I’m a terrible mother.
Before you call social services and report me, no, I don’t
beat or starve my children, but there are days when I fall way short of today’s
definition of a good mother. I don’t spend a lot of time with my children (and
often think that’s okay). I don’t correct their homework (and have no intention
of doing so). At times, I get annoyed when they interrupt me. I sometimes yell
at them when they frustrate me (like spilling milk on the table I just
cleaned).
How many times have I not paid attention to what a child was
saying because my attention was on my email? How many times do I pack my day
with too much work and end up too tired to play a game or read a story to them
before bed?
We as mothers and women have a tendency to set the bar so
high, it’s nigh on impossible to reach. We tell ourselves that if we don’t bake
the cookies from scratch, or don’t pay close enough attention to the babblings
of the 2-year-old, or don’t fill-in-the-blank, our children will not be happy,
healthy, or have a good life.
Sounds ridiculous, doesn’t it? But how many of us have had
similar thoughts dance through our minds, along with the accompanying guilt at
not being a good enough mother? I sure have, even though I try very hard not
to.
Then there’s the inevitable comparisons with other mothers.
Even when we’re not consciously thinking about how other women parent, it can
seep into our minds in the blink of an eye.
Here’s an example of what I mean: When my oldest was a
toddler, we went to the park on one of the first warm spring days. She had on a
short-sleeved shirt probably for the first time that year. As we walked to the
playground, I looked around at the other mothers who were arriving with their
children. Nearly every one of them had whipped out a tube of sunscreen and was
slathering their child’s face and arms with the stuff. My daughter looked at me
and asked if she needed sunscreen. I told her no and to go play, but in that
moment, I felt like a bad mother, one who sends her defenseless child out into
the sunny world with no sunscreen.
Other times this feeling has cropped up for me includes
being the mom without the first aid kit at the playground and another mom has
to lend you a Band-aid to bandage your child’s bloody knee. Or giving my kids a
non-organic, not-too-healthy snack when other moms have artfully arranged
carrot sticks and hummus.
If we fall into this mindset that we are not good enough
mothers, that our parenting styles and family life is not up to par with the
rest of the world—and as a result our children will not be able to fulfill
their great destinies— then we will miss out on a lot of the joys of childhood.
We also will miss out on the laughter and the pain, the joys
and the sorrows, the average grades and the missed goals. And those lessons
learned from not being perfect, from seeing how we as mothers handle life’s
disappointments, and from enjoying life to its fullest whatever our
circumstances, are priceless.
It’s not being the perfect mother that our children will
love us for—it’s being the best mother we can be for them. That won’t look good
some days, but if we turn our backs on measuring ourselves to an impossible
standard, we can have more good days than bad.
It took me several years to come to terms that I wasn’t a
great mother by certain standards. And there are times when I slip and start to
obsess about how I’m not a good mother. But most of the time, I aim to be a
good enough mother, and so far, it’s been a good one for my four children.
Until next time,
Sarah
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