The Exhausted Mam
Back in April, I read a post on Unstoppable Mother on Facebook. Much of that post resonated with me. I've pretty much done all of the things listed in the first half of the post (and a few more).
I've been the Mam who stood crying in the shower because I was so exhausted that I really couldn't think of anything else to do. I've been so emotionally and physically tired that I really couldn't see a way to get through things that needed to be done. I've sat crying on my bed because I told my LG off, and I felt guilty for doing it because in hindsight I knew it was because I was tired, and she was just enjoying her childhood. I've struggled with getting myself and her out the door in the morning, juggled school runs, chased and herded when I wished I just had time to let her engage and explore her curiosity.
For a long time I really felt that my worth was pretty close to 0. That I wasn't important enough to anyone or anything if I stopped what I was doing.
My LG has always thought that I was enough. Her eyes looking up at me in the dark middle of the night when I was feeding, crawling into bed with me for her early morning feed as she got older.
She's always thought I'm great. Always figured that Mami was good enough, even when I was really struggling to keep the plates spinning and not crashing to the ground around us.
Despite knowing this, I've spent the much of my LG's life thinking that I was failing as a parent.
That I needed to keep doing more and more. Why? Because, generally, as a society, we don't seem prepared to just tell people that they're doing well. The times when I was really struggling, noone came up to me and told me that I was doing OK, that I was a good Mam, that we all struggle sometimes.
I was running around, thinking I was incompetent, useless. That I was not a good parent. That I was failing, both in my career (because I'd had to work part time just to keep up with life) and as a mother. It seems that, as a woman, I was expected to be able to do all of those things, put me on hold, and still function.
All I needed to hear were the words
I've been the Mam who stood crying in the shower because I was so exhausted that I really couldn't think of anything else to do. I've been so emotionally and physically tired that I really couldn't see a way to get through things that needed to be done. I've sat crying on my bed because I told my LG off, and I felt guilty for doing it because in hindsight I knew it was because I was tired, and she was just enjoying her childhood. I've struggled with getting myself and her out the door in the morning, juggled school runs, chased and herded when I wished I just had time to let her engage and explore her curiosity.
For a long time I really felt that my worth was pretty close to 0. That I wasn't important enough to anyone or anything if I stopped what I was doing.
My LG has always thought that I was enough. Her eyes looking up at me in the dark middle of the night when I was feeding, crawling into bed with me for her early morning feed as she got older.
She's always thought I'm great. Always figured that Mami was good enough, even when I was really struggling to keep the plates spinning and not crashing to the ground around us.
Despite knowing this, I've spent the much of my LG's life thinking that I was failing as a parent.
That I needed to keep doing more and more. Why? Because, generally, as a society, we don't seem prepared to just tell people that they're doing well. The times when I was really struggling, noone came up to me and told me that I was doing OK, that I was a good Mam, that we all struggle sometimes.
I was running around, thinking I was incompetent, useless. That I was not a good parent. That I was failing, both in my career (because I'd had to work part time just to keep up with life) and as a mother. It seems that, as a woman, I was expected to be able to do all of those things, put me on hold, and still function.
All I needed to hear were the words
'You're doing OK.'
'You're a good Mam.'
I'm pretty sure we all need to hear those words sometimes. They cost nothing, but we seem reluctant to use them.

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ReplyDeleteYou are an amazing mami, none of us are perfect parents hun.....😊 x
ReplyDeleteThanks hun x
DeleteYou're a brilliant mother despite not having a brilliant mother yourself. X
ReplyDeleteAh. But I think I did x
Delete