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December 20, 2023

Not Mama's Boy: How To Build A Healthy Mother-Son Relationship | S6 E14

Mothers and sons share a special bond, but it’s also a delicate one. Steve and Mary Alessi sit down with their son Chris to share what they’ve done to find balance in their very different roles as parents.

Mothers and sons share a special bond, but it’s also a delicate one. Steve and Mary Alessi sit down with their son Chris to share what they’ve done to find balance in their very different roles as parents.

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The Family Business with The Alessis

Can moms love their sons too much

No mother wants to hinder her son from becoming a man, but the mother-son dynamic can create major headaches for the entire family if not handled properly. 

In this episode, we delve into the intricate dynamics of the mother-son relationship and the valuable roles both parents fill in their young man's life. 

From discussing the differences in parental roles to highlighting the importance of respect and clear communication, Steve and Mary Alessi, along with their son Chris, offer insightful perspectives on family relationships and the impactful roles of mothers and fathers in shaping a son's development. 

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Transcript

Steve Alessi:

So what you're saying is she's Victoria's Secret and I'm big and tall. If you're going to go shopping, well, don't. Well, I would say this, man, if you're gonna. Yeah, that's a great way to say it, baby. He's gotta shop for his wife.

Mary Alessi:

Victoria's Secret, Sandy's.

Steve Alessi:

Hello, and welcome to another episode of the family business with the Alessis. I'm Steve Alessi, and because family is everybody's business, I have in the podcast Booth today Mary Alessi and our son, Christopher John Alessi.

Mary Alessi:

That's me.

Chris Alessi:

That's you.

Mary Alessi:

Good to be here.

Steve Alessi:

All right. If you were to look at the merchandise in front of us, you'll see that there's a gift waiting for you to purchase and give your friends and wear yourself. I personally like the one about podience.

Mary Alessi:

That's really cool.

Steve Alessi:

That's what you are listening to us today. And it explains it on the t shirt.

Mary Alessi:

Yeah. And if you like to listen to podcasts, that's a great.

Steve Alessi:

That's a great one to have. Yeah. And then the onesie for the babies. That's really cool. And then, of course, the book 42. If you haven't got it and read it, you should.

Mary Alessi:

Absolutely.

Steve Alessi:

The guide to finishing well, when you thought you were finished. All right, Mary, we're in the podcast booth today because you have a subject that you would like to discuss with your son. So I'm here to monitor. Take it away.

Chris Alessi:

Monitor, or both.

Mary Alessi:

This is an interesting topic because I said to you the other day, I would love to go in the podcast booth and discuss this with Chris. Put him on the spot and have this conversation, because we know the relationship. Are you ready? Between mothers and sons can be strained. It can be a very difficult relationship, or it could be a wonderful relationship.

Steve Alessi:

I feel like I should be sitting in the middle just to keep you all.

Mary Alessi:

No, go for it. I think if we're going to help our audience, one of the things that we do, we say family is everybody's business. And so we like to air our dirty laundry business out here on this.

Steve Alessi:

Put it out.

Mary Alessi:

So we need to talk about it. Out.

Steve Alessi:

Tell me what inspired this particular one. 

Chris Alessi:

This is going to be news to me, by the way.

Steve Alessi:

Oh, yeah.

Mary Alessi:

Okay. It's not you. Not this time.

Steve Alessi:

It's my mother's.

Mary Alessi:

So, interestingly enough, we have your mother, a wonderful mother in law to me, and a wonderful mother to you, who is staying with us now for about a month. And you actually remodeled the guest bedroom to be larger so she could come and stay more periodically and stay longer times to be with us, which is wonderful. And she's a great house guest.

Steve Alessi:

First time in my life.

Mary Alessi:

For the first time in your life.

Steve Alessi:

Because she's always lived right next door down the street, really, in Miami in her own home.

Mary Alessi:

You go see her at her house.

Steve Alessi:

Right now she's in mi casa.

Mary Alessi:

So it's wonderful. She does everything she can to small herself up and be as inconspicuous as possible. And what I've noticed, though, is the daughters, like with me and her, I love. I wake up in the morning if she's in the living room, I grab my coffee, stay in my robe, in my pajamas, and we chat because it's cherished time, girl to girl talk. But I've noticed, like with dad, and he loves his mother and she loves him. He doesn't know how to act. He just doesn't know how to behave. So he gets quiet and he gets tense.

Mary Alessi:

And then I notice her. She tries even harder then, and she has to overcompensate. And I'm watching this game.

Chris Alessi:

I think I'm here to monitor what's.

Mary Alessi:

Going to bring Lauren back in for a counseling session.

Chris Alessi:

No, but you know what's funny about that podcast? I'm the one who has a degree in psychology first, and yet Lauren is the one that everyone thinks we need here. Okay, you're not going to bring me in for all things theology next year, and I have a master's in theology.

Mary Alessi:

This is mothers and sons, not fathers and daughters. This is about you and me. Mr. All right, forget him. Okay. But I thought it would be really interesting because the dynamic between and as you get older, it definitely changes and shifts the expectations of mom changes on her son, especially if it's her only son. And I'm watching this and taking notes, just so you know. But I think you and I have a very different relationship because of our verbal energy that we have.

Mary Alessi:

We talk incessantly and a lot, so it's different. Dad is a completely different personality. Right. So there's a difference there, but also on the broader scale, when there's a lot of single moms raising sons and the expectation of the son and just kind of covering all of that, how simple men are, really, they're so simple, and women tend to complicate them because we're complicated. So as a mother who has, in her mind, raised this savior of the world's son, the perfect son, the perfect mean, we're just born that way. You're going to see that with Rochelle raising Moreno. Stephanie's about to have Matthew. You'll see them.

Mary Alessi:

Their mothering is very different than it is with daughters. So I think, though, I'd like for us to keep the audience listening and not turn this off. Just you go ahead and just talk about our relationship, Chris, and my expectation or any pressure that my mothering puts on you.

Chris Alessi:

Okay.

Steve Alessi:

Besides her being perfect, the perfect woman in the world. Besides that, in the comparison trap of all of that, I know your problems.

Mary Alessi:

With your dad, not me, but go ahead. Just for the sake of the podcast.

Chris Alessi:

I will say, when you brought up the topic, I got an image of the Dolphins stadium, because right next to the Dolphins stadium, where they play all their games, is a very big training facility. It's a big practice field and it's right there. And the father is always the coach of the son. Always. That never stopped. But I have thought that the mother is that practice field. It's the training ground. And it's not that they get your worst at all.

Chris Alessi:

It's actually how you practice is how you'll play. And dad helped me see early on that the way I treat my mother, the way I view my mother, is the way that I will treat my wife. And really, as a leader, anyone I lead, I mean, the way that I don't really see a one for one, from the way I treat my dad to the way I treat people, right, because he's always up. But my mom, it's like the way I treat my mom is really the way I'll treat anyone that I love. And so I've seen that, and that's why I got that image like, yeah, the game is over here, but that practice field is right there. And that's what dictates how well the game will go. And so I think there have been times where you have definitely given me a lot to practice.

Mary Alessi:

Okay.

Chris Alessi:

But I would say I'm one of the lucky few. Definitely one of the lucky few. And I would think that if there are sons listening, even daughters, the way you treat your mom, regardless of who she is or what she does or how good the turf is, how good the facilities are, how you practice is, how you'll play, and if people don't like you and the way you treat them, your mom probably doesn't like the way you treat her, right? And so, I don't know, I think that I would hope my mom would think that I treat her well.

Mary Alessi:

Yes.

Chris Alessi:

And I think my wife thinks I treat her well. And I do believe it's know three sisters and a mom gives you a lot of practice.

Steve Alessi:

Okay, let me interject. I like this. This is a great conversation.

Mary Alessi:

By the way, do we have any personalized Alessi family business podcast? Tissues.

Steve Alessi:

You have said over the years that.

Chris Alessi:

Reveals the logo as the tears.

Steve Alessi:

Sorry. You have said over the years, Mary, that anytime Chris and I are or Chris has a challenge with me in the office, he goes to you, and the two of you kind of practice working out. Practice. You coach him along the way to say, hey, this is how you got to deal with your dad. There's things you got to say and so on and so forth. I know it's hard for you to believe, but he actually does the same thing with me.

Chris Alessi:

With you, no, but that's more lately. That was never new.

Steve Alessi:

Coffee. Coming in.

Chris Alessi:

Coming in. And the tissues. There they are.

Mary Alessi:

Oh, yeah.

Steve Alessi:

Wait, that's mine. Did you get my coffee cup?

Mary Alessi:

I don't know. Because it's about.

Steve Alessi:

Thank you, Melanie.

Chris Alessi:

She brought me Marino in our last podcast.

Mary Alessi:

She did.

Chris Alessi:

All right, babies.

Steve Alessi:

Yeah, he does. We talk about you, Mary, and making sure. But it's all good.

Chris Alessi:

Yeah, can I.

Mary Alessi:

Okay, stop, stop, stop. See how men do. See how you all did. You all just did that. Oh, but no, it's all fine.

Chris Alessi:

Well, hold on.

Steve Alessi:

No, because we're being picture minded.

Chris Alessi:

I think we have a.

Mary Alessi:

Women would go, yeah, he does. Because he has issues with you and because you don't take the time to stop and talk to him and because you're a terrible father. That's how women.

Chris Alessi:

That's actually handle the truth.

Mary Alessi:

You think I can't handle the truth?

Chris Alessi:

Am I mediating?

Steve Alessi:

Come on. Okay.

Chris Alessi:

Actually, no. You know what I think happened? So you mentioned, mom, that it changes over time. And when I was younger, I was almost a one for one mini me of you, 100%. The way that I thought, the way that I processed, I was all you. And I think it was because what my community needed of me required that. But as things have shifted, as I've become a married man and as I've had a kid, and even my role in the organization has shifted, I've noticed more of him coming out in me.

Mary Alessi:

Right.

Chris Alessi:

And to the point where I'm understanding his side of things, I'm going back over my entire life to conversations where I just thought he was speaking complete and total hieroglyphics. And I'm like, I get it now. And so it's almost kind of like the part of me that was so much like you, that's not coming up naturally anymore. And it makes sense because I have to provide a fathering role to Marino now, a leadership role to my home, which is we make the Enneagram joke, the eight in him. So I don't know, it's the man in him.

Steve Alessi:

Yeah, sure it is completely shifted.

Mary Alessi:

But I think this is really personally, stop, okay? I'm trying to be serious and help our audience. This is exactly what mothers need to hear. Yeah, especially, well, I think every mother of sons, but single moms as well. Here's why. What you're saying is when you were a young man, because a mother's love is unconditional, a father's love is conditional. A father says, you take out the trash.

Chris Alessi:

And that starts even as an infant.

Mary Alessi:

It starts right away.

Steve Alessi:

You're feeling it.

Chris Alessi:

I see it right now.

Mary Alessi:

I see it in you with Marino like he cries with me and I don't like it. I'm like, he's a baby.

Chris Alessi:

Let me be clear. I have a great, my son and I are very, but hold on.

Chris Alessi:

No, because I am not one of.

Chris Alessi:

No, because I am not one of those fathers who thinks I'm disconnected from my infant. No way I could take him for a whole day and be fine.

Steve Alessi:

You taught him how to kiss so much. Now he just wants to kiss.

Mary Alessi:

Everybody kisses the girl. He's five months old and he's kissing.

Steve Alessi:

Kid's going to be a great kisser when he gets.

Mary Alessi:

But here's. No, he won't. Okay, so here's the point.

Steve Alessi:

He's going to tell his wife, my.

Chris Alessi:

Daddy, let's get back on what happens when you just throw the Alessi red come.

Mary Alessi:

Anyway, what's so helpful about that comment, Chris, that you just made was this is the seasonal changes. And when a young boy becomes a man that mothers need to know, and if he's disconnected from you and he is thinking about his wife and his children, and he is not as emotionally available to you, that's a sign you did your job. And if you're still pining over him, oh, I lost my son. And you used to this and you used to that. You are eroding his manhood. Mothers need to understand how to talk to their husbands and their sons. It's very, very important. I'm learning as you get older how important it is.

Mary Alessi:

Because when you were 1819, dad looked at me and said, and we've talked about this on the podcast. Go back and listen to those if you haven't listened to them. When we've done sessions on raising kids, we've talked about some really dark days and some difficult times in raising sons because of the stress it puts between he and I. Mothers fiercely protect.

Steve Alessi:

And what did I have to tell you?

Mary Alessi:

You've got to let me raise him. Only a man can raise a man, Mary. And I didn't understand it until I saw one scene from Yellowstone. And it shifted for me, which was.

Chris Alessi:

Years after the conversation, which was years, and I just almost a decade after.

Mary Alessi:

The conversation, to have peace between you and I. There was a lot of disagreement because I felt like if you would just talk to him. I did not realize there was different things Christopher required as a man. Now, if I flipped the script, I would tell you, you don't understand. Leave the girls to me in this area. And I was harder on them in some areas than you were. But that was a natural instinct for me. For some reason, as women, me particularly, I'll speak about myself, that was a much harder shift, because when you raise a baby boy, it's very hard to release them.

Mary Alessi:

What, you know, you have to to this, what you see as this man who's hard, and he's just so aggressive. And I don't want my son to be that way, but he is that way. That's just inside of him. And you know what I used to say? I used to realize this. I would say to myself, Christopher is a much better version of himself. When you piss him off, when you would make him angry and he'd have to fight back through his testosterone. I would like that version of Chris so much better once he'd process it and go, dad, you're right, because he always came to terms with it. The point that I'm making with mothers and sons is a mother is instinctively not going to want to get her son to that place, because moms see hostility and anger in their son as a negative rather than a positive.

Mary Alessi:

She doesn't realize that that good hostility is stirring up testosterone. That's stirring up his strength and his power, and he needs that.

Chris Alessi:

Well, I heard it said this way. I'm reading a book about fatherhood, and he talks about how if your son's playing a sport, basketball, football, and let's just say this, he wants his mom there, right? He wants his mom making signs celebrating him. He wants his mom to see him as the world and to think he's great. But if he hurts his knee and he's on the field, he does not want his mom running onto the field. My boy, my boy, my boy. To help him.

Mary Alessi:

Right?

Chris Alessi:

He doesn't want that. He wants his dad there. Yeah, and in reality, I think moms don't realize that dads really don't celebrate, which is fine. That's why the mom is valuable.

Mary Alessi:

That's right.

Chris Alessi:

The dad is valuable. When he gets hurt, he wants his dad there with the coach to make sure are things good because he covers the son's pride. It helps. Yes. I think the thing there is recognizing that men need other men for direction. We need other women. We need mom for celebration and love. And the truth is, we see everything through a lens of respect.

Chris Alessi:

If we don't feel respected, you're not going to get the best of us. The mother has to celebrate, so we feel respected. But if that celebration becomes the only direction they get, then you create narcissists, because now they are always driven by just the celebration. And it is the dad who gets to be there to temper that. It is the dad that gets to say, you're good, you're not great. It is the dad that helps there.

Mary Alessi:

Well, or the mom that says you're great just because you are and you're here and you're wonderful, and the dad's like, no, you're not. If you don't do the things I ask you to do, you're not that great.

Chris Alessi:

So I already shared this with Rochelle, this whole know, telling her there's going to be a day, and it's not two decades from now. It's much less where you're going to have to turn something off and let me do it all with this boy, especially because of how aggressive he already is at five months old.

Mary Alessi:

Crazy.

Chris Alessi:

I told mom I'm working out now not to look good. It's just to stay stronger than him. But I really do think so. She was already feeling sad about that.

Mary Alessi:

Yeah.

Chris Alessi:

And I'm like, you got to leave a little soon.

Steve Alessi:

Six months.

Chris Alessi:

No, but it was just because I was reading it, we were discussing it, and I'm like, you've got a decade and a half. You're going to be okay. But she is already processing. Like there's something in me that does need to be bridled at some point.

Mary Alessi:

With this boy, because it's fierce. Your protection. That's my baby. And you feel the same way with your daughters, but you are a girl. It's just so different. And you use the big r word, and I think for the holidays, you use the word respect. That's a huge one. And I think it's very currency.

Mary Alessi:

It's men's currency. And how would a mother show respect to her son to get the very best out of him and better the relationship. And let's just take the holidays, for example, like, if we could give them a scenario, because I know over the years where you've needed respect, and it was consideration, just considering your plans, that you have a lot on your plate. And, Chris, you say this all the time, whether you realize it or not. I need to know what the expectation is, and the girls will go, well, we know what the expectation is. You show up, you go, whatever. But it's very different. And I noticed dad was always that way.

Mary Alessi:

He liked clear plans and clear expectations because men are just wired differently. So how does a mom show respect to get the right reaction from her son?

Chris Alessi:

I think when I feel misrepresented, I feel disrespected.

Mary Alessi:

Right?

Chris Alessi:

Like, if I'm not given the benefit of the doubt, when I feel like I've proven myself in certain areas, that really bugs me. And what I mean is, for instance, with Rochelle, if I feel like I'm sharing something for the sake of freeing you guys. And I met back with some type of opposition, like I was somehow saying something bad. I can't stand that. And it's because it's not a miscommunication issue. It's almost like I feel like I've earned that. My intention here is to serve and make you feel better. It's not to make you feel bad.

Mary Alessi:

So have you become the man that fixes everything?

Chris Alessi:

I've become the man that has to recognize I don't say everything. Well, that's a shock. But the reason I bring that up around the holidays is because that will bug me with you, too, where I'll feel like something that I'm trying to do or I'm trying to say is being heard through emotion in the moment. And I'm so far from that. In my mind, I'm like, I'm trying to make this day easy for you, but it's being read through a whole different lens. So then it comes out like I was telling you the other day, a moment where I was like. I was like, rochelle, you don't have to cook. Marina's not feeling good.

Chris Alessi:

Don't even worry about cooking. She's thinking, you don't like my food, right? And I'm like, I'm literally here thinking, you know what? I'd rather spend the money and deal with that. So we get to sit and relax. So you kind of process something through emotion, and I was just trying to play my part well, right. And that, I think, can be difficult.

Steve Alessi:

Okay. I can speak into this for a second place. A mother, how can she do something for the son? Understanding. So you would get up on a Sunday morning and you say, hey, in a text, if you all want to go to lunch, or then let's all be here right after service and so on and so forth. And if you want to come, great. If you don't. And that could be kind of like.

Chris Alessi:

A no pressure type thing.

Steve Alessi:

No pressure, kind of a.

Mary Alessi:

Right.

Steve Alessi:

And then you're thinking, Chris, like, all right, we're going to do this. But when?

Chris Alessi:

Oh, okay. The exact example is, hey, we're thinking of doing lunch at some point. Let us know if we could figure. And it's like, tell me we're doing lunch at one.

Steve Alessi:

Yeah. Because by the way, I say to her, hey, tell the kids we're eating lunch today.

Mary Alessi:

We're going to Cooper talk. Make it a reservation.

Chris Alessi:

01:00 okay, say it because then it's easy. Then we go, okay, right.

Steve Alessi:

I'll be there at one and I.

Chris Alessi:

Can do my own thing. Mom says, we're thinking of it and what she's trying to do is say, when you can fit us in, fit us in. But that's like, it's actually easier to tell us how big is the puzzle piece we're trying to fit? We want to do it at one. So, okay, great example. Tell me where, around the Thanksgiving table. Where do you need me? What can I do? Tell me exactly how I can benefit. And I think Marino's made it easy because we love getting him around you guys. But before that it was like, tell us when we should be at your house.

Chris Alessi:

When do you want us to come?

Christopher Muiña:

Be there.

Chris Alessi:

And part of it is because we have so many other things as a young married couple, we're trying to figure out. Don't give us another thing to try to figure out.

Mary Alessi:

Right? It's just very true.

Chris Alessi:

Give us that django block. Just tell us where that fits. It actually alleviates us.

Steve Alessi:

Oh, it drives me crazy, too, because she'd say, be here for lunch at 01:00, 12:00. I'm like, where are they at? She's like, why? I told them 01:00. I said, mary, I need help setting this place up. Get them here at twelve. You tell them to show up at one, they show up at one. Nobody's helping set up and I'm the one responsible. So I get on her, why did you tell them?

Chris Alessi:

And then we all had kids and now the men show up carrying baby bags and dad goes, I got this. Dad's got everything set up. It's like we came here early.

Mary Alessi:

No, it's true.

Chris Alessi:

I will say this. I actually was talking to one of the single moms in the church. She's got a young boy. He's 15 years old. He's a stud. We were talking, and she was telling me, I actually asked her, do you know how profound what you just said was? But she told me that when she was pregnant with him. She remembers when he was like, four, five, six months, she was pregnant with him. She was like, I don't ever want to know a day without having my child inside of me.

Chris Alessi:

This is the most beautiful thing in the world. And then towards the end of it, it got so uncomfortable, Ed, so hard. She's like, cut this kid out of me.

Mary Alessi:

That's right.

Chris Alessi:

So she went from, like, I could never see a day to get rid of him. And then all of a sudden, he turned. He's like, 910. And he's so sweet, and things are great. And she like, I could never imagine this kid moving out and getting married. My boy.

Steve Alessi:

I could never leave him.

Chris Alessi:

Then he turns 14. He's got friends, he's got hormones, and she's like, what's the legal age?

Steve Alessi:

I can kick my son out of my home.

Mary Alessi:

We get it.

Chris Alessi:

She realized that that conflict, in her case, was a gift because she would have held on to her son forever.

Mary Alessi:

Truth.

Chris Alessi:

She would have kept him in the womb forever. She would have kept him in the home forever. And I think that's one of the things. Maybe that's the reason that moms don't want to see the anger, because the anger is actually the sign he's getting ready to come out of the birth canal. Yeah, it's the sign he's got to go into the world on his own, and you're trying to stop that, but it's actually a gift. And I actually think in the season where I didn't have all that testosterone, dad and I wouldn't fight the season. It started pumping through, and I started fighting him, trying to help soften. That really did get in the way.

Mary Alessi:

It did.

Chris Alessi:

I needed that. I needed to process that. I needed to see where do I fit in this world? What do I do with these emotions? What do I do with this feeling? And I will say, once we got in order, your input in my life helped me because I am, and I'm not emotional, but I've learned I can be angry and not sin, and you've taught me how to do that. You've taught me how to still be soft, even though I can be harder. And so I do think that if a mom realizes just because she doesn't have the direction role doesn't mean she doesn't have a really important role, I think she'll always fight the dad on it and she'll create a son she doesn't like.

Mary Alessi:

Oh, 100%. And you're just like your father. That's what ends up.

Steve Alessi:

Yeah, that's the whole thing. Be angry and sin not. Yeah, the anger thing is the father. So that's the thing that she didn't like in me when I get angry. So she's eating you. But then she taught you the sin not part. I taught you how to be angry because that's what men do. She taught you how to sin.

Steve Alessi:

Not in the midst of your anger, which is a great balance, which is why it's so important. Husbands and wives really stay focused on making sure those kids are being raised. But you've got single moms out here that are trying to raise their kids on their own. Maybe the most freeing information that would be shared today is for the mom to realize, all right, take it as far as you can, but then recognize there's going to be a time where you have to see, wait, he's not rejecting me when he wants to start doing things or maybe even wanting to be closer to his dad, be around his dad, have his dad in his life. Even if it's a divorce situation and the mom wife's very upset with the ex, it's good for him to be able to still have that connection with that father because the father is helping in areas and the mom needs to just step back for a minute because then the season will come back around where she needs a little more. How to navigate it all. I don't know. I consider myself pretty wise, but at 63 and having my 85 year old mom in the house, I'm still kind of clueless because there's feelings that I have, there's thoughts that I have, and I got to be so sensitive that in the midst of that, she's in the living room.

Steve Alessi:

She wants just to sit there and wants to have coffee and may say something in the middle of the show that we're watching, and I'm wanting to listen to the show more, and I have to be sensitive to that. It's a little confusing. It's a little conflicting because the last thing I ever want her to feel like is in my home. She's not appreciated and valued and wanted, and I'm very grateful. Mom's phenomenal. Helping me. She treats her better as her mom than I treat her as the mom, because I'm here. The son at this season of life is to fix things, step into what dad used to do, right, fix things.

Steve Alessi:

And I feel like I've done my job. But to sit and have long conversations and be okay with moments of silence and quiet, that's a little awkward. And then wanting to watch show. I mean, last night, we're sitting around and I'm trying to watch whatever we can watch on tv, and she finally looks at me at, I don't know, 1030 me. She goes, are you tired? Are you ready to go to bed? And I'm like, thank God she brought it up. I do need to go to my room.

Chris Alessi:

I didn't want to leave her alone.

Mary Alessi:

Can I go to my room?

Chris Alessi:

But she's the one who's actually saying.

Steve Alessi:

Steve, I'm going to ask you this question, but the reality is I'm ready to be alone.

Mary Alessi:

I want you to go.

Steve Alessi:

I want to go to my room, take a shower, read.

Chris Alessi:

She's the only grandmother in the world. That's like when she had her house. Grandma, you wanted to come over? No, I'm going to spend my day reading my books.

Steve Alessi:

But your guilt I have like, oh, my gosh, she can't be alone, but she wants to be alone. So I can't say there's a way to actually do it. The right, the wrong. I think it's good to recognize this is going to be awkward. And the more we're aware of it, it becomes a little bit more manageable. And as a son and a mother, your wife and you're going to have a great relationship. But the uniqueness of the mother and the son is really precious. And I got to say, you guys do pretty good at it, especially since you work together.

Steve Alessi:

And maybe you do have a lot like her. Probably why you and I are able to work so well together.

Chris Alessi:

Probably.

Mary Alessi:

Well, I want to say my last point. You can say whatever you want, but what I think all the moms like me that are wanting to hear and need to hear whether your kid is ten or whether he's 40 or 50, 30, however old your son is, I think the most important thing that a young man needs, a son needs from his mother is for her to understand the power of respect, respecting his time, respecting his decisions, respecting his life and honoring it, and do not overcomplicate his responses. And you said it. You feel like you've earned intention, what your intentions are, and sometimes women complicate that. Oh, he said this, but is that because maybe his wife doesn't want to come? And women are masters of speculation. Masters. And we will have better relationships with our sons, and I think our sons will even go above and beyond to do more for us when we don't speculate towards a negative conclusion. But we said, I asked them.

Mary Alessi:

He gave me a clear answer. And that's all that he meant. He can. He can't. He will. He won't. That's what he means. If I need him, I need to call him.

Mary Alessi:

I need to be clear about the time. These are the expectations. Don't add no pressure, because if you're asking him, it automatically puts pressure. Am I right? Yeah. Okay, so if I'm asking you, just asking you straight up with clear intentions and clear details now, do you want to know what a mom wants from her son?

Steve Alessi:

Absolutely.

Mary Alessi:

I think for the moms that are out there listening, what a mother wants is really for him to just be sweet to her, walk in the room and hug her. And you do this. You are a very sweet son, but just don't be disconnected from her. Just don't be cold to her, hug her and love her and say, mom, I love you. What do you need? You want to take the garbage out? It is so easy. It really, really is easier than you think. But I also think for the young men who have wonderful mothers and fathers at home and they've married and now they're over at their wife's family, because that happens. That's a very natural progression.

Mary Alessi:

Don't forget about your mom. Make sure you keep equal, fair time. And you fight for that relationship, too, because it's so easy for a young man to go, yeah, we're just going over to her parents because sometimes the expectation on him is less at the in laws.

Steve Alessi:

Totally.

Mary Alessi:

And that's something that he needs to be respectful of. And say, my mom and her home and my dad and his home is just as important and just as valid as your mom and dad and split those times, even they need to be split. Be fair. If you've been at her mom's house two or three times in a row, then you better even that out and not have for your mother to have to ask you. You go, it's only right. I've got to honor and love my parents because they honor and love me.

Steve Alessi:

Cool.

Mary Alessi:

And that's it.

Steve Alessi:

I love that. Do you have anything you want to say before we close this thing up?

Chris Alessi:

I think this is great. I don't know.

Steve Alessi:

Wow. He's lost for speechless.

Chris Alessi:

I would want the podcast to know that whenever I get up there and I preach, dad's made reference of it. I say all the time, my dad said this, my dad said this, my dad said this. But the hardest lessons that I've had to learn as a person, the only reason the pill was able to go down was because of conversations I had with you.

Mary Alessi:

Yeah.

Chris Alessi:

And I would want. There is a one a and a one b. The father has to be the one a. But it's kind of like, we think you can get everything from Amazon. No, you can't. You need other stores.

Mary Alessi:

Yes.

Chris Alessi:

You cannot get everything from any one store.

Mary Alessi:

No.

Chris Alessi:

So the reality of it is the mom has to realize that the son can't get everything from your store. Even if the dad's a deadbeat, he needs things from the men's store. But the things he needs from your store are absolutely invaluable.

Mary Alessi:

Yes.

Chris Alessi:

And I am telling you, the hardest pills for me to swallow, that always initiated with him.

Mary Alessi:

Yeah.

Chris Alessi:

We would start fighting and I'm like, I am not going to lose this time. He's going to lose this time. It was in those moments that my mom talking to me sometimes, like he would talk to me, helped that pill go down.

Steve Alessi:

That's so good. So what you're saying is she's Victoria's Secret and I'm big and tall. If you're going to go shopping, well, don't. Well, I would say this, man. Yeah, that's a great way to say it, baby. He's got to shop for his wife, candies and sweets. Okay, perfect. So here's what I would say.

Steve Alessi:

If you're going to go hang out, son, with your in laws, just make sure you're not on the phone when you're around her families. Stay as engaged as you would your own. All right, that's it from the Alessi family business podcast booth. Thanks for joining us. Hope you were encouraged. And if you think this episode might help a father, a mother, and a son, why don't you go ahead and send it to them? Like it, get them to subscribe, and let's have fun as we continue bringing to you the Alessi family business, where family is everybody's business.

Christopher Muiña:

You've just enjoyed another episode of the family Business podcast with the Alessis, and we can't thank you enough for being a part of our audience today. Now that you've learned more about us, here's how you can join in in the family business. First, make sure you're following our podcast right now and download this episode so you can hear it at any time. Second, think of someone you know that might need or enjoy this episode and.

Chris Alessi:

Share it with them.

Christopher Muiña:

You'll be helping them and helping us to spread the word about the family business. Third, go to alessifamilybusiness.com and tap the ask the Alessi's button.

Chris Alessi:

This is really cool.

Christopher Muiña:

You could use it to record a voicemail comment or question, and we can add your voice to our conversations. Finally, while you're on our page, tap the reviews tab and you'll see a link to leave a review on Apple Podcasts.

Chris Alessi:

We love reading your reviews, and we.

Christopher Muiña:

Might even share them on the show. Thanks again for joining us, and we'll see you next time at the family business with the Alesses. Because family is is everybody's business.

Chris AlessiProfile Photo

Chris Alessi

Pastor / Author / Speaker

Christopher Alessi was born and raised In the beautiful and diverse city of Miami Florida. He earned his bachelors degree in psychology with a minor in leadership communication at Florida international University.

Christopher serves as the next generation pastor in the church that his parents, Pastor Steve and Mary Alessi, founded and continue to lead, Metro Life Church. His desire is that all children, youth and young adults would recognize the true Ephesians 3:20 nature of God and inspire others to do the same. At his side in ministry and in life are his wife Richelle and their son, Marino John.