She told me a technician who came to the house to look at our trees, laughed at her, and made her cry.
Think about this this way.
Did a technician look at her trees? Yes.
Did the technician laugh at something? I would assume yes.
Did your mom cry? I would assume yes there as well. But remember, she wasn't upset or agitated when they left. So she cried later thinking back on it.
Did the technician make her cry? Now you're asking a question that depends on perspective. Your mom said yes, the technician said no. I'd bet a dollar that both are telling the truth. Why? How? Maybe something the technician said made her cry in hindsight...maybe the tree made her think of your dad, or a dog she had when she was 10. Who knows what the connection was in this instance. He could have said something completely normal though and it could have made her cry hours later.
With mental illness, everything said is true from the viewer's perspective. Everyone else may say it's false, but that's not how feelings work. If you feel sad, you're sad...there's no proof or explanation required. Your mom heard something that made her sad. That's true. But it doesn't mean that the tree guy was a bad person or said something ugly.
Hopefully that helps a little.


