to dress like that? Everyone stares at you.”
“No they don’t. They are probably staring at you because you are so handsome,” I told him.
“I blend in. They aren’t staring at me. They are looking at you. Why do you have to wear dresses and high heels?” For the record, I was wearing the outfit below. The nerve, right?
I decided I wanted to try something with my teenage son that day. I asked him if he wanted to dress me for a little while. I told him he could pick out my outfits and I would wear whatever he wanted me to wear as long as he had an open mind and would listen to a few things I had to say about people and the way they choose to dress, so that’s what we did.
I wanted to talk to him more about the subject and why he was feeling the way he was. And by having him choose my clothes for a while I would better understand why he wanted me to wear certain things, and maybe he would understand why I like to dress the way I do and that, really, it shouldn’t affect him as much as it does.
This was his choice for the first day. He picked out a very casual, sporty outfit, and I loved it.
While I dress like this about half the time and like this look, it doesn’t always suit me. Sometimes I feel like dressing up more, so I do. When I asked my son why he picked this out, he said because I “blended in and didn’t look out of place.” In his mind, when I dress up, I look like I don’t belong. If he only knew how many women I saw throughout the day wearing suits and heels maybe he would have a different opinion.
Regardless, I told him nobody should be judged based on how they dress — not even your very embarrassing mother . Most people wear what they are comfortable in, what makes them feel good. It doesn’t matter where it came from because this isn’t how we judge others. We focus on how they make us feel, if they are kind, how they treat people. I told him judging people for what they wear is very transparent, and he will be missing out on a lot in life if he is going to focus on making friends because of what they wear, what they have, or what they look like.
If he is comfortable dressing in a way that makes him feel like he blends in, I think that is great. However, I want him to have the inner confidence to step out of the box if he wants. If he feels like wearing something, even though none of his peers are, I want him to feel like he can.
I also let him know what someone puts on their body isn’t an invitation, for him or anyone else, ever. And he should always take heed on how he looks at people, especially women. There is a way to look at a woman without staring or gawking. No matter how you see her, she deserves respect. I don’t care what she’s wearing.
I also want my son to realize just because I am a mother it doesn’t mean I have to dress a certain way. I loved the outfits he picked for me, and dress like that on my own accord often. But I also love wearing dresses, heels, skinny jeans, and trying out new trends because that is who I am, and who I was long before I became his mother. It’s not my intention to embarrass him. It is my intention to be myself, and him making comments or telling me he doesn’t want to go anywhere with me because of the way I dress is hurtful (as normal as it is).
A few days ago, I discussed these “lessons” I was trying to teach him with a friend and she told me he would “take all these lessons and bake them into a gentleman pie.” I really hope she is right.
DEAR DEIDRE Husband dumped me for a woman ten years older - now he's trying kick me out
Catfish concerns Where have all the genuine girls gone?
game girl Where have all the tall, mixed-race, gaming girls gone?
HOlding on My ex says he doesn’t love me any more, but he wants to talk every day
DEAR DEIDRE: I HAVE been having sex with my friend’s son.
I didn’t seduce him but his mum says I obviously must have offered him sex on a plate and blames me.
My team and I are working safely from home but we are here to help you as always.
Every problem gets a personal reply, usually within 24 hours weekdays.
You can also send a private message on the DearDeidreOfficial Facebook page.
I am 32 and he’s 19. He seemed a kid a year ago but very much a man when he came home from university after they closed in the spring.
We chatted at my friend’s birthday barbecue in the summer and I had far more to drink than usual.
He was flirting outrageously, telling me I looked so young I could pass for a student. It boosted my ego.
We ended up slipping away from the party and went upstairs to his room.
All the time he was kissing me he was undressing me too and we ended up having sex. It blew my mind.
The next day I felt so guilty I texted him to say we should stay away from each other but he bombarded me with texts and insisted we carry on seeing one another. He was too hot to refuse.
He had a row with his mum one day and blurted out about us. She’s stopped speaking to me.
She believes I cradle snatched her son. His dad and older sisters are not speaking to me either.
I confided in my mum and sister, and they disapprove and told me I shouldn’t get into a relationship with him.
Everyone blames me because I am older, and they think I took advantage.
Nothing could be further from the truth. He’s the one who insists we carry on and gets angry if I argue.
He’s been away at uni since October. Of course I couldn’t visit him but we’ve been very close online.
He’s told his family he’s seeing a girl at uni now, but he tells me he loves me and wants to tell them the truth when he gets home, which will be any day now. I am so scared of their reaction.
Do I call it off and do what everyone else wants, or carry on and risk losing everyone I care about?
AFTER finding love, we might assume our relationship will look after itself.
But we all change, and relationships require time and attention.
My e-leaflet Your Relationship MoT can help you avoid a crisis.
DEIDRE SAYS: It is unfair that everyone blames you. Of course it takes two to tango, but your instinct to call a halt to the fling right from the start was right.
Now you need to let age and experience speak and take a firmer line with your young lover. Be firm that it’s over.
He’s got no right to get angry. It’s probably linked to quite separate tensions with his family but that’s all the more reason to do what is best for you.
It’s not just the age gap, though at 19 he is looking for a very different experience from what is right for you.
You are risking losing people you care about and who care about you. They can see what you are not seeing right now.
Cut free from this guy and move on with your life.
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