As a kid I remember thinking I was
never going to be like my parents. If my
kids didn’t want to clean their room, then I wasn’t going to make them. It is their room after all. If they don’t like fish, then they don’t have
to eat it, and an 8:30 bed time is just unreasonable. Then one day, I woke up and realized I had
turned into my parents. I am not sure if
it was a slow progression or if it just happens one night while you are
sleeping. You find yourself saying things like, “Because I said so that’s why”
“If you just listened to your mother then things like this wouldn’t happen”
“Well I am not (insert child’s name)’s mother now am I” Or my personal
favorite, “If Johnny told you to jump off of a bridge would you do it?!”
I, like most other women, saw
parenting like it is on TV. The nurse
would hand you a clean, great smelling, quiet little wide eyed baby after a
brief drug and virtually pain free delivery and life would be perfect. You
would ONLY use cloth diapers, you would breast feed of course, and when the
time came, make ALL of your own baby food.
Your perfect bundle would only fuss when she needed something and quiet
as soon as they saw you. They would sleep through the night practically from
birth and it would all be so blissful. Then reality slapped you in the face.
After 12-50 hours of intense EPIDURAL FILLED labor you are handed a gooey,
slimy, slightly misshapen screaming baby. It is the best feeling in the world.
Although things didn’t go as planned initially, from here on out it will be PERFECT!
Then you leave the hospital. Your perfect baby wont latch well, your nipples
feel like they have been put through the meat grinder, you have a HUGE pile of
dirty cloth diapers and you are FAR to sleep deprived to wash them. Welcome to parenthood.
I am here to tell you, that it is
ok. What makes a good parent is not
breast milk, cloth diapers, or organic steamed beets. Don’t get me wrong those moms exist, my
sister in law Moira is one of them. She has 5 kids, she home schools, she
gardens, her babies wear cloth diapers, she is still nursing her nearly 2 yr
old, and she even has her own chickens. She is my hero. Is she
a better mother then me? I don’t think so.
I live in my car half the time, running to this child’s sporting event,
or 4h meeting, or Girl scout project. We are never home. My idea of home cooked
is frozen pizza warmed in MY oven in MY HOME, therefore home cooked! I KILL
house plants just by looking at them. My sister says my house is where house
plants go to die; it is like a plant hospice. If we had to eat only what I
grew, we would all starve to death. Moira had her 5th child unassisted
at home drug free; when my 4th kiddo was born I walked into the
hospital NOT EVEN IN LABOR YET and asked for my epidural. I had been here a few
times before and I knew what was coming, might as well be prepared. My son was
born a few hours later, a perfect gooey misshapen screaming baby. He was not
harmed in any way because I chose not to suffer through the pain of child
birth, to each its own.
I am here to say, IT IS OK! If you
feed your kids boxed macaroni and cheese, they will survive. If you don’t pick
them up and hold them the second they start crying, they will not turn into the
children that shoot up play grounds. If you let them watch Yo Gaba Gaba on a 3 hr
loop so you can have a few blissfully quiet moments, their brains will not turn
to mush. IT IS OK! In reality, society
has now made it so that no matter what you do, you will feel like a failure. If you exclusively breast feed you are causing
the child to have an unnatural attachment to only you making it difficult for
the child to bond with their father therefor insuring that they will have daddy
issues in the future. If you exclusively
bottle feed then you are lazy and are choosing to poison your child. If you home school you are isolating your
children and insuring they will be out casts in society. If you put your
children in public school you are just pushing off your responsibilities on
others so you don’t have to deal with them.
If you let them watch TV you are letting the world poison their minds,
if you don’t let them watch TV then you are sheltering them and they will be
unprepared for the real world. I could
keep going forever, but really, you get my point. Society seems to LOVE to make parents feel
like failures.
So when you wake up one day and
realize your life of parenting resembles more “Children of the corn” then “Cheaper
by the dozen”, don’t feel bad, you are not alone. Millions of sleep deprived parents out there
feel your pain. I wish I could lie to
you and say it gets better, it doesn’t. People
will tell you it is just a stage, they will outgrow it, and they do. They then
start a new stage, their stages never get better. I once asked a father of 4 grown children
what age is the worst, he replied that it depended on the child, for one of
them it was 35. So fear not, it is only the
first 50 years of parenting that are the most difficult; it’s all downhill from
there.
HA! I used to dread those moments too "Have I become my mother?!" Yes. I have. I've made peace with it. You are super mom - I get tired just hearing about how busy you are! It gets easier with each kid, right? Right!?
ReplyDeleteSince Peter wants like a dozen kids, I am going to tell myself that it gets easier and less expensive the more you have. I am not in denial, I'm just selective of the reality I choose to accept. ;)
ReplyDelete