Wait Wait Your My Mums Friend

Wait Wait Your My Mums Friend




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Wait Wait Your My Mums Friend
The bond between a mother and a daughter or son is unparalleled. Which is why there are so many realistic my mom is my best friend quotes available on the internet. Mom nurtures you, protects you, and is the greatest friend you’ll ever have rightly so we can say that.
Here is a list of our top 16 my mom is my best friend quotes that we’re sure you can relate to.
1. Even if the rest of the world looks away, a girl can always turn to her mother.
2. The love between a mother and her daughter lasts forever.
3. My mother is my superhero. She’s taught me how to be soft, how to be fierce, how to be brave, and how to be kind. She’s my greatest friend and also my biggest critic. Everything I am today, I owe it to her.
4. Mothers are the guiding pillars that keep our life upright.
5. Thank you for believing in me when no one else would. I love you, Mom.
6. A mother’s love is much like the sun shining through on a rainy day. No matter how bad it gets, it fills you up with warmth and gives you the strength to carry on.
7. Whatever I do and whatever I achieve in life. I just hope I can make my mother proud.
8. My mother has taught me compassion, she’s taught me love, and she’s taught me faith. She’s my rock and I owe so much to her. Thank you, Mom. I love you.
9. There is no equivalent to a mother’s love. It is the most selfless and purest love to ever exist.
10. I’m lucky to have a mother who is also my best friend. If you have that, you need little else from the world.
11. Motherhood is perhaps the only true labor of love. I know this because no matter how badly I mess up, my mother will always be there to guide me. Her love holds no judgment. It only knows how to help and heal.
12. My mother has taught me to be strong through failure. She’s taught me to be humble through success.
13. I am lucky to have found a friend in my mother. Thank you for the lessons, Mom. You inspire me every day.
14. A mother’s love is like a balm against everything that life throws at you. As long as she’s there to hold you, you know things can get better.
15. Thank you for filling my life with so much love. You are the reason I am where I am today. I love you, Mom.
16. My mom taught me everything I know. She believed in me so I learned to believe in myself. Thank you for everything, Mom. I love you.
17. “A mother’s arms are more comforting than anyone else’s.” – Princess Diana
18. “My mother is the bones of my spine, keeping me straight and true. She is my blood, making sure it runs rich and strong. She is the beating of my heart. I cannot now imagine a life without her.” – Kristin Hannah
19. “I am a strong woman because a strong woman raised me.” – Unknown
20. “On the darkest days, when I feel inadequate, unloved and unworthy, I remember whose daughter I am and I straighten my crown.” – Unknown
21. “Call your mother. Tell her that you love her. Remember, you’re the only person who knows what her heart sounds like from the inside.” – Rachel Wonchin
22. “No matter how old she may be, sometimes a girl just needs her mom.” – Cardinal Mermillo
23. “I realized when you look at your mother, you are looking at the purest love you will ever know.” – Mitch Albom
24. “A mother’s love for her child is like nothing else in the world. It knows no law, no pity, it dares all things and crushes down
remorselessly all that stands in its path.” – Agatha Christie
25. “A daughter without her mother is a woman broken. It is a loss that turns to arthritis and settles deep into her bones.” – Kristin Hannah
26. “A mother is not a person to lean on, but a person to make leaning unnecessary.” – Dorothy Canfield Fisher
27. “The best place to cry is in a mother’s arms.” – Jodi Picoult
28. “There were times when, in middle school and junior high, I didn’t have a lot of friends. But my mom was always my friend. Always.” – Taylor Swift
29. “All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother.” Abraham Lincoln
30. “No daughter and mother ever live apart, no matter what the distance between them.” – Christie Watson
31. “Mothers are their daughters’ role model, their biological and emotional road map, the arbiter of all their relationships.” – Victoria Secunda
32. “I am not a perfect mother and I will never be. You are not a perfect daughter and you will never be. But put us together and we will be the best mother and daughter we would ever be.” – Zoraida Pesante
These quotes tug at your heartstrings, don’t they? We hope you liked our collection of my mom is my best friend quotes. Now go and give your mom a gigantic hug and if you can’t, call her and let her know how loved she is.

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Originally Published: April 21, 2018
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There comes a time in every mother-daughter relationship when you become much more than just a parent and child. It’s when you reach Lorelai and Rory Gilmore status and you consider your mom your best friend. It makes sense that your mother would be the ultimate BFF, considering you love spending time with her, she’s your biggest supporter, and you share everything with her. Whether you’re snapping a photo at a Mother’s Day brunch or going on a getaway together, cute mother-daughter friendship quotes are perfect when sharing all your precious memories on Instagram.
These mother-daughter friendship quotes will definitely come in handy the next time you and your mom have a girls’ trip or spend some quality time back home together. You’ll also want to pull them out on her birthday or on Mother's Day, when you want to share with all your followers just how special your No. 1 since Day 1 is by posting an adorable throwback pic of you both rocking some ‘90s outfits or a recent snap of you on vacay by the beach. Whatever the memory may be, you’ll be prepared, thanks to these 30 mother-daughter quotes that describe all the feelings you have for your biggest supporter perfectly.
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This article was originally published on 04.21.18

Are You Really Supposed to Be Best Friends With Your Mom?
This article is from the archive of our partner .
They drink together, or, rather, if Samantha is offered a cocktail, she gives it to her mom. People think they're sisters, or possibly, when they travel in Italy, lovers. They sit at the bar together, which makes Samantha, 19, feel grown-up (which she likes) and, presumably, Julie, 50, feel young, which she probably likes as well. They wear matching T-shirts (but not on the same day). They talk about who's hotter. They tweet at each other . They act like "pals," not mom-and-daughter: "Samantha refrained from the typical teenage indicators of mother-induced misery. No mortified slumping, no glassy stare, no snapping, no sighing, no episodic glaring, no thumbing out one cell-phone SOS after another," writes Williams. "And Julie? When Samantha spoke, Julie listened until her daughter had completed her thought. Which I assumed happened only in dreams and completely unrealistic movies."
This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire .
The mother-daughter relationship may be one of the most complex that exists in all of human relations—both more intimate and also, possibly, more fraught with difficulty than one with a husband or wife, even.
Relationships between mothers and daughters come in many a form, as varied as the array of human personalities that exist within those moms and their beloved, if sometimes frustrating, kids. In fact, the mother-daughter relationship may be one of the most complex that exists in all of human relations, both more intimate but also at times more fraught with difficulty than one with a husband or wife. Those who know you best can let you down the most, and who knows you better—sometimes most annoyingly so—than your own mom? Paige Williams' New York magazine article on the extremely harmonious mom-kid duo of Julie and Samantha Bilinkas sheds light on one such relationship, which appears at different points as something we should feel jealous of and something we should be concerned about. The title of the article speaks for itself: " My Mom Is my BFF ."
How are Julie (mom) and Samantha (daughter) BFFs, exactly?
Even though Julie and Samantha assure Williams that they do fight, over typical teen/mom things like room-cleaning, Williams is amazed witnessing that rarest of things, a unicorn of familial relationships—"a fantasy come to life." She shares her own mom experience, in which certain things (discussions of sex, for example) are taboo, in which clothes belong purely to one person or the other, in which older generations are hopeless about the technologies of the new. Parenting was different then, Williams hypothesizes: Now, with shows like the new VH1 reality show Mama Drama , the parenting norm is BFF-dom. Is this good? Bad? True? What does it even mean?
Like a mother-daughter relationship, it is complicated .
I am not BFFs with my mom. I love my mom, yes; we have what anyone would call a good relationship. But we don't share clothes (when I wanted to borrow her stuff in high school, she quashed that quickly; instead, I borrowed my dad's giant sweaters). We don't talk daily, or hourly, as do some adult women and their moms. We grew up very differently, and to some extent, perhaps we don't always see eye to eye about where the other has come from. We each have others who we do consider "best friends." But that doesn't mean that we would fail to be supportive, even to put each other above nearly anyone else. It also doesn't mean that we don't speak our minds. Like "best friends," the people who love you even in your worst times and continue to love you after you've gotten through them, we don't worry that we have to please or pander to each other. Like best friends, we are generally honest, but we also know some discussions aren't worth getting into. And some are, even if it means you fight. My mom is not my best friend. She's something more rare, something you typically only get one of: My mom.
I'm a bit older than Samantha, though, and this "new wave" of parenting may have started after my formative years. The friendship, and I'd call it that, if not "best friendship," between my mom and me is one between two grown-ups, even if we do happen to be mom and daughter. What's different about Samantha and Julie is that they're doing these "friend" things at a younger age—and they live in the same city, the same home, even. When I was 19 I probably wouldn't have talked about boys or drank willingly in bars with only my mom; we were more protective of our individual space. When I am home now, my mom and I don't go out on the town; we sit and talk at the dinner table over wine. My mom doesn't text, much less tweet. (She does, however, read blogs, even if she despises Facebook. I appreciate that.) Williams posits that the moms who came of age in the sexual revolution, during Vietnam, during the women's rights movement, experienced a norm that diverged from domestic and societal norms. They were different, could be different, as women, and so they could be different as parents. Instead of continuing in the hallowed tradition of setting an example for daughters to rebel against, maybe moms could just be friends with their daughters. Maybe? According to Williams :
Friendship became a kind of parenting strategy: By treating Child as Adult, parents hoped that the kid would actually become an adult, and a good one. The happy outcome for some: mothers and daughters who didn’t have to wait until middle or old age to actually enjoy each other’s company. To maintain peer-ness, there came a coinciding pressure to stay young, technologically supported by the capacity to stay young. Moms have never had at their disposal so many resources—so much paraphernalia—allowing them to shrink the generation gap. If they want, they can practically turn themselves back into teenagers.
Friendship as a method for adults to seem young and kids to seem grown-up; it's positively innovative. Williams points out that this "perfect relationship" is still not exactly common, a reality highlighted by the fact that Samantha and Julie's relationship still appears, if not entirely too good to be true, something so unusual as to be gawked at in an article.
Think of the other "friend-moms" we see in the outside world: The "trying-too-hard" mom depicted by Amy Poehler in Mean Girls , the mom who wants to be one of the girls so bad it's just cringeworthy (and inappropriate). Or Gilmore Girls ' Lorelai-and-Rory-Gilmore pairing of mom and daughter who seem to exist in a generally symbiotic über-reality. There's the mom, someone has one, someone likely to work in your very own office, whom that daughter speaks to daily, gets advice from, shops with, with whom she confides in every matter, things you can't imagine talking about with your own mom. Did these moms really fail to exist before now, or have they always been there, if not talked about in this way? Maybe some moms and daughters, like some family members, just get along better than others.
Williams argues that the mom-daughter BFF phenomenon couldn't have happened without an overall societal and marketing focus on youth—even as older moms are infinitely more common and acceptable, moms don't want to seem old. (A corollary for thought: Is it possible that moms having children a bit older has led to the phenomenon as well? Maybe with older parenting comes both maturity and appreciation, and a loosening of a certain kind of traditional expectations.) Maybe it's not weird to be best friends with your mom (even though some are dubious and see this as a reflection of family dysfunction or even "spawning to socialize"—ew). Certainly, it's different to be friends with your grown-up daughter than it is to say that your toddler is your BFF, and worry about what will happen when she finds pals her own age, as one woman Williams quotes wrote on Babble.com.
Then there are people like Julie and Samantha, who seem to be friends because they have similar interests, because they spent time together and in doing so realized they have fun together. Maybe they're friends because, goodness gracious, they just like each other, barring the occasional dispute that comes from hanging out a lot. But that's kind of what friendship is about, no matter who the players are, no? As Williams writes, "By rejecting the traditional traps, she and Julie have sort of beat the system by waging a new form of rebellion, one that’s not between parent and child but rather forged between them, against some standardized definition of family life. They’ve created their own dynamic, whether others understand it or not."
As with any friendship, they understand it, which is what actually matters.
Image via Shutterstock by Monkey Business Images.

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